Remember these?
Remember these?
Yeah, and I remember the photo booths where I'd take my girlfriend to make a quick set of funny wallet pictures.
What year is this?
I remember the great lunch counter at Al Pisa Drugs, Meyers and Schoolcraft. Good chow. Then the sweetie who lived the block behind me got a job there and I started lunching there every day. Not necessarily for the chow.
My guess would be late 50's to early 60's. By the mid 60's prices were a little higher than that. You could still get the coke for 10 cents though. I remember the lady at the candy counter knew my mom casually. She would give me a little white bag with broken chocolate pieces for free.
I preferred the lunch counter at Kresge's. Mmmm... those chiliburgers, and the pop in those weird paper cones.
There was a lunch counter in the Book Cadillac as well. I think it was inside a drug store? All the men in there having a coffee & smoke while reading the paper early in the morning, [[probably while waiting for their wives to get ready.)
Last edited by 401don; August-10-21 at 12:16 PM.
Yes, yet during the early years of Jim Crow Woolworths was NOT a spot for dining if you were black. Up thru the 50's - including up north, here.
My parents [migrating from the south] recounted their top-of-mind, southern experiences of the 'treatment' - recalling valiant sit-ins they participated to change that. I liked the grilled-cheese by the time I was going as a kid. Simple fair - white bread [who was eating wheat in the seventies?], yet so yummy! Three dollars could buy quite a bit! With pop galore. Or was that soda?!
Last edited by Zacha341; August-10-21 at 03:26 PM.
Wasn't that a Shapero's drug store in the Book Cadillac? Or was it a Schettler's, another slightly 'upscale' drug store chain in the Cunningham drug family? I remember eating breakfast several times at the Shapero's in the First National building back when my dad had an office across the street. Pretty darn good, with fresh orange juice too.
Last edited by EastsideAl; August-10-21 at 01:12 PM.
In one of those drug stores I had my first experience of air conditioning. We didn't have it at home or in school. Also, I remember air conditioning on Greyhound buses.
Sander's had decent food, too. With added bonus of their ice cream and cake deserts.
I'm wondering if that Woolworth's menu is fake. Some of the typography has a too-modern look.
Shapero's was the Book Cadillac drugstore.
The Woolworth lunch counter where the civil rights movement started has been restored to original conditions and on display in Greensboro NC at the International Civil Rights museum.
https://youtu.be/GJEG4dUTYeY?list=TL...HXExMTA4MjAyMQ
Last edited by Wheels; August-11-21 at 08:44 AM.
Very interesting Wheels... I had never heard of this museum. But they mention a 1960 date as when the "lunch counter" incident happened.The Woolworth lunch counter where the civil rights movement started has been restored to original conditions and on display in Greensboro NC at the International Civil Rights museum.
https://youtu.be/GJEG4dUTYeY?list=TL...HXExMTA4MjAyMQ
From everything I have read, the civil rights movement started in 1955 when Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a bus in Montgomery Alabama. The HENRY FORD had purchased the bus at auction, after outbidding the Smithsonian. This was in 2001, and the then decrepit bus was restored, and is on display in Dearborn.
https://www.thehenryford.org/explore...osa-parks-bus/
So I guess it depends how you interpret "how the civil rights movement first started".
But it is very cool how they preserved an old Woolworth's and turned it into a civil rights museum.
Woolworth's still exists...its called...are you ready...Foot Locker.
1953
^^^Wow! Look at those prices. Ten dollars now can barely get a basic burger, small fries and a small pop at Mikey D's.
And prices are only going up, UP and away!
I don't know how old that menu is, but keep in mind that $0.50 in July 1955 is about equivalent to $5.11 in July 2021.
https://www.bls.gov/data/inflation_calculator.htm
Yum.... along with water in a cone with a chrome cone holder.
I went to the Mack-7 Shopping Center Sander's... but the same sandwich. Here's a photo of the grand opening of that plaza in 1955... wish it were higher resolution... because one of those stores on the left, or just outside this image, was Sanders....
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