Showing posts with label retail history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label retail history. Show all posts

Sunday, January 10, 2021

About that name Publix ... and its link to Paramount Studios

 




By Jane Feehan

George Jenkins opened Publix Food Store in Winter Haven, Florida Sept. 6, 1930. In 1940 he launched Publix Super Market; the rest is history and part of everyday life for the millions of us who shop there. But the provenance of the name Publix goes back to Dec. 21, 1925 and it’s linked to show business.

That’s the year the two largest movie theater groups in the world—Famous Players Lasky and Balban and Katz Theatres of Chicago and the Middle West—merged to form Publix Theatres, Inc., an affiliate of Paramount Studios (formed 1912 and led by Adolph Zukor). From that date, Sam Katz president and Harold B. Franklin, vice president, oversaw operations of 700 theaters throughout the nation, including those in St. Petersburg, Tampa, West Palm Beach, Jacksonville and a list of others in Florida.

The film industry was an expanding and relatively new form of entertainment in the 1920s, especially after the first “talkie” with Al Jolson in the Jazz Singer released in 1927. There was still an attachment to live theater or vaudeville, so it was common to see a movie paired up with an extravagant live revue before a film started (much like latter day Radio City Music Hall).  

Revues included scores of entertainers. One newspaper in Buffalo claimed $2 million was spent to provide for “the greatest in picture and mammoth stage production.” Publix Theatres built a reputation for operating lavish theaters with plush carpeting and luxurious seating. Their reputation also included maintaining a well-trained staff.

The Buffalo Times exclaimed Publix Theatres entertained on a “scale so elaborate that no single theatre could afford it.”  The New York Daily News billed one of the Publix Theatres, the Paramount in the Paramount Building in Times Square, as “New York’s Newest Wonder.” A reporter for The Middletown Times Herald in New York state wrote “as Publix goes, so goes the rest of the show business. Expect everything in a Publix Theatre because you won’t be disappointed.”

The stock market crash of 1929 changed the course of Publix Theaters, Inc. Debt piled up. Bills went unpaid. The company restructured in 1930 but filed for bankruptcy and went into receivership in 1933. By 1935 the company reorganized as Paramount Studios.

The Publix theaters were failing so George Jenkins "borrowed" the name. He liked the name for his new business; its reputation was tops – and remains so to this day--though for a different business with a much longer history.

 

Sources:

Yonkers Herald, Dec. 21, 1925

Buffalo Times, Jan. 14, 1926

Buffalo Times, May 27, 1926

Yonkers Herald, Sept. 21, 1926

New York Daily News, Nov. 28, 1926

Middletown Times Herald, June 10, 1930

New York Daily News, July 20, 1933

Library of Congress

Florida State Archives/ Florida Memory: https://www.floridamemory.com/items/show/321985


Tags: Movie theaters, Florida in the 1920s, Paramount Studios, Publix Theatres, Inc.

Monday, October 15, 2018

7 Facts about the Jefferson SuperStores ... SOFLA History

Jefferson  Stores, Fort Lauderdale 1974
Florida State Archives/Erickson






1. First Jefferson Store established in Miami in 1946 by hotelier Harry Mufson (d. 1973), once part owner of the San Souci Hotel who later built the Eden Roc Hotel (1956) causing a rancorous split with Fontainebleau owner and partner, Ben Novack;

2. Jefferson SuperStores was tapped as the nation’s Outstanding Westinghouse Dealer in 1953;

3. The Fort Lauderdale store opened July 20, 1960 at 2400 N. Federal Highway with: 1,000 
parking spaces, 156,000 sq. ft., a photographic studio, shoe repair, beauty shop, pet shop, home improvement department, bake shop, restaurant, tailor, dry cleaner, jewelry department (featuring Miss Florida, Kathy Magda, for opening day), and Funland’s indoor rides for kids;

4. By 1969, other South Florida locations included prime sites in Boca Raton, Hollywood,  West Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach;

5. By the 1970s, more than 20 Jefferson SuperStores operated in Florida, with 500 employees at its Miami headquarters.

6. Montgomery Ward purchased Jefferson’s in 1973 for $37 million in stock; the stores were then known as Jefferson Wards;

7. By 1985, Jefferson Ward operated 23 stores in Florida and three in Virginia but 200 of its 500 employees were laid off at the Miami headquarters. The same year, Jefferson’s was put up for sale but merchandise was eventually liquidated by AMA Management Company.



Sources:
Miami News, Nov. 19, 1953
Fort Lauderdale News, July 20, 1960
Miami News, Oct. 13, 1961
Palm Beach Post, Nov. 21, 1969
Miami News, May 14, 1973
Miami News, May 30, 1985
Miami News, Aug. 16, 1985



Tags: Fort Lauderdale retail history, Fort Lauderdale history, Harry Mufson, Eden Roc Hotel, Miami history, Jefferson SuperStores