After posting my first post in the series on store exclusives yesterday, I discovered Fuji had blogged about store exclusives last week! But he's going to get a surprise in this post...
Woolworth's was a very popular store when I was kid. Known as "Woolies" in the UK, they were famous for having a large pick'n'mix confectionary display. In a lot of places, Woolies was one of the bigger shops and the only place to buy records and CDs, kid's clothing and toys, as well as a range of hardware items.
Many stores also had cafes and when I was very little my Mum used to take me to the big Woolies in the centre of Birmingham, where we lived. That's one of my earliest memories. I must have been about three years old. I can remember the cafe with its yellow formica tables, and eating sausage, chips and beans, which was a typical offering on a kids' menu at the very end of the 1970s.
Because it was a ubiquitous high street name in the UK, I remember being surprised to find that it started in America. The British company was independent from 1982, and outlasted its American parent company by about a decade. It was quite a big story when the company closed down all its UK stores around time of the recession of 2008, as it left a big hole in many town centres, particularly in smaller towns across the UK.
Like some other stores, Woolworth - the American one - sold exclusive card sets. I have acquired two cards from them. One has the Woolworth branding on it, but the other is just branded as Topps.
Card Number 695: Topps (Woolworth) Baseball Highlights, 1987; #16
No reference to Woolworth on the front - but this is listed as a Woolworth set on Trading Card Database
Total: 696 cards
I feel like I might have gone into a Woolworth's at some point in life (like on a road trip or something), but don't have any actual memories. Based on your description, it sounds very similar to the Kmart my parents went to when I was a kid. I'm impressed that you remembered "yellow formica". Lol. Those two words stood out to me in this post. That was very popular when I was a kid.
ReplyDeleteYes. I can really picture it quite well. It was a proper cafeteria where you took a tray and there was a long counter with food ready to be served.
DeleteAnother Woolies memory is buying Star Wars: The Phantom Menace action figures in one of their stores because they were on buy one get one free. I was an adult then, but my goodness that was over 20 years ago!!