While most of us grew up with supermarkets and shopping malls already existing; some of us remember the family-run grocery stores where your options were often limited. Others might even have had the chance to grow their own food, but once general stores grew bigger and became more convenient, there was no way back. Still, the consumerist lifestyle as we know it didn't happen overnight, and we got where we are now gradually.
Bored Panda has collected a series of vintage photos that take you through different grocery stores across America in the olden days. It’s safe to say we came a long way from grocery shopping in our Sunday best to browsing the aisles in our PJs. But of course, it is only one of many ways shopping malls have changed. From wider aisles and more elegant stores to small homegrown businesses, these cool photos reflect a very vintage life. Take a look at all the interesting photos from a long time ago below and don’t forget to upvote for your favs!
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Country Store On Dirt Road. Note The Kerosene Pump On The Right And The Gasoline Pump On The Left. Brother Of Store Owner Stands In Doorway. Gordonton, North Carolina, 1939
I think the best thing about this picture is the fact that different races are getting on fine.
The Grocery Store Of The Late 19th Century, USA
1980, When Every Soft Drink Bottle On The Shelf Was Still Glass
Cashiers At The Piggly Wiggly Continental, Encino, California, 1962
Grocery Shopping, 1960s
This was when we had to be PERFECTLY groomed for the lord and master to get home
My mother didn't do this back in those days---her hair and makeup would be done, and she'd even put on a girdle to go to the grocery store!
Load More Replies...My grandmother says it was just such a trend and such an 'it' thing to do and they just loved it. Nothing to do with lord and master and grooming....
My Mom would do this, except she used bobby-pins instead of curlers (and would wrap a dishcloth around her head). It drives me nuts that some young people look at sitcoms from 50s and 60s and think that women walked around in their good dress, high heels, and perfect hair while they were shopping, cleaning, cooking, washing clothes, etc. My Mom wore stretch pants, a soft cotton shirt, and tennies most days while she was doing her work.
I sdisagree, my mother would have died before anyone in public saw her in curlers.
Notice the mix of product in one area, due to the smaller size of stores in those days. Cookies, crackers, canned good, etc over the refrigerated or freezer section. Now we have whole aisles dedicated to each.
Have you been to a Trader Joe's? They still do that.
Load More Replies...Is it just me or is the women on the left the spitting image of Juliette Lewis?
I complain when I see people wearing pajamas in the stores ... maybe I should chill.
Well, most of us wore scarves over our rollers. Before everybody had hair dryers, you HAD to spend all day in those damn rollers, before you teased the hair to go out in the evening!
I've still seen women like that in the grocery store in NY. Was really surprised.
but god forbid you go shopping today in your trackies and comfy shirt...
I wore my hair in rollers like this to the grocery store, restaurant. I wasn’t married. Women wanted to look good. There wasn’t all the electric hair appliances back then. There are trends now and back then. And I will add, women looked way nicer back then. Now they either look like slobs or they look as if to say, look at me-look at me.
Fix your hair, put your makeup on, cook that big dinner. Now do the dishes, put the kids to bed, now get ready to please your honey. The life of the 50s women.
When I was a kid I always wondered when and for whom did they ever take the curlers out? They wore them out and about all day, but presumably they slept in them, too. My mom got her hair "done" once a week, slept on a hairdo pillow for three nights and then wore a wig the rest of the week, never washing it in-between visits. I'm thankful for my modern short hair.
Cannot believe they caught women in hair curlers! It was considered a big no-no and I was totally embarrassed if had to go to the store in them. And yes, that was in the 60's. Maybe it was different in the south as it doesn't say where this was.
Just love the looks on there faces ,they are so happy to be there ,looks like some of my customers at my place of work ;=]]
Back in these days a man probably never stepped foot inside a grocery store, so I'm guessing the women didn't mind
I got a hitch-hiking ticket as a 16-year-old and mom had to accompany me to court. Not only did she have curlers in her hair, she was also wearing Bermuda shorts, so the lady judge said the way she dressed lowered the decorum of the court so we had to wait until the end and go to see her in her chambers. I got two weekends of work detail.
The woman on the right looks ready for a cart ram & crackers battle. (Metal tins of Hershey's syrup; no plastic squeeze bottle; you had to learn to puncture 2 holes, one to pour and one to vent -- it was a skill.)
This was obviously a weekend in the 60's and they were getting their hair ready. I lived it.
Hair curlers , bless their hearts the ladies did some tough stuff to look good .
Whoa, that woman on the left looks like a super sour Juliet Lewis
And I'm up here thinking that we've gotten sloppy when I see women in curlers at the store today. Times really don't change all that much and I need to chill when I see ladies in curlers at the store now.
I would never live there, I just want to go as a tourist because I'm a huge Beatles fan and would love to see everything there.
Load More Replies...Don’t go to the door with your hair still in curlers....you might not see him again.....
Let’s face it. The 60s were the beginning and of our downfall!!!!
Publix Supermarkets Showcased Their Wide Aisles And A Self-Service Dairy Case By Driving A Shopper Around A New Store In A Tiny Car, Circa 1957
In Spain, it was a SEAT 600. It was a small car, to the spanish people was like the Ford-T to de US-citizens, our first car!!. My mom had got one. We went to the beach, two moms and 4 kids inside, with all the beach materials!. It´s true! I swear
A Large Sign Reading "I Am An American" Placed In The Window Of A Store, On December 8, The Day After Pearl Harbor. The Business Was Owned By The Matsuda Family. The Store Was Closed Following Orders To Persons Of Japanese Descent To Evacuate From Certain West Coast Areas
Interior Of The Original Piggly Wiggly Self-Service Grocery Store, Memphis, Tennessee. The First Self Service Grocery Store, Opened 1916. Picture From 1918
I've shopped there, it's still open in the same location, but modernized of course
Publix Market In Sarasota, Florida, 1961
Two Women Shopping In An American Supermarket, Circa 1970
Shopping In Coop Store, Greenbelt, Maryland, 1938
My Great Great Grandparents At The Counter Of Their Grocery Store In Bremerton, Washington (1925)
James Dean Shopping For Groceries In Marfa, TX, 1955
Jitney Jungle Checkout Clerk Billy Barineau In Tallahassee, 1962
My Great Grandfather Standing In His Grocery Store, Evansville, IN, 1960
Man And Dogs In Front Of Grocery Store, Robinson, Illinois, 1940
Children In Front Of Grocery Store, Chicago, Illinois, 1941
Jayne Mansfield Grocery Shopping In Las Vegas, 1959
Where to start here? Traumatized Chihuahuas, girl in bathing suit and... what did Jayne buy?
Supermarket In 1960s
Working Mother Jennie Magill Shopping With Her Children At The Super Market, 1956
My 2nd Great Grandmother Opening Her Store In Cincinnati, Ohio
Oh, look, Tide ! No one knew about it`s nutritional value back then :D
Home Turned Into Grocery Store, Omaha, Nebraska, 1938
The Super Giant Supermarket In Rockville, Maryland, 1964
Shopping In Coop Store, Greenbelt, Maryland, 1938
Working At A General Store, 1973
Tulip Town Market, Grove Center By James Edward Westcott, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, July 4, 1945
Buying Groceries In Store At Blankenship, Indiana, 1938
Food Shopping And Mini-Skirts, 1970
Three Women Talking In Frozen Food Aisle Of Supermarket, 1950s
Mayfair Supermarket Cookie Display, 1950s
Proprietor Of Small Grocery Store, Jeanerette, Louisiana, 1938
Kroger Grocery Store, Lexington Kentucky, 1947, By Lafayette Studio
1920 Interior View Of A Chicago Grocery
Shopping In The Cooperative Grocery Store, Greenbelt, Maryland, 1942 (Colorized)
Kings Supermarket, 1950s
Interior Of A Piggly Wiggly Grocery Store, 1959
Box-Boy In A Small Rural Grocery Store In Southeast Idaho, 1972
Dairy Counter At Clark's, A Grocery, Drug, Sundries, And Department Store And Lunch Counter, Charlotte, NC, 1962 Or 1963
Scene In The Cooperative Store At Irwinville Farms, Georgia, 1938
Man looks like he’s saying “How dare you people charge 28 cents for this box of aspirin?!” ..... “Well, sir I just work here”
Grocery Store Parking Lot, West Covina, CA, 1959
At Nixon, Wife Of VP, Grocery Shopping With Her Daughters Julie And Tricia, 1958
Grocery Cart, 1974
Vintage Trade Ad With Ruffles Potato Chips, Flings, Etc. At A Checkout
Delivery Vans, 1942 Style, Line Up Outside A Greenbelt, Maryland, Grocery Store Awaiting Customers
They had something to do, they learned to work and have fun with friends... unlike your spoiled rotten kids who are glued to thier phones and video games 24/7... so to hell with your child labor BS
Interior Of Northland Foods, Thief River Falls, MN, In The 70's
Grand Grocery Company, Lincoln, Nebraska, 1942
Ralph's Supermarket, Los Angeles, 1942
U-Pak Kmart No Frills Supermarket Pontiac, Michigan, 1979
Duke's Mayonnaise Jars Assembled In A Display At Cozart's Grocery Store, 1965
Sunkist Grocery Store Display, 1940s
Grocery Store Window, Dubuque, Iowa, 1940
At The Grocery Store, 1950s
Kroger Grocery Store, Lexington, Kentucky, 1947
Cooperative Store At Greenbelt, Maryland, 1938
Store Operated By John Zabala Until 1979
Cigarette And Cigar Displays (Camel, L&M, Etc...) At Clark's, A Grocery, Drug, Sundries, And Department Store And Lunch Counter, Charlotte, NC, 1962 Or 1963
Boy On Porch Of General Store, Roseland, Virginia, 1938
Rear Of Grocery Store, Baltimore, Maryland, 1938
My Dad Doing Groceries During His High School Exchange Year In Michigan, 1962
Houchens Grocery Store, Kentucky, C. 1950s
Interior View Of A Ralphs Grocery Store At An Unknown Location In Los Angeles In November 1943, Showing The Check-Out Counter And Cash Register
The CPI Inflation calculator says that $.67 in November 1943 is $9.69 in today's money. WOW!
When I look at these it hits me how different Europe was back then. My grandparents and parents struggled so much in Poland whilst Americans (not only, of course) had all this and more... I can still remember harsh times when I was a kid in the 80 and 90. This is heartbreaking to me. Not mentioning that there are still nations that are suffering up till day.
There’s a n old joke: An American, a Russian, and a Czech are asked “What is your opinion of the meat shortage?” The Russian says, “What’s an opinion?” The Czech says “What is meat?” The American says “What’s a shortage?”
Load More Replies...When supermarkets were first introduced in the UK shoppers kept on asking permission to take things from the shelves, they assumed they were all on display.
I remember the 1st Supermarket grocery store in my little town - they had a delivery system as people didnt have cars back then. Your shopping and on getting home 15 minutes later it was waiting on your doorstep
Load More Replies...What a neat list! It's probably weird, but when I travel to a different country (sometimes state, even!) I like to go to the grocery store to compare/contrast with my grocery at home.
All those made me wonder, if anyone looking now at them here recognizes themselves or their family... :)
The American body has changed quite a bit. I couldn't spot any obesity in the photos.
Yeah well, I'm pretty sure there is a correlation between over consumption of cheap food and obesity. The kids in the top photo are probably not as slim as they used to be...
Load More Replies...I love these pics! So refreshing from the Buzzfeed type ‘remember 1999 or 2004’ bs. This is nastalgia at its best for us people 40+. WE ARE NOT THAT OLD!
Maybe it`s me, but i see Softdrinks, Cookies, Cereals in the Food Carts, but almost no overweight people. What happenned? Also i see little packaging and no plastic bags. It is possible to avoid trash while shopping. Ah! Good old times!
First of all - food was food back then - made in big batches, yes, but from all natural ingredients - no sugar added to your sausages as today... no soy flour in meat, no added fructose syrup, or millions of e-something s**t. And back then even pasta boxes were about design. We used less processed foods, and less plastic. And we had healthier planet to live.
Load More Replies...In Curaçao there is still an grocery store with the old Miami Vice style front!! Looked so awesome. The outside never changed in all those years
WHY do some people feel like they can't appreciate these pictures without putting down how we live today? And no, I'm not a millenial, I'm 45 years old, I remember some of this s**t and I can assure you, life was no better then.....just different.
These old pictures truly capture a slice of history, showcasing the evolution of shopping experiences over the years. It's incredible to see how much has changed, yet some aspects remain timeless. https://www.kuponkloud.com/call-on-doc-promo-code
It was a pleasure to view these old pictures of grocery stores, so thank you very much for sharing them. I was reflecting on the fact that most people now shop online due to the large number of fantastic online stores. I always purchase at Target because of the incredible quality and exceptional customer service; further recently, I learned about their excellent policy. I recently stumbled over this blog, which explains how students can receive "Target Student Discount" on their purchases. It really is great. Read it if you can. Here is a link to the blog: https://www.aintpayingfull.com/target-student-discount/
Is it true one effect of the ending of WW2 was the introduction of supermarkets in such diverse countries, both Allies & the enemy, in countries like France, Britain, Germany, Japan, Italy, Netherlands & Korea? If true, something good came out.
sad that only a few pics show the proud african americans that were the backbone of america...just pure white just like the bread....sad
Man, these take me back. I got my driver's license in the late 60's and my mom made me go grocery shopping when I did. Oh well, saved her having to drag us kids out, or me having to baby sit them (6 of us), and I got to drive the pink and white Rambler Station Wagon, lol. Much preferred the Suburban my dad got later on, though I put the first dent in it.
My husbands grandparents had a Ben Franklin store in Elkin, NC during the 60's and 70's. He still remembers working there during the summer.
I remember going to my grandmothers in Texas , which seemed like it took two years to get there to this small kid (me), she would have a big glass bottle of Dr Pepper in her frig, not to mention the glass bottle of Prell shampoo sitting on the tub, good times lol :) .. simple, life was.......
I wonder how they manage the supply chain, replenishment, merchandising, best seller articles, slow & fast moving product, etc.. without an excellent software and powerful database server.
Human mind, paper and pencils, calculating skills.
Load More Replies...When I look at these it hits me how different Europe was back then. My grandparents and parents struggled so much in Poland whilst Americans (not only, of course) had all this and more... I can still remember harsh times when I was a kid in the 80 and 90. This is heartbreaking to me. Not mentioning that there are still nations that are suffering up till day.
There’s a n old joke: An American, a Russian, and a Czech are asked “What is your opinion of the meat shortage?” The Russian says, “What’s an opinion?” The Czech says “What is meat?” The American says “What’s a shortage?”
Load More Replies...When supermarkets were first introduced in the UK shoppers kept on asking permission to take things from the shelves, they assumed they were all on display.
I remember the 1st Supermarket grocery store in my little town - they had a delivery system as people didnt have cars back then. Your shopping and on getting home 15 minutes later it was waiting on your doorstep
Load More Replies...What a neat list! It's probably weird, but when I travel to a different country (sometimes state, even!) I like to go to the grocery store to compare/contrast with my grocery at home.
All those made me wonder, if anyone looking now at them here recognizes themselves or their family... :)
The American body has changed quite a bit. I couldn't spot any obesity in the photos.
Yeah well, I'm pretty sure there is a correlation between over consumption of cheap food and obesity. The kids in the top photo are probably not as slim as they used to be...
Load More Replies...I love these pics! So refreshing from the Buzzfeed type ‘remember 1999 or 2004’ bs. This is nastalgia at its best for us people 40+. WE ARE NOT THAT OLD!
Maybe it`s me, but i see Softdrinks, Cookies, Cereals in the Food Carts, but almost no overweight people. What happenned? Also i see little packaging and no plastic bags. It is possible to avoid trash while shopping. Ah! Good old times!
First of all - food was food back then - made in big batches, yes, but from all natural ingredients - no sugar added to your sausages as today... no soy flour in meat, no added fructose syrup, or millions of e-something s**t. And back then even pasta boxes were about design. We used less processed foods, and less plastic. And we had healthier planet to live.
Load More Replies...In Curaçao there is still an grocery store with the old Miami Vice style front!! Looked so awesome. The outside never changed in all those years
WHY do some people feel like they can't appreciate these pictures without putting down how we live today? And no, I'm not a millenial, I'm 45 years old, I remember some of this s**t and I can assure you, life was no better then.....just different.
These old pictures truly capture a slice of history, showcasing the evolution of shopping experiences over the years. It's incredible to see how much has changed, yet some aspects remain timeless. https://www.kuponkloud.com/call-on-doc-promo-code
It was a pleasure to view these old pictures of grocery stores, so thank you very much for sharing them. I was reflecting on the fact that most people now shop online due to the large number of fantastic online stores. I always purchase at Target because of the incredible quality and exceptional customer service; further recently, I learned about their excellent policy. I recently stumbled over this blog, which explains how students can receive "Target Student Discount" on their purchases. It really is great. Read it if you can. Here is a link to the blog: https://www.aintpayingfull.com/target-student-discount/
Is it true one effect of the ending of WW2 was the introduction of supermarkets in such diverse countries, both Allies & the enemy, in countries like France, Britain, Germany, Japan, Italy, Netherlands & Korea? If true, something good came out.
sad that only a few pics show the proud african americans that were the backbone of america...just pure white just like the bread....sad
Man, these take me back. I got my driver's license in the late 60's and my mom made me go grocery shopping when I did. Oh well, saved her having to drag us kids out, or me having to baby sit them (6 of us), and I got to drive the pink and white Rambler Station Wagon, lol. Much preferred the Suburban my dad got later on, though I put the first dent in it.
My husbands grandparents had a Ben Franklin store in Elkin, NC during the 60's and 70's. He still remembers working there during the summer.
I remember going to my grandmothers in Texas , which seemed like it took two years to get there to this small kid (me), she would have a big glass bottle of Dr Pepper in her frig, not to mention the glass bottle of Prell shampoo sitting on the tub, good times lol :) .. simple, life was.......
I wonder how they manage the supply chain, replenishment, merchandising, best seller articles, slow & fast moving product, etc.. without an excellent software and powerful database server.
Human mind, paper and pencils, calculating skills.
Load More Replies...