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The First Ever Walmart (1962)
LOLWOT ^
| 1-2-2015
Posted on 01/03/2015 8:27:21 AM PST by kingattax
Hard to imagine that from this simple image emerged a supermarket global empire
TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: firstwalmart; walmart
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1
posted on
01/03/2015 8:27:21 AM PST
by
kingattax
To: kingattax
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
2
posted on
01/03/2015 8:29:57 AM PST
by
Steely Tom
(Thank you for self-censoring.)
To: kingattax
I’m guessing that this store was in Arkansas. Anyone know the town?
3
posted on
01/03/2015 8:30:17 AM PST
by
snoringbear
(E.oGovernment is the Pimp,)
To: kingattax
That’s not a photo from 1962.
4
posted on
01/03/2015 8:30:58 AM PST
by
Bryanw92
(Sic semper tyrannis)
To: kingattax
5
posted on
01/03/2015 8:32:15 AM PST
by
Brandonmark
(There is still hope for our country! 11.04.2014 - DAY OF RENEWAL)
To: kingattax
Upscale competition ...
6
posted on
01/03/2015 8:32:44 AM PST
by
shove_it
(The bigger the government, the smaller the citizen -- Dennis Prager)
To: snoringbear
7
posted on
01/03/2015 8:32:57 AM PST
by
donozark
(Andrea Chalupa:"Ukraine is fighting for survival. The UN is fighting for relevancy.")
To: Bryanw92
Those 1962 crossover SUVs were awesome.
To: kingattax
Are those 1962 mini-vans parked outside?
9
posted on
01/03/2015 8:34:49 AM PST
by
shove_it
(The bigger the government, the smaller the citizen -- Dennis Prager)
To: kingattax
10
posted on
01/03/2015 8:34:50 AM PST
by
Bryanw92
(Sic semper tyrannis)
To: snoringbear
Rogers, Arkansas. Started as a "five and dime" on July 2, 1962. The store later expanded and relocated to another area in Rogers but the original store still serves a a visitor center.
Below is what the store looked like 10 years later (after the relocation). "Alone Again (Naturally)" by Gilbert O'Sullivan was playing in some of those car radios at the time.
To: kingattax
Five and dime stores were big at one time. I remember several in my area. We had Kresge's (the forerunner of Kmart), Woolworth's and G.C. Murphy's. Other discounters such as Hills and Zayres came along later. All gone now.
To: kingattax
Sam Walton opened his 5&10 on the Bentonville town square in 1950Source: History of Walmart
13
posted on
01/03/2015 8:35:57 AM PST
by
Brandonmark
(There is still hope for our country! 11.04.2014 - DAY OF RENEWAL)
To: kingattax
When I worked at walmart, they bragged that the only entity with a bigger computer system was the U.S. government.
I haven't set foot in a walmart in over 5 years.
14
posted on
01/03/2015 8:38:45 AM PST
by
real saxophonist
(Spam, Spam, Spam, Bacon, and Spam. Extra Bacon.)
To: kingattax
My local Walmart is store #4.
The recent Walmart Neighborhood Market that opened last fall is store #6960.
Sam and his wife were the clerks in that store. Sam was always friends. Helen, not so much.
My folks used to go to Bentonville (county seat) to assess property in the spring and pay taxes in the fall in the late 50s and early 60s.
15
posted on
01/03/2015 8:40:52 AM PST
by
TomGuy
To: fatnotlazy
Ben Franklin stores in NYC ....
To: Brandonmark
Bentonville — on the west side of the town square.
17
posted on
01/03/2015 8:42:37 AM PST
by
TomGuy
To: kingattax
Sam Walton, a smart religious man who married well.
18
posted on
01/03/2015 8:49:19 AM PST
by
Moonman62
(The US has become a government with a country, rather than a country with a government.)
To: kingattax
Wal-Mart owes its success primarily to the fact that they were the first chain to source Asia for cheaper goods in a large way. Secondarily, they learned to handle logistics well.
End result you have a nation with billion dollar trade deficits and a dwindling middle class.
To: fatnotlazy
We used to have GC Murphy Co., Woolworth’s, and TG&Y’s. I always enjoyed visits to those kind of five-and-dime stores. The atmosphere, the ambiance. The Murphy store had a lunch-counter whose architectural motif reminded me of “The Jetsons” in its space-age, early-60s style. The one at the Woolworth’s dated to the 1940s, and still retained that appealing look. Miss all that visual variety, that shopping used to offer.
The tall-ceiling, warehouse style of the big-box stores like Wal-Mart just depress the hell out of me, for some reason. Dismal, bleak, and tacky. Add stores like Best Buy, with ear-splitting music and dvd-films being run all around you, simultaneously. Ugh.
20
posted on
01/03/2015 8:50:17 AM PST
by
greene66
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