A grocery store is a store that primarily retails a general range of food products, which may be fresh or packaged.
Beginning as early as the 14th century, a grocer (or “purveyor”) was a dealer in comestible dry goods such as spices, peppers, sugar, and (later) cocoa, tea, and coffee. From the late 1600s until the 1850s, the word “grocery” referred to a place where people went to drink.
As increasing numbers of staple food-stuffs became available in cans and other less-perishable packaging, the trade expanded its province. Today, grocers deal in a wide range of staple food-stuffs including such perishables as dairy products, meats, and produce. Such goods are, hence, called groceries.
Here is a set of amazing photos from Massillon Museum that shows what grocery stores of Massillon looked like in the 1880s and 1890s.
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Albright & Co. Grocery Store, Massillon |
Albright and Breckel Grocery Store, Massillon |
Albright and Breckel Grocery Store, Massillon |
C.G. Audi Grocery, Massillon |
Charles Breckel Grocer, 10 North Erie St., Massillon |
Ed. C. Segner Store, Flour, Feed, Lime, Hair, Cement, Massillon |
G.F. Breckel, Massillon |
Graber Bros. Meat Market, Massillon |
Graber Brother's Meat Market, Massillon |
Graze and Sonnhalter Store, Massillon |
Gust Breckel Grocery Store, Massillon |
Herings Grocery Store, Massillon |
Herman Bros. Fancy Groceries, Massillon |
Krier's Grocery Store, Massillon |
Lutz and Graze Groceries, Massillon |
Martin and Vogt Grocery Store, Massillon |
North east corner Main and Clay Streets, Massillon |
Paroz Grocery Store, Massillon |
Paul's Meat Market, Massillon |
Pietzckers Grocery Store, Massillon |
Pietzckers Grocery Store, Massillon |
S.A. Conrad and Co., Massillon |
Schworm Bros. Grocery, Massillon |
Schworm Grocery Store interior, Massillon |
Schworm Grocery store, Massillon |
Sonnhalter and Brenner Grocery Store, Massillon |
Sonnhalter Store, Massillon |
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Wade Bros. Meat Market, Massillon |