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Wait, how did this chain get exempted from the Boston bag ban?

Bradlees bag in Roslindale

Ezra Freedman noticed this scene on a Roslindale street this morning, wonders:

Is Bradlee’s grandfathered into the plastic bag ban?

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Comments

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I'm pretty clueless sometimes, but not that clueless. Somebody posted a funny photo and he tagged me, so ...

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?

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on trash day. You'll see a bunch of Stop and Shop bags I get for free in Quincy.

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That is now my new pick up line.

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... I have a Piece Goods Bag around here somewhere...

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For those who can't remember when they closed wikipedia has some decent history on defunct department stores.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradlees

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In an effort to get the longest lines(?), Bradlee‘s required cashiers to type in both the price and the 10 or so digit stock number for each item bought. Ah, the good ole days before scanners.

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How many decades old is it???

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I hope a paper bag wouldn't disintegrate in your house either.

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I miss Woolworth too. People may look down their nose at that type of store now, but there was always some interesting, not to mention useful, thing to find in these colorful places. Today's high end stores are just plain boring.

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Hell, I miss Building 19.

We still use the Xmas tree and the kitchen table we bought at Bradlees.

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Everyone knows about the windows, but I got a flier once that had a sale on salvaged baseball gloves.
They were stamped 'salvaje', so naturally they ran with 'Autographed by the great All Star player Hector Salvaje!'

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Building 8 sold kitchen and bath cabinets , got their name from the building they were in at the old Hingham shipyard.

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Maybe because I only caught the last decade of the chain when they were obviously past their prime and beelining to insolvency.

They were not fun places. Think of a K-Mart with less inventory and more disorganized. (Ames too.)

I don't miss these places. You can't blame Amazon for their demise.

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...I still have a Bradlees branded jig saw. Probably paid six bucks for it.

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You can still visit Woolworth today... just go to Foot Locker (Foot Locker is what remains of Woolworth USA)

Jokes aside, Family Dollar and Dollar General are pretty much Woolworth's business model. Smaller stores in smaller towns/city centers selling a wide variety of goods, housewares, food, and other stuff at discount prices. Quality isn't very good, but it is cheap.

Woolworth was pretty much the same thing. Its really too bad Woolworth could not hang on (well the 5 and 10 store part, not Foot Locker) a few more years and it would have lead the discount store market.

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and those were part of Woolworth's appeal, and why people miss them.

Also, the Woolworth in downtown Boston was huge -- 3 stories. It is now divided into TJ Maxx, Home Goods, Marshall's, and possibly some other stores I don't remember anymore.

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Dollar stores don't sell goldfish and turtles. I also remember Woolworth's goods generally being higher quality than what's in Dollar General, but then, you'd have had to really search for stuff that bad in those days.

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Woolworths always had parakeets flying around as well. And, the lunch counter ladies! What a treat to get a hot dog at Woolworths!

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Woolworths was a class act. Always well lit and interactive with their neighbors. I don't know of any other stores that sponsored plastic model car making competitions.

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The one at South Shore Plaza had great subs.

And I could really go for a Great American at Brigham’s right about now...sigh.

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And raise you Zayre, Caldor, and Ann & Hope.

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I'll raise an Ames

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at Assembly Square. Not many of these left.

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Time to stock up on KMart plastic bags. They'll be vintage someday.

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There was a single strip mall on the Cape that had a Tweeter, Gateway store, and a KMart (across from a Sears).

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Never heard of that one.

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N/T

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n/t

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and raise you a Mammoth Mart.
Yes, I am old.

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was once a Mammoth Mart.

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Dont forget Raymonds and JM Fields.

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and I'll raise you a Brands Mart. Never went there, but I remember their advertising. They were on an industrial side street off Concord Ave, near Fresh Pond in Cambridge. I believe their product mix was similar to Lechmere, heavy on appliances and electronics.

There is a chain with that name today in Florida and Georgia, selling similar merchandise, but I don't think it's related.

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like Service Merchandise once was (but later), by the rotary where Alewife Brook Pkwy starts? My father joined that and shopped there sometimes.

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We called it Ann & Hopeless.

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and raise you a J M Fields

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I am probably one of the few who remembers the Turn-Style. There was one at Northgate in Revere. It was one of those Almy's type of stores. Their gimmick was you had to go through a turnstile to get in.

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But Hills is where the toys are..

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And I'll raise you with an SS Kresge's. Remember when that used to be right in the heart of downtown crossing?

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Unlike the downtown Woolworth, it was before my time. Where was it?

(Kresge is still around, barely; today it is called Kmart.)

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Kresges was at the corner of Washington Street and Temple Place, where the Men's Warehouse is now. It actually lasted well into the 80s, but by that point it was a mere shadow of it's former self. That same location later housed a large record store in the 80s, the name of which I cannot remember (not Discount Records which had been in the same general area but was gone by then and not Strawberries which was further North on Washington)), and was later an optometrist place. There also used to be a Neisners at Washington and Bromfield. Also a big Grants in the building that later housed Barnes & Noble and now remains vacant.

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was it Sam Goody's? I don't think Tower had a downtown store, and HMV was around the corner on Winter Street.

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Sam Goody's was on the corner of Washington and Winter, across from the Corner Mall (which was formerly Gilchrists). Goody's was a terrible record store. Astronomical prices, bad selection, unknowledgable staff. I think the one at Washington and Temple Place was called Grooves or something generic like that.

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Speaking of relics from the 80s in that area, the Herman's (We are sports!) sign stayed up a lot longer than Herman's.

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This makes me happy. And makes me feel old for the first time.

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:)

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Danvers has an Ann & Hope as well. Not as big as the old stores, but still a great store.

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As a former Rhode Islander who has lived in Roslindale for 8 years, I STILL get my x-mas tree at the Cumberland Ann & Hope every year.

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There's an Ann & Hope in Westboro.

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well, I'll raise you a Spag's....oh, wait. Nevermind.

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I loved bradlees n caldor as a kid they had those rickety lil rides,horrible popcorn ahh man it was the best

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Bradlees warehouse now an Amazon one,

Braintree Amazon Distribution Center Gets Planning Board Approval

https://patch.com/massachusetts/braintree/braintree-amazon-distribution-...

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Stay you, Roslindale!

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Home of Sherbos...........

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