The Palo Alto History Project
Woolworth's                                                        
                                                      352 University Avenue & Stanford Shopping Center
Woolworth's: Palo Alto's Five and Dime

In recent years, Walmart has taken a bevy of verbal attacks from small town merchants and competition
watchdogs.  The complaint stands that America’s biggest retail outlet moves into small towns, undercuts
local prices and puts Main Street “Mom & Pops” out of business.  But while the economic gigantism of
Walmart may damage any sense of free market justice in small town America, such complaints were heard
about other stores long before Sam Walton ever started lowering smiley-faced sticker prices.    For decades
it was the F.W. Woolworth’s store on every American Main Street that had local shop owners muttering
about out-of-town corporate bullies.  Here in Palo Alto, department stores like I. Magnin’s,
Bergmann’s
and The Emporium had long runs, but for 70 years, it was F.W. Woolworth’s that was the place to get just
about everything.

Frank Winfield Woolworth began his business career with a couple of big ideas.  When he opened the
original Woolworth’s, it was one of the first department stores to put the merchandise out on the floor.  Up
until then, customers would hand their shopping lists to a clerk who would fetch the items from behind the
counter --- usually leading to some negotiation over price.  Woolworth’s also tried to rewrite the customary
department store economic playbook.  Slashing prices to almost ridiculous lows, F.W. attempted to simply
sell as many goods as possible, trusting that profits would follow.  

And indeed they did.  After an initial failed start on a $300 loan, F.W. Woolworth’s “five and dime” model
prospered in the 1880s, --- originally in Lancaster, Pennsylvania --- and later across the nation.   Soon F.
W. was on his way to realizing his stated goal of putting red and gold awnings “in every town of over 10,000
in the country.”  

The riches that came to Woolworth would make him one of the richest men in America --- and one of the
most extravagant.   Mourning the death of his daughter and the illness of his wife, Woolworth embarked on a
heedless, almost desperate attempt to cure his depression through material satisfaction.  He built an entire
row of mansions for his daughters on New York’s illustrious 5th Avenue as well as a mansion on Long
Island that included a room-sized pipe organ, a $2 million pink marble staircase, and a full-time staff of 70
gardeners.   The gaudy spending spree culminated with the $13 million Woolworth’s Building, which was
paid for entirely in cash and was erected in 1911 as the world’s tallest building.  

After Woolworth’s death in 1919, the company continued to prosper under the savvy guidance of the
company board --- “his boys,” as F.W. had referred to them.   While inflation eventually forced the stores to
raise prices above a dime, Woolworth’s continued to expand and thrive in the Great Depression and through
the mid-century.  The introduction of the famed Woolworth’s lunch counter further helped attract
customers.  The red stools and grilled hot dogs, chicken soup and milkshakes, helped pioneer the teaming of
food and shopping which is now second-nature to stores like Ikea, Target and Borders Books.  And in the
days before malls and drive-ins, the Woolworth’s counter was a popular hangout spot in virtually every
American small town.

In 1917, Palo Alto got its own Woolworth’s.  The original location was at 222 University Avenue and its
opening was a big event for a small town.  A musical orchestra greeted customers at a special dedication in
which hundreds of customers turned out just to “look over” the merchandise before the store officially
opened for business the following day.  In those early days, Woolworth’s sold many items recognizable
today --- though at much cheaper prices.  A look back at old newspaper ads reveals that you could get
three pencils for a nickel, a baseball for a dime and a mirror for just fifteen cents.  Today’s shoppers would
be less familiar with other items for sale such as dust caps, jelly tumblers and tatting shuttles.

In 1949, Woolworth’s moved down the street to 352 University Avenue, the 185 foot-long building now
occupied by Long’s Drugs.  The new opening was again a big deal, bringing out the mayor, fire chief, chief
of police, and president of the chamber of commerce.  They helped usher in the brand new building that
featured such novelties as air conditioning, fluorescent lighting and a new lunch fountain.  And with the
longest frontage along University Avenue, this new Woolworth’s store would anchor the University Avenue
shopping district for the next four decades.

And yet customers across the country in the 1950s were heading out of downtown for the convenience of
suburban malls.  Woolworth’s went with them.  In Palo Alto, this progression took shoppers away from
University Avenue and out to the newly christened
Stanford Shopping Center.  While the downtown location
remained, a new Woolworth’s opened in 1955 as one of eleven original members.

Of course, in those days the Stanford Shopping Center was more like a neighborhood mall than the regional
luxury center of chic that it would later become.  The Stanford’s early incarnation --- which included a
hardware store and a Purity supermarket --- welcomed Woolworth’s as one of its own.  

By the 1980s, however, the Stanford Shopping Center had experienced some serious upward mobility.   
While still a profitable store and the ideal place to pick up some AA batteries, underpriced shampoo or a
pack of gum, Woolworth’s had increasing become an anathema to the Stanford Shopping Center’s new
market strategy.  In 1986, Rosemary McAndrews, the overseer of Stanford’s march to boutiqueville, said
that Woolworth’s no longer “fit the Stanford image.”  Indeed, Woolworth’s did seem a bit out of place
alongside Tiffany’s,
Bloomingdale’s and Pottery Barn for Kids.

Actually, by the 1990s, Woolworth’s was struggling all over the country.  Its market niche had been usurped
by the bigger all-purpose stores like Walmart and Target which offered more brands, more square footage
and a lot more parking.  Additionally, as supermarkets and drug stores expanded to sell more than just food
and medicine, Woolworth’s value declined.  

In 1994, Woolworth’s closed more than half of its 800 locations across the nation, but Palo Alto’s two
stores were already gone.  In 1989, the Woolworth’s on University Avenue made its final sale and the
Stanford Shopping Center Woolworth’s bowed to pressure in 1991.  The glory days were surely over for
the once mighty Woolworth’s.  Consolidating its retail assets six years later, the Woolworth Corporation
made the decision to change its name to the Venator Group.  The name Woolworth’s, it seemed, was just
so yesterday.
                                                                                                                       -Matt Bowling
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Sources:
Palo Alto Historical Association, Palo Alto Weekly, Palo Alto Times,
Peninsula Times Tribune, Wikipedia,
Remembering Woolworth's by
Karen Plunkett-Powell,
F.W. Woolworth's and the American Five and
Dime
by Jean Maddern Pitrone
A map of the Downtown East area where Woolworth's thrived at the current site of Long's Drugs.
Frank Winfield in top hat.
The University Avenue
Woolworth's stands where
Long's Drugs now resides.  
The Hotel President looms in
the background.
A postcard of the first
Woolworth's.
The 57 story Woolworth's
Building was paid for in cash.
Frank Winfield Woolworth,
one of the most successful
businessmen of the 20th
Century.
A postcard of a typical
Woolworth's lunch counter.
A postcard of the
Woolworth's at theStanford
Shopping Center.  Banana
Republic now stands in that
spot.
Memories added by our readers:
"My father was a manager for several of these stores and my brother and I worked at
several through the early '70s.  The one on 5th Avenue in NY was a wonderful store
with 2 floors.  I think that it was my favorite."
-Judith