“Created during the Great Depression,” Hammonds said, “the supermarket first delivered self-service and low prices, then boundless variety, healthy fresh foods, one-stop shopping, convenient prepared foods, and now gourmet, ethnic and organic offerings.
“Today the supermarket endures as a concept more than a single format. Whether consumers are shopping at a conventional supermarket, combination food-pharmacy store, a supercenter or a warehouse outlet, the business model remains the same: affordable prices, vast variety, abundant fresh foods and convenience.”
Among its contributions over the past 75 years, the supermarket:
It is recognized that the first supermarket was a King Kullen store opened August 1930 in Jamaica, NY. The King Kullen store, comparable to today’s no-frills warehouse outlets, served as the catalyst for a new age in food retailing, selling more than one thousand products. The company promoted the store unabashedly as “The World’s Greatest Price Wrecker!”
Other companies pioneering the supermarket concept in 1930 were Piggly Wiggly in Tennessee, Ralphs Grocery Company in California, and the Texas-based Weingarten’s Big Food Markets and Henke & Pillot, which was purchased by The Kroger Co. in 1956.
Key to the early success of the supermarket were the shopping cart, introduced in 1937, the automobile and free parking lots, and mechanical refrigerators in the home and store, eliminating the need for melting blocks of ice. More recently, the supermarket has kept pace with diversifying lifestyles demanding year-round produce from a global marketplace, ethnic foods, organic offerings, upscale and gourmet delectables, and a host of nonfood products and services — all sold at competitive prices.
‘A Uniquely Democratic Institution’
“Over the years,” Hammonds said, “the supermarket has always responded to consumer demand for several reasons:
“All these factors have made the supermarket a uniquely democratic institution. By what they purchase, families vote hundreds of times each week. Products that fly off the shelves are the winners, and those that don’t soon disappear.
“The supermarket is the epitome of free choice and free enterprise,” Hammonds said.
“That supermarkets can deliver this consumer service is a logistical marvel,” he said. “The aisles, lined with thousands of products, are restocked weekly through millions of deliveries from all parts of the world. And yet, while the cost of life’s other necessities — housing, healthcare, education — ever escalates, the family budget for food as a percentage of income continues to decline.
“As we mark the supermarket’s 75th birthday, consumers may want to pause the next time they walk the aisles of their favorite store. The boundless variety, the low cost, the brand quality, the abundant fresh foods, the one-stop convenience are all part of this ever-changing economic miracle that touches every American family every day.”
Links to Two Photos of Supermarkets From the 1930s:
1. Caption: The supermarket was invented to meet consumer needs during the early years of the Great Depression. Pictured here is a typical early supermarket. Click here for photo
2. Caption: The supermarket shopping cart (foreground), introduced in 1937, enabled customers to easily gather large amounts of groceries in a single trip. Click here for photo
Food Marketing Institute (FMI) conducts programs in public affairs, food safety, research, education and industry relations on behalf of its nearly 1,250 food retail and wholesale member companies in the United States and around the world. FMI’s U.S. members operate more than 25,000 retail food stores and almost 22,000 pharmacies with a combined annual sales volume of nearly $650 billion. FMI’s retail membership is composed of large multi-store chains, regional firms and independent operators. Its international membership includes 126 companies from more than 65 countries. FMI’s nearly 330 associate members include the supplier partners of its retail and wholesale members.
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