The Department Store With the Difference: The Story of Bradlees

Do You Remember Tuesdays rolls on into March, and with the start of the new month, a new theme!

We’re leaving behind dying and defunct restaurant chains behind, and moving into the retail world.  Four weeks, four department stores.  First up, a store that was the Wal-Mart/Target hybrid of its time.  If you grew up in New York, New Jersey, and Connecticut, this department store chain should ring a bell with you.

This week, we’re going shopping at Bradlees!

First up…

Savings On The Good Stuff!: The Story of Bradlees

Because no “Do You Remember?” retrospective article would be complete without history, it is important to know the story of the store. That only clears the way for the good stuff…personal nostalgia and commercials!!

Bradlees was founded on March 14, 1958, named for Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Connecticut, where the store founders held their early planning meetings.  The chain was acquired by grocery store chain Stop and Shop, which owned Bradlees until 1992.  In those years, you would be apt to see a Stop and Shop either in the same shopping center, or connected to Bradlees to make a superstore-type setting (think Super Wal-Mart of the 1960s through early 1990s).  Bradlees stores also had lunch counter/snack stand sections in their stores (you know, like Target and Wal-Mart do today).

af35b9a661985f4a75263fc69b22f9c3
Wayne, NJ Location (Source: grapeimgxs.pw)

Stop and Shop pulled out of the New York area in 1992, effectively ending their association with Bradlees, selling them to an investment group. Unfortunately, this was the beginning of a slow decline that resulted in Bankruptcy Protection in June 1995, resulting in store closings and the sale of some stores of Ames (a similarly-veined store in the New York/New Jersey/Connecticut/Pennsylvania region).

The company emerged from bankruptcy in early 1999 after making a decent profit through 1998 and into 1999.  However, this was short-lived, as the chain once again, as an economic downturn at the beginning of 2000, as well as increased gas and oil prices, competition from other Big Box-type stores, and tightening of trade credit made Bradlees operations unprofitable.

3805648755_f2c5eafa4d_m_d
Bordentown, NJ (Source: Google Trends – Hot Keyword Searches)

On December 26, 2000 (ugh, the day after Christmas), Bradlees filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, which made way for the chain to begin liquidating and ceasing operations as soon as possible.  Beginning in January 2001, Bradlees held their “Going Out of Business Sales,” with the final store closing in March 2001.  At the time it began ending operations, Bradlees had 105 stores in seven states and 10,000 employees.

Today, Bradlees locations have been taken on by other major retailers (the local former Bradlees location in my area, at the Cardiff Power Center/Cardiff Circle in Egg Harbor Township, NJ, has been Forman Mills since the 2000s).  I regularly shopped at the Toms River, NJ location, and that sat vacant for a little while (it was one of the last stores to close).  That shopping center, thankfully, doesn’t appear to be vacant these days.

dsc08259
Toms River, NJ location – Circa 2009 (Route 37 East) (Source: Caldor Rainbow)

Jake Williams, of Bright Sun Films, creates great documentaries.  His energy and thorough research make for interesting stories of retail past.  His series “Abandoned” covered Bradlees, and it is a fascinating watch.

Upload via Bright Sun Films

Mrs. B, Bradlees “Buyer”

Screenshot (235)

Bradlees had its share of slogans and ad campaigns, but one of their most famous featured Mrs. B., Bradlees Buyer Extraordinaire (not a really person – she was played by actress Cynthia Harris, and her role was just clever advertising).  You only buy what Mrs. B. buys, and nothing she buys is substandard crap (not the words used in the advertising).  She was a fixture of commercials in the 1970s and early 1980s, but made a comeback in the mid 1990s (the screenshot above is from a 1996 commercial).

How does she do it?

Screenshot (237)

I Was A Bradlees Shopper!

…are you surprised?

As a lifelong native of New Jersey, both the Central and Southern areas of the state, formerly living in an area served by the New York City media market, I shopped at Bradlees and watched their commercials.  In the 90s, Bradlees was the Target/Wal-Mart hybrid of its day – this was in the years where Wal-Mart and Target didn’t have a market presence like they do today.  Target and Wal-Mart are shopping standards these days, but in the 90s, it was all about Bradlees and its chief competitor, Caldor.

The sad shame was that as a teenager in the late 90s, there really were no indications that the store was on its way out.  I used to shop at the location on Route 37 East in Toms River (my grandparents lived near there), and that store closed by March 2001.  It was sad to see it go too, it was always a great store to shop at, and one in a line of department stores of my childhood that met their end just as I was growing up.

giphy

(18-year-old me was sad to see this commercial, but 36-year-old me would have been hugging the TV and screaming “NOOOO!”)

In those not-so-crazy days of “The Day After Thanksgiving” (before the stampeding shoppers of Black Friday became a standard), my Aunt Marilyn (and one of my cousins) stood in line at Bradlees the morning after Thanksgiving the year Pound Puppies were the hot new toy to get the kids in the family their own.

My brother and I named ours “Marilyn” and “Victor” after our aunt and uncle, probably as a way of thanking them for the great Christmas present!

(Don’t laugh, I was four years old!)

What Retrospective Would Be Complete Without…Commercials?

The YouTubers of YouTubeLand have their own memories via videotape, and have put their Bradlees commercials on YouTube for the world to see!

I’ve checked my own collection plenty of times, but for some reason, Bradlees commercials just don’t show up in any of my archives.  Which is a shame, really.

Be on the lookout for great bargains, Christmas, and Mrs. B., Bradlees buyer (for the purpose of those commercials)!

All uploads via 513official4, TheRetroTimeMachine, ClassicRetailAds, TVARCHIVEZ, and moldymac

That liquidation sale commercial makes me super sad.  Time doesn’t soften that blow.

So How About You?

Did you shop at Bradlees back in the day?  Did you find bargains hand-picked by Mrs. B?  Did you save on the good stuff, or ever say “Charge It!”

Screenshot (238)
Source: archive.org

Sound off in the comments (or get social on social media) and tell me about your Bradlees experience!

Retail month carries on here at Allison’s Written Words, with three more defunct retail stores to feature.  Mrs. B. may be giving all the deals (and buying all the good stuff you want), but Ms. V. (soon to be Mrs. P.) helps bring back all the memories.

My aim with these is to get the stories of former shoppers, but I would love to hear from former employees of any place mentioned in these articles.  If you happen to know someone who worked for any of the places featured, please ask them to comment!  I’d love to hear from them…and you, of course!

As they say in the close of a sale (and as I say all the time) have a great day!

giphy

(Oh, and if you really want to be mind blown, check out the archived website for Bradlees, which can be accessed from as far back as mid-1998!)

12 comments

  1. My first job was a bradlees cashier. A teamsters position as well. There were so many bargains and great merchandise to choose from. Who can forget, and appreciate Dollar Days. Hated working it, lines to the back of the store, but the sales!!!!! I miss Bradlees

    Liked by 1 person

  2. I realize my comment is a day late and a dollar short, but the internet is forever so I’ll post anyway! I was the Store Manager of the Bradlees on RT37 in Toms River from the mid-late 80’s-late-late 90’s, and yes, it was a great store to shop in and a great place to work with a lot of wonderful people on both sides of the cash registers. It was a shame we became the victims of corporate raiders at the time. Long story, but not the point here. I loved my job until those pirates made it impossible to work there anymore, and shortly afterwards, Bradlees was gone. Nice to to know it’s not completely forgotten!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. That was my Bradlees of choice!!!!! OMG thank you for sharing your story – my grandparents (both sides) lived in Toms River in the same retirement community, one block apart. My maternal grandmother used to take us to Bradlees, but my mom also preferred that store. I’m aware of a former location in Egg Harbor Township (where I live now), in the Cardiff Power Center on the Black Horse Pike (across the street from Boscov’s and the former Shore Mall). I have told my husband about Bradlees, and explained it as “the east coast Target, before Target moved into the area.” I remember being on 37 in early 2001, right after the location closed for good, and seeing the sign, after having seen the Going Out of Business commercials, was sad!

      I couldn’t forget the store, or those commercials, especially Mrs. B.!

      Like

  3. I worked at the Bradlees in Lewiston, Maine for nearly 15 years and my final day was the day our store closed in June of 1996. It was a great place to work for the most part and the employees were like family in many cases.
    I was hired part time as a cashier –it was a big deal when our store was upgraded to having the ability to scan items at the register lol! I can still remember my employee number was 2295. I also worked in layaway when coverage was needed. Then was hired full time in 1985 putting in 11 years as a full timer. I was trained on service desk, cash office, and as a front end supervisor. I also trained my share of employees. To this day I will occasionally run into an old customer wanting to reminisce about Bradlees, the first time allowed to open on Sundays, the insane Cabbage Patch craze, likewise, when Teddy Ruxpin and Skip -bo came out there was a the crowd. And of course, senior citizens day brought in the people! Who can remember hearing a page to the ” Sight and Sound Department ” or the ridiculous panic mode management would go into when “the auditors will be here tomorrow!” My personal take on that was, how much of a realistic picture of an audit can they get when they actually ANNOUNCE it ahead of time? ” And also , if you are doing your job right you aren’t going to NEED to panic when audits happen because you will be ready for them!
    That final closing announcement was a sad one indeed!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thank you for sharing your story!!! 🙂 I miss the days of shopping at Bradlees. It was the Target of the east coast, before that really moved into this part of the country (we got one in 1997 in my area). My aunt and one of my cousins waited in line outside Bradlees on Black Friday the year Pound Puppies came out, so they could get them for me, my brother, and my two cousins (this was before my aunt was a grandma of 10 kids, so she always bought cool gifts for me, my brother, and our two cousins).

      The end of Bradlees in my area was sad, as it was my senior year of high school (2000-2001), so big changes were coming already. I hated seeing that store go.

      Like

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s