CLICK HERE for Benton's
Grocery
CLICK HERE for Arnette's
Grocery
CLICK HERE for Williams
Grocery
CLICK HERE for White Spot
Grocery & Market
NECESSITIES --
Where did we shop prior to Publix, Winn-Dixie, and Albertson's? Many
Jacksonville residents looked no further than several blocks away: They
frequented neighborhood grocery stores. Sometimes operated by a mom &
pop, these enterprises were sort of like convenience stores: They turned
up everywhere, and they offered a variety of products. Neighborhood
grocers, though, did provide more substantial edibles, like meat & vegetables,
rather than focusing on fast snacks.
The heyday of the little markets occurred during the early to mid 1900s, before
supermarkets muscled them from center stage. Just check the 1925
Jacksonville city directory. It lists
over 600 small groceries, ranging
from the Abdullah Brothers to F. A. Zeising. And
remember that far fewer people lived in the city at that time. In
contrast, the 2002
BellSouth directory indicates a smaller number of grocers,
even counting the convenience stores. The businesses in the
2002 volume are often franchises, not unique operations like most of the old-time
neighborhood markets.
Just fifty years ago,
local grocers had already begun to fade from the scene. Jacksonville
shoppers patronized large, chain competitors like A & P, Piggly Wiggly,
Setzer's, Lovett's, and Daylight Super Markets. By 1955, the
self-service supermarkets were responsible for 60% of America's grocery
sales. And chain convenience stores have also carved out a large niche
of the food retail industry. In 1965, for example, Jacksonville
residents dashed into Seven Elevens, Johnson's Mini Markets, and Pak's Zippy
Marts.
OCALA RECOLLECTIONS -- They're going, but they're
not forgotten: Neighborhood groceries bring back warm memories. A store in my Florida
hometown has even popped up in a handful of my dreams over the years. I
often stopped by there as a kid during the Sixties & early Seventies.
"Betty's" was run by Betty, a senior citizen known throughout her Ocala
neighborhood. Her grocery was located in its own little building, an old, two-story, concrete block
structure on a corner lot. In front was a dusty parking lot covered with
lime. The slamming of the store's screen doors was a familiar sound to
local customers.
"Betty's" didn't offer fresh meat & vegetables, but it did maintain a small
supply of such edibles as bread, grits, macaroni, canned food, and pancake mix.
When I knew Betty, however, she probably made most of her money from candy &
soda sales. Her store
proved a mecca to students who attended Eighth Street Elementary School and
Osceola Middle School, both located across the street.
According to neighborhood lore, Betty's father bestowed the grocery to his
daughter during the 1940s. Betty was
short, heavy-set, and bespectacled, a
very kind lady who may've been a spinster. Kids & neighbors often
visited her. She held court in a wooden rocking chair behind crowded counter
tops & glass cases, crammed with penny candy, display stands for BC Powder &
666 Cold Remedies, and other tiny items. The store looked rather dark
and dusty, but it didn't smell musty, since Betty kept a large backdoor
open for circulation and a little light.
SWEET TOOTH PARADISE --
Kids loved to buy stuff at Betty's. During the mid Sixties, a candy
bar & a small Coke cost a dime, plus a penny deposit for the bottle.
Youngsters would just leave the money on the counter. They then sat on
an outside step and drank the soda, soon returning the empties for the one
cent refunds.
Pop sickles and Nehi
grapes also tasted "groovy"
on a hot, sticky day. Betty would patiently cut a pop sickle in half for
a child who wanted to share with a friend. This
proprietor didn't like to see her little customers disappointed,
as I witnessed one morning
when I was about four. One of her penny
gumball machines contained a few pieces of specially colored gum that could be
redeemed for a dime's worth of other candy. When a unlucky boy spent a
lot on the machine but didn't receive a special gumball, Betty unlocked the
dispenser's top and used a spoon to fish around for one, giving it to the child.
Betty also saved RC bottle caps for my older brother & his friends.
They used
them to see movies at the now-closed Ocala Theater. RC sponsored matinees
that drew hundreds of kids, lined up along the side of the downtown theater
into the back parking lot. The company required a certain number of its caps for
admission.
What fun we had trick or treating at Betty's! Each Halloween, my
brothers & I climbed the outside staircase to Betty's teeny apartment above
the grocery and stood on the landing as she handed out homemade fudge, fresh
from the stove. When I was small, I was all eyes, peering into the
living room. It amazed me that someone could reside above
her place of business. And I remember how surprised I was when I
once spotted
Betty at the nearby Winn Dixie. She appeared to me to be a fish out of water,
since I had known her to always be at her own store.
When Betty passed away in the mid 1980s, it seemed like the end of a local
institution. On behalf of the neighborhood, my mother placed a flower wreath on
one of grocery's doors.
Candy necklaces, wax lips, and Sugar Daddies gave way to scanners,
modems, and CD burners. At first, the old grocery was revamped and
turned into a fabric shop. It is now occupied by a popular computer
store.

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