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The 2000s brought new, stronger competition to the New York area, and the chain shrank, receding mostly to Manhattan. At the time of A&P's liquidation in 2015, The Food Emporium had 11 stores. The banner was acquired from bankrupt A&P in late 2015 by Key Food Stores Co-op, Inc. , which currently operates thirteen of The Food Emporium stores.
Food Fair, also known by its successor name Pantry Pride, was a large supermarket chain in the United States.It was founded by Samuel N. Friedland, and his brother George I. Friedland who opened the first store (as Reading Giant Quality Price Cutter) in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, in the late 1920s.
Associated Supermarkets provide services to a network of approximately 250 independent grocery retail stores, many located in New York City. [1] The company also has stores on Long Island, in Upstate New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, North Carolina, South Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Virginia. Associated is a banner ...
A&P. Perhaps one of the best-known defunct grocery store chains, A&P, or the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company, traces its roots back to 1859, beginning as a mail-order tea business in New York ...
Penn Traffic operated 43 supermarkets under the Bi-Lo trade name across Pennsylvania, and also distributed food to 51 franchised and independent supermarkets from its DuBois, Pennsylvania, distribution facility. Quality Markets, founded in Jamestown, New York, in 1913, joined the Penn Traffic family in 1979. Penn Traffic operated a total of 34 ...
Most of its stores are in the four boroughs of New York City outside Manhattan and carry a variety of products. Met Foods is a banner of Associated Supermarket Group (ASG). Met Foods has various locations throughout the New York and New Jersey area. Founded in 1941 in Syosset, Long Island, it was purchased by the DiGiorgio Corporation in 1964–65.
Hills Supermarkets, owned by H. Frederick Hill, was a New York based grocery store chain which was popular in the 1960s. [1] In May 1977 it was sold as a subdivision of Pueblo International Inc., to Pantry Pride .
It included a Woolworth five-and-dime store, a Walgreens drug store, a Food Fair supermarket, a Buster Brown shoe store, a public auditorium, a movie theater, and an outdoor ice rink. The original anchor of the mall was a 3-level 320,000 ft² (31,900 m²) Macy's , which opened on August 29, 1956.