View Full Version : T.G.&Y. Stores:Gone but not forgotten
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Generals64 07-01-2009, 08:32 PM Who else worked in the TG&Y HQ on this thread? When I went to work there in 1969 the men all had to wear white shirts and ties and the women all had to wear dresses or skirts.
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Hey guy, I worked at the headquarters as well as in the stores;....Larry Shafer comes around the thread every now and then. you knew him I'm sure and you know me. By the way, Cal Warren was the last retail to work in the office....He used the old downstairs as his office over by the Southwest parking lot...If you are who I think you are....How about some Printing Presses?????
Prunepicker 07-01-2009, 09:35 PM Who else worked in the TG&Y HQ on this thread? When I went to work there
in 1969 the men all had to wear white shirts and ties and the women all had
to wear dresses or skirts.
I knew a girl who worked at the one just north of Bruno's on N.W 36th and N.
Western. It was @ 1972 and her name was Mary Ann. Maybe just Mary.
Long dark hair and very pretty.
Generals64 07-01-2009, 09:44 PM I knew a girl who worked at the one just north of Bruno's on N.W 36th and N.
Western. It was @ 1972 and her name was Mary Ann. Maybe just Mary.
Long dark hair and very pretty.
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Sam McCord was a "mighty"man in the year of '92 with George Pratt his partner and brother Billy too when he came back from North to Alaska....No gold?....see any whales???? are you really back in the lower states or are you just playing with us??? Did you report in to the mother-hood yet.? Oh yeah, Bruno's is now in the TG&Y building...That was a "dinky" but Successful store for TG&Y. If the finances were available there would be about 15 of the old locations that I would be willing to gamble on again and that store was one of them. Mr. Young always smiled if you asked about the Stores overall....But, if you asked about HIS Variety stores he would give you and earful....Glad you are back...now, I'm sick......Life goes on in the Nostalgia world...the pruner shows back up.....
gen70 07-02-2009, 01:02 PM The T.G.&Y. store at 74th & Penn. had a lunch counter or snack bar you might call it in the very back of the store. I remember they had a burgundy cherry ice cream that was awesome, best I ever had. Anyone know the brand name?
[Maybe Generals64 knows?]
Generals64 07-02-2009, 02:03 PM The T.G.&Y. store at 74th & Penn. had a lunch counter or snack bar you might call it in the very back of the store. I remember they had a burgundy cherry ice cream that was awesome, best I ever had. Anyone know the brand name?
[Maybe Generals64 knows?]
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if my memory serves me correctly, we got all of the ice Cream and dairy products needed from the Borden Route Salesman. I can remember the lady that ran the Snack Bar but I can't remember her name.
gen70 07-02-2009, 02:24 PM Thanks 64, I'll check around here and see if anyone carries Borden's.
RealJimbo 07-02-2009, 03:46 PM No printing presses now...but I had a career in printing even after the demise of T.G.&Y. Did you buy a press or two from the old T.G.&Y. shop?
Generals64 07-02-2009, 03:55 PM No printing presses now...but I had a career in printing even after the demise of T.G.&Y. Did you buy a press or two from the old T.G.&Y. shop?
__________________________________________________ _____________________
Yep, you're getting close. didn't we see each other at the Reunion?
RealJimbo 07-14-2009, 02:37 PM Yep. Now I know who I'm talking to. I'll never work with a better bunch of people than I got to know at TG&Y. We really were like family. The reunions are nice, but it would be nicer to get together more often.
I worked in the HQ my whole career. Once in about 1981 we had a water main break under the floor in the middle section of the office, "walnut row" we called it. You could hear the rumble under the floor for about 10 minutes before the water came blowing out from under the floor, mostly down in the Advertising Department. Fran Keller who had become more of a fixture than an employee by that time was dozing behind a newspaper (which she did most afternoons those days) and was awakened by the rumble and the roar. She usually moved at a snail's pace but grabbed her coat off the coat tree in her office, grabbed her purse in the same motion and was out the south door on her way to her car when the blowout occurred. I had never seen her move that fast in all the years I worked there.
Those of us who worked under Bill Johns who was in charge of building maintenance stayed all night cleaning up water that had been a foot deep down in the Adv. Dept. Wet pickup vaccuums, squeegees, mops, anything we could grab was employed that night to clean it up. What a mess!
By the way, I've been inviting Lawanza to the reunions every year but she won't come. You'd be interested to know that she works for Bags, Inc. where we once bought all our plastic shopping bags.
Bulldog 07-15-2009, 11:38 AM ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Fighting the FLU...man this is horrible. The store was next door to the Humpty Dumpty about mid way in the center. I was in Texas when "Bud" was there. I did (over the years) have to deal with Bud ........... could be a tremendous pain if he tried just a little. The store closed in the late 70's, early eighties and a ladies dress shop was there for a long time. Jim Kelley originally opened the store in the late fifties, early sixties....I managed the store in '68 - 71......Really like the store and the Job. I have always wondered what would happen if a developer with a "dead" center would go back and re-develop the old centers with the basic tenants...i.e. Drug Store, Grocery store (family owned) a true Variety store...ladies/men's apparel stores. a Dodson's type Cafeteria. I believe the consumer is NOW "tired" of all the "hype" and Glitz. they seem to just want NO turmoil and a simple place to do their daily shooping...Look at 59th/Western.HMMMMM
Great memories....cannot let this one go Generals64 and you know why. I was there in 72 and early 73 and it was a great place to work. The idea on shopping centers is great also. I would much rather go into a small TG&Y like 59th & Penn for a roll of paper towels than WalMart.
Thanks for the memories and tell the Mrs. hello from me.
Prunepicker 07-17-2009, 05:24 PM Hear ye! Hear ye!
Southside OKC Memories
Get Together
Coit's Root Beer Drive-In
2500 S. Western
TOMORROW!
JULY 18, 1:30pm
Bring memories, memorabilia,
photos, yearbooks, etc...
sansee 07-23-2009, 08:11 PM i got my first barbie doll at TG&Y on sw 29th st next to humpty dumpty grocery store and my little colored easter chicks at the one on sw 44th and may
Generals64 07-26-2009, 08:02 AM i got my first barbie doll at TG&Y on sw 29th st next to humpty dumpty grocery store and my little colored easter chicks at the one on sw 44th and may
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My first Real job with TG&Y started at the store (Airline) on S.W. 29th....I remember putting the Barbie Dolls out on an end counter and they were in Small Boxes not the Plastic encasement like they are now. Easter Chicks....Yeah but how about the Rabbits and the Ducks and all the "Pop" they left behind and then people that got mad at us for having "Colored" Chicks.....Wonder how many of those ever really live very long????
papaOU 07-26-2009, 11:45 AM ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
My first Real job with TG&Y started at the store (Airline) on S.W. 29th....I remember putting the Barbie Dolls out on an end counter and they were in Small Boxes not the Plastic encasement like they are now. Easter Chicks....Yeah but how about the Rabbits and the Ducks and all the "Pop" they left behind and then people that got mad at us for having "Colored" Chicks.....Wonder how many of those ever really live very long????
Don't remember the Capitol Hill store having rabbits and ducks at Easter. Was that done at "select" stores?
Of course I remember Horn Seed Co. doing that. Seems the only time of year they put the animals out in the "front" part of the store.
Prunepicker 07-26-2009, 02:01 PM There was a kid on our block who raised some of those chicks from TG&Y!
They lived for quite a while. 3 years?
papaOU 07-27-2009, 03:09 AM There was a kid on our block who raised some of those chicks from TG&Y!
They lived for quite a while. 3 years?
I tried several times to raise chicks but always failed. Think I was planting them too deep? :omg:
Doug Loudenback 07-27-2009, 08:34 AM I've looked through each page of this very long thread but did not find what I was hoping for ... a photo of the TG&Y at 220 W. Commerce ... didn't find it in your photobucket account, John, and didn't find anything at OHC's Star Archives.
Does anyone have a pic that I could use in the as yet undone Capitol Hill series that I'm planning to get back to shortly?
Prunepicker 07-27-2009, 10:45 AM I've looked through each page of this very long thread but did not find what I
was hoping for... a photo of the TG&Y at 220 W. Commerce...
Does anyone have a pic that I could use in the as yet undone Capitol Hill
series that I'm planning to get back to shortly?
Gen64 might have one. He's shown me the place where TG&Y is still in the
tile in front of the entry way.
papaOU 07-27-2009, 07:41 PM I've looked through each page of this very long thread but did not find what I was hoping for ... a photo of the TG&Y at 220 W. Commerce ... didn't find it in your photobucket account, John, and didn't find anything at OHC's Star Archives.
Does anyone have a pic that I could use in the as yet undone Capitol Hill series that I'm planning to get back to shortly?
Tile from East and West front enterance. Front of store from the north side of commerce. Back door in alley with the painted TG&Y sign still visible.
Probably need a better picture of store front.
Doug Loudenback 07-28-2009, 05:45 AM Thanks, John. I'd surely like to use a version of the building image if it shows the TG&Y store before it closed. I can't tell from the thumbnail, though.
papaOU 07-28-2009, 01:46 PM Thanks, John. I'd surely like to use a version of the building image if it shows the TG&Y store before it closed. I can't tell from the thumbnail, though.
The face of the building has nothing to show it was TG&Y. Sorry I couldn't help.
Generals64 07-28-2009, 03:43 PM Thanks, John. I'd surely like to use a version of the building image if it shows the TG&Y store before it closed. I can't tell from the thumbnail, though.
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I've got one somewhere, I'll start digging and try and find it....If not I know a guy who definitely does.....I did find a picture of the first TG&Y management Seminar...1947.....If you can use it I'll make sure you get a copy....
Alek Hidell 08-08-2009, 09:27 PM By gum, a TG&Y thread! Worked at the World's Largest (74th & Penn) from 1982-1986. That store was like home away from home when I was a kid - seems like we went there almost every Sunday after church. Loved it then because they had not one but [I]two[I] comic book racks - one was in Toys and the other was farther west (can't remember exactly where - by the Camera department, maybe?)
Starting at the west end of the store, there was the small jeweler (Murcer's, right?) along with the Camera department, Cosmetics, and Stationery. At the back of the west end was the snack bar (behind a little wrought-iron fence, as I recall). Then into clothes: Infants, Shoes, Men & Boys, and Women's. Near Women's, at the front, were Lingerie and Jewelry. At the back of the center of the store were the Service Desk and a small portrait studio.
Down the first ramp into Fabrics and Notions (curtains, bedsheets, etc.). There was a flower shop at the front of this section, too. Then into Pets and then Sporting Goods. Across the parking lot was the Auto Center.
Down the second ramp into Hardware and the east end of the store. Then out the doors there and across the street to the Garden Center.
The big watermelon feed was always held on Labor Day, as I recall. There was usually some sort of entertainment too - I remember a live C&W band one year.
I can recall an experiment they did once when I worked there - the store stayed open 24 hours! That was unusual back then. Not much of a success either, as I recall - I worked a midnight-to-eight shift and the place was stone dead. They were just ahead of their time, I guess.
If you were in the store between '82 and '86 you probably saw me. I worked most of that time in the Men & Boys clothing department (anyone remember Opal Calton who worked there for years? I'm sure she's gone now), some in Shoes, then during the last year I was in the Cash Office (near the service desk, behind the scenes). Looking back I'm surprised they let two 20-year-old kids handle all that money. Fortunately for the company we were honest. : )
mugofbeer 08-10-2009, 07:36 PM I think of all the businesses OKC has had and lost over the years, TG&Y was the most tragic because it was the prototype for Wal Mart. If TG&Y hadn't been raped and plundered by those McRory (or whoever) folks who bought it, those Wal Mart stores around the world might very well be TG&Ys. What a waste.
Generals64 08-11-2009, 05:05 PM By gum, a TG&Y thread! Worked at the World's Largest (74th & Penn) from 1982-1986. That store was like home away from home when I was a kid - seems like we went there almost every Sunday after church. Loved it then because they had not one but [I]two[I] comic book racks - one was in Toys and the other was farther west (can't remember exactly where - by the Camera department, maybe?)
Starting at the west end of the store, there was the small jeweler (Murcer's, right?) along with the Camera department, Cosmetics, and Stationery. At the back of the west end was the snack bar (behind a little wrought-iron fence, as I recall). Then into clothes: Infants, Shoes, Men & Boys, and Women's. Near Women's, at the front, were Lingerie and Jewelry. At the back of the center of the store were the Service Desk and a small portrait studio.
Down the first ramp into Fabrics and Notions (curtains, bedsheets, etc.). There was a flower shop at the front of this section, too. Then into Pets and then Sporting Goods. Across the parking lot was the Auto Center.
Down the second ramp into Hardware and the east end of the store. Then out the doors there and across the street to the Garden Center.
The big watermelon feed was always held on Labor Day, as I recall. There was usually some sort of entertainment too - I remember a live C&W band one year.
I can recall an experiment they did once when I worked there - the store stayed open 24 hours! That was unusual back then. Not much of a success either, as I recall - I worked a midnight-to-eight shift and the place was stone dead. They were just ahead of their time, I guess.
If you were in the store between '82 and '86 you probably saw me. I worked most of that time in the Men & Boys clothing department (anyone remember Opal Calton who worked there for years? I'm sure she's gone now), some in Shoes, then during the last year I was in the Cash Office (near the service desk, behind the scenes). Looking back I'm surprised they let two 20-year-old kids handle all that money. Fortunately for the company we were honest. : )
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Alek:....I started with TG&Y in June of 1962....in June 1964 (June 4th, 1964 to be exact) we began receiving freight at store #411. I had the fortune or misfortune of haveing to be the first to sweep the original store with a push broom. Knew Opal Calton the day she was hired. Don't know if she is still alive or not but she was a great person. Murcer's jewelry was right and the Camera Center was right. Paul Epperson (Epperson's Photo) was the initiator of the Camera Department along with a guy by the name of Danny Chesnut. Don't know what happened to Danny but Paul Epperson is very successful in the photo business. The first remodel put the Sporting Goods department at the top of the first level. Second remodel moved the Sporting Goods down on the second level and it was there for quite some time. The sporting goods department was (at that time) one of the best and largest in the State. The Watermelon feed began it's tradition in 1968. We had melons brought in from Rush Springs and had a huge outdoor sale. Miss that store and the people that worked there. My wife (at age 17) ran that service desk you talked about all the way through her college years.....Many stories about that store.....
gen70 08-12-2009, 08:10 AM In the 60's my family lived on S. Klein near 74th. I used to pick up pop bottles on the side of the road on the way to the 74th and Penn. shopping center, then collect the deposit at the grocery store and spend the money at the T.G.&Y. store.
Generals64 08-12-2009, 10:56 PM In the 60's my family lived on S. Klein near 74th. I used to pick up pop bottles on the side of the road on the way to the 74th and Penn. shopping center, then collect the deposit at the grocery store and spend the money at the T.G.&Y. store.
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Hey 70, I used to do that at the old Airline store.....it was easy there though, Humpty Dumpty kept their bottles outside in a fenced cage (with no lock) they didn't know or notice everything...25 cents for the movie...20 cents for Popcorn and 10cents for a coke....55 cents equaled 1 full case of pop bottles 2 cents for the bottles and 25 cents for the crate:...."Hey let me carry it back to the cage for you"....Thanks son we are kinda busy.....empty shopping basket another kid and another 55 cents....now comes the Milk Duds...Oh what a life....finally got caught.....had to start at another store....
Prunepicker 08-12-2009, 11:58 PM Hey 70, I used to do that at the old Airline store... it was easy there though,
Humpty Dumpty kept their bottles outside in a fenced cage (with no lock)
they didn't know or notice everything...
7/11 did the same thing. They kept them stacked behind the store. To kids
it was like 'free money'!
papaOU 08-13-2009, 02:10 AM --------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hey 70, I used to do that at the old Airline store.....it was easy there though, Humpty Dumpty kept their bottles outside in a fenced cage (with no lock) they didn't know or notice everything...25 cents for the movie...20 cents for Popcorn and 10cents for a coke....55 cents equaled 1 full case of pop bottles 2 cents for the bottles and 25 cents for the crate:...."Hey let me carry it back to the cage for you"....Thanks son we are kinda busy.....empty shopping basket another kid and another 55 cents....now comes the Milk Duds...Oh what a life....finally got caught.....had to start at another store....
Shame on you...........
And the way you rave about shoplifters at TG&Y............
It was just payback..............
What karma caused the curse of the kidney stones............
Generals64 08-13-2009, 10:11 AM Shame on you...........
And the way you rave about shoplifters at TG&Y............
It was just payback..............
What karma caused the curse of the kidney stones............
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WOW, you hurt my feelings Papa....I was going to bring you some of the funny little pills they have me on. But, NOOOOOOO I'll put them back in the Safe....I hope and pray none of you guys EVER have to put up with Kidney stones.........
papaOU 08-13-2009, 10:52 AM -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
WOW, you hurt my feelings Papa....I was going to bring you some of the funny little pills they have me on. But, NOOOOOOO I'll put them back in the Safe....I hope and pray none of you guys EVER have to put up with Kidney stones.........
OOOOOOOOHHHHHHHHHHHH MaNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNNN!
rocket-j-squirrel 08-18-2009, 07:48 PM A T.G.&Y. thread! Holy cow! I worked for O.H. Goss (Owen...much to his chagrin...Honey, Goss) who started his rise to V.P. of the construction division by sweeping the stockroom in some forgotten store a hundred years ago. Of course, I really worked for his underlings, but most corporate brackets include a network of people you have to answer to. Mr. Goss, however, could call you to his office (a rather splendid work of mahogany and brass) and talk to you like he was your Dad. Whenever something didn't go quite right, he'd start the conversation with 'Now, I'm not finding fault here, but what happened and how do you propose we fix it'. What a great leader!
I was in charge of the Interactive Graphics Department doing the layouts for every freakin' store in every dadgum state (2 million sq. ft. per year) for 5 years before bailing to another job in '84. I worked with the buyers (you all remember the program plans for each counter?), the Central Fixtures co. that made the counters, Central Maintenance co. that serviced all the stores. All of their info had to go through my computers. The AIM stores was the last gasp of a dying empire. I was part of the research team that traveled to Phoenix to spy and take pictures of the Smitty's stores to develop a prototype of a racetrack concept of higher-end product to sell at discount rate. All was for naught, we were a huge company, but Dayton Hudson (and Del Santo) took us down. I really don't blame Del Santo, he was just the guy hosting the wake.
For all the DMs, DVPs, or whatever title you acquired, it was fun while it lasted!
Generals64 08-19-2009, 08:23 PM A T.G.&Y. thread! Holy cow! I worked for O.H. Goss (Owen...much to his chagrin...Honey, Goss) who started his rise to V.P. of the construction division by sweeping the stockroom in some forgotten store a hundred years ago. Of course, I really worked for his underlings, but most corporate brackets include a network of people you have to answer to. Mr. Goss, however, could call you to his office (a rather splendid work of mahogany and brass) and talk to you like he was your Dad. Whenever something didn't go quite right, he'd start the conversation with 'Now, I'm not finding fault here, but what happened and how do you propose we fix it'. What a great leader!
I was in charge of the Interactive Graphics Department doing the layouts for every freakin' store in every dadgum state (2 million sq. ft. per year) for 5 years before bailing to another job in '84. I worked with the buyers (you all remember the program plans for each counter?), the Central Fixtures co. that made the counters, Central Maintenance co. that serviced all the stores. All of their info had to go through my computers. The AIM stores was the last gasp of a dying empire. I was part of the research team that traveled to Phoenix to spy and take pictures of the Smitty's stores to develop a prototype of a racetrack concept of higher-end product to sell at discount rate. All was for naught, we were a huge company, but Dayton Hudson (and Del Santo) took us down. I really don't blame Del Santo, he was just the guy hosting the wake.
For all the DMs, DVPs, or whatever title you acquired, it was fun while it lasted!
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can't private message you right now But, I knew Mr. Goss very well...Knew Mr. Price, Henderson, Gosselin, Young, Hubbell, All of the original old-timers. I started with TG&Y in 1962 working for H.O. Price in a small variety store sweeping the floor and ended up in the buying department and left two weeks after they announced the sell of the Company.
One time I had gotten mad at Mr. Price and quit TG&Y and went to work for C.R. Anthony for about two months at Casady Square....I was having lunch when a tall blonde headed man sat down beside me and placed his order and then in his commanding voice said, "Don't you think it's time you come back to where you belong?".....It was Mr. Goss...My answer was timidly, " Yes sir...Where and When"....Monday of the next week and back where you quit......You need to get some ketchup....I asked "Ketchup"? Yes...you've got a lot of crow to eat......... Miss that company and the old-timers....David Green (Hobby Lobby) was a TG&Y old-timer.....good one too....
RealJimbo 08-19-2009, 10:08 PM Carolyn Smith, O.H. Goss' secretary grew up down the street from me. We keep in touch to a degree. The "home-grown" T.G.&Y. brass were all the "real deal". I actually got to know Dan Kelly much better after the company was gone. We visited at his store in Tulsa quite often. He was a store operator and was never so happy as when he was tooling around the store with a pad and a feather duster.
Generals64 08-20-2009, 06:57 AM Carolyn Smith, O.H. Goss' secretary grew up down the street from me. We keep in touch to a degree. The "home-grown" T.G.&Y. brass were all the "real deal". I actually got to know Dan Kelly much better after the company was gone. We visited at his store in Tulsa quite often. He was a store operator and was never so happy as when he was tooling around the store with a pad and a feather duster.
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Saw Dan's Brother (Jim) yesterday. They ahd me go around the country looking for merchandise for their stores. They bought the old TG&Y in Carnegie and it was successful for quite some time.....When the auctioneer started the bidding on the first item in the store I paid little for it. I told everyone there that I came to buy the store intact for a new variety store. Most of the people there were from Carnegie and they just backed off. I got that store fixtures and all for little of nothing.....
rocket-j-squirrel 08-20-2009, 11:32 AM I'd forgotten about Mr. Kelly. He and my Dad played a lot of golf at Twin Hills C.C. Heck, with those connections, I should have been a DVP or something. lol!
My experience at ''Corporate'' was interesting, challenging, and rewarding. I had an office with walls that went up to the ceiling and a door you could shut. It had no window or built-in furniture, but it was a move up from my desk in the storage room next to the blueprint machine...the smell of ammonia still haunts me. And then there was the cafeteria! The food was great (except for burrito day). I think at one time, there were 1,500 employees occupying the main building and the adjunct building where I worked. Another part of my job was to design displays for new products like the computer games and I designed the office remodels for the guys on ''Mahogany Row''. CFC built a lot more than your standard double sided 10' long 5' high display counter. Geez, now I can't remember the icon classification we keyed into the drawings to produce the cut sheets for CFC to manufacture the cabinets and order the racks! Oh well, T.G. &Y. was at the forefront of CAD/CAM back in 1979.
Generals64 08-20-2009, 09:30 PM I'd forgotten about Mr. Kelly. He and my Dad played a lot of golf at Twin Hills C.C. Heck, with those connections, I should have been a DVP or something. lol!
My experience at ''Corporate'' was interesting, challenging, and rewarding. I had an office with walls that went up to the ceiling and a door you could shut. It had no window or built-in furniture, but it was a move up from my desk in the storage room next to the blueprint machine...the smell of ammonia still haunts me. And then there was the cafeteria! The food was great (except for burrito day). I think at one time, there were 1,500 employees occupying the main building and the adjunct building where I worked. Another part of my job was to design displays for new products like the computer games and I designed the office remodels for the guys on ''Mahogany Row''. CFC built a lot more than your standard double sided 10' long 5' high display counter. Geez, now I can't remember the icon classification we keyed into the drawings to produce the cut sheets for CFC to manufacture the cabinets and order the racks! Oh well, T.G. &Y. was at the forefront of CAD/CAM back in 1979.
By the way, you weren't the little "twerp" that kepr raiding my Candy samples were you?....Jimbo will tell me I'm Sure. By the way Bobbie Elmore passed away and so did Bill Phillips. I ended up in the buying department for the last three years of my time with TG&Y.....
rocket-j-squirrel 08-21-2009, 06:15 PM Ha! Nope, I never took your lousy candy! By the time you set up the display counters and took a picture, it was already stale. LOL You might want to think about those creeps in advertising. They took everything that wasn't nailed down!
There was a buyer (I think) that was a Native American who was one of the funniest guys to talk with. I'm not sure of his name, and maybe you could help me...was it Mr. Williams? He was a runnin' buddy with Mr. Goss. Most of his adages couldn't be repeated in mixed company.
wheltzel 08-30-2009, 12:18 AM My best TG&Y memories are tied to the Skytrain and Del City theatres. I seem to remember that TG&Y had stores right across from both. The folks used to drop sis and me at one or the other of a Saturday afternoon with $1.00 (not each, a buck between us.)
For my half of that buck I could get into the show for $.35 and a popcorn for $.15. OR, I could bop across the street and get three times as much popcorn and still have a nickel left for a candy bar.
The Skytrain never said anything about it, but the old gal that ran the Del City didn't like it a BIT. She used to raise the devil about it with us 'til one day I invited her to speak with my mom about it. After that she still made a stink about it, just not with me and sis ;)
Generals64 08-30-2009, 02:36 PM My best TG&Y memories are tied to the Skytrain and Del City theatres. I seem to remember that TG&Y had stores right across from both. The folks used to drop sis and me at one or the other of a Saturday afternoon with $1.00 (not each, a buck between us.)
For my half of that buck I could get into the show for $.35 and a popcorn for $.15. OR, I could bop across the street and get three times as much popcorn and still have a nickel left for a candy bar.
The Skytrain never said anything about it, but the old gal that ran the Del City didn't like it a BIT. She used to raise the devil about it with us 'til one day I invited her to speak with my mom about it. After that she still made a stink about it, just not with me and sis ;)
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Don't remember the location of the Skytrain but you are right about a Store being across from the Del City theater.....Used to be a good Store too...
wheltzel 08-30-2009, 02:55 PM Skytrain was in Downtown MWC across I40 from Tinker. Can't believe the shopping center sign still looks materially the same after all these years, at least from the pics I've seen recently. I think it's been something like 15 years since I was personally in that area. Hard to believe it's 40 years come December since my family moved from MWC.
So.... That would put the TG&Y in question in Downtown MWC. Seems like it was directly across the street from the Skytrain.
That theatre was remodeled circa '66. Sis and I got to go the day it reopened. Would you believe it was closed for less than two weeks? I think that was the first time I'd ever seen the house lights on. I KNOW it was the only time I ever saw the place clean! ;)
What a way to spend an afternoon. Double feature w/cartoon for $.35, tax included!
papaOU 08-31-2009, 01:36 AM --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Don't remember the location of the Skytrain but you are right about a Store being across from the Del City theater.....Used to be a good Store too...
I don't remember the Skytrain either. Was it in Midwest City? North of 29th in that shopping center east of Air Depot?
Generals64 08-31-2009, 07:09 AM I don't remember the Skytrain either. Was it in Midwest City? North of 29th in that shopping center east of Air Depot?
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I have racked the old brain on this one. I remember the center you're talking about and I remember what they considered downtown Midwest city....There was a rather large TG&Y store in that center (right across from Tinker) but, I can't remember where there was a Theater....
gen70 08-31-2009, 09:25 AM I think the Sky Train Burger joint is what poster meant. (Maybe)
papaOU 08-31-2009, 01:27 PM I think the Sky Train Burger joint is what poster meant. (Maybe)
Don't think so. But just in case, was there a TG&Y near there?
papaOU 08-31-2009, 01:46 PM What was the name of the drive-in on N.E. 23rd and Coletrain(spelling ?)
gen70 08-31-2009, 02:34 PM Don't think so. But just in case, was there a TG&Y near there?
Yes. The T.G.@Y. was in a strip shopping center. I'd have to google streetview to find address. I might be wrong I get mixed up in Del and Midwest City.
wheltzel 08-31-2009, 04:21 PM I think the Sky Train Burger joint is what poster meant. (Maybe)
OK. I'll buy that, if the burger joint in question is where the theatre used to be ;)
Skytrain was at 108 Mid America Blvd, around the corner from Streets and the other shops that fronted the Interstate. FNB of MWC was close.
(I haven't posted enough yet so am still being moderated, so my traffic is appearing a bit out of order yet. Thanks admins for running a tight ship. Nice group of folks here. Keep up the good work.)
RealJimbo 08-31-2009, 04:30 PM Roy Russell was "Candy Man" to everyone in the office. He was real free with the candy samples. One day he had some of our mail clerks take samples around the office on their mail deliveries. One of the guys in the print shop got one of those giant chocolate bunnies - you remember them, hollow, but still a lot of candy? What he didn't know at first was that it was a wax dummy. It didn't take long, though. Ptuy!
Generals64 08-31-2009, 05:12 PM Roy Russell was "Candy Man" to everyone in the office. He was real free with the candy samples. One day he had some of our mail clerks take samples around the office on their mail deliveries. One of the guys in the print shop got one of those giant chocolate bunnies - you remember them, hollow, but still a lot of candy? What he didn't know at first was that it was a wax dummy. It didn't take long, though. Ptuy!
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Ha-Ha:.......you don't remember doing the same thing to me when I first went out there....Ptuy is right....I haven't thought about Roy in a long time....I remember when he and Charlie Jones were out in the stores....
Generals64 08-31-2009, 05:16 PM O.K., the TG&Y was facing 29th st. right across from Tiner:...to the west where there was a dividing street the Skytrain Theatre was located.....However, when the TG&Y moved to 15th and Midwest Blvd. That whole area began to fold.....Not because of TG&Y but the other anchor tenants started leaving......Then they tore it down and a New Center is there....Nice place to shop but it isn't what it used to be....
papaOU 08-31-2009, 07:58 PM Yes. The T.G.@Y. was in a strip shopping center. I'd have to google streetview to find address. I might be wrong I get mixed up in Del and Midwest City.
That's okay. They do too.
Prunepicker 09-08-2009, 07:08 PM Where was the T.G. & Y, around the Bethany area, in '58? Mom really let me
have it there one day. My rear is still warm.
I'll never forget... about a month after the T.G. & Y incident, on my 30th
birthday, Mom...
Maybe I'll wait and tell this later...
Generals64 09-08-2009, 10:33 PM Where was the T.G. & Y, around the Bethany area, in '58? Mom really let me
have it there one day. My rear is still warm.
I'll never forget... about a month after the T.G. & Y incident, on my 30th
birthday, Mom...
Maybe I'll wait and tell this later...
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TG&Y was located one block east of SNU on the south side of the street. The store manager's name at that particular time was Aaron Gant. He had that store forever. They had to make him take a family center and after 6 months of running a big store he talked them (TG&Y) into giving him that store back as manager....That was a money making store. If you pulled a very bad thing I could see aaron spanking you in front of your mother. He was my mother-in-law's Cousin....
rondvu 09-08-2009, 11:01 PM What was the name of the drive-in on N.E. 23rd and Coletrain(spelling ?)
It was called the Skyview.
Prunepicker 09-09-2009, 12:36 AM TG&Y was located one block east of SNU on the south side of the street
Where was it from Clark's Bakery? Was it west or east of N. College?
Prunepicker 09-09-2009, 12:39 AM It was called the Skyview.
I remember watching ALL of the Avalon / Funicello beach movies at the
Skyview. I think they showed 5 of them in one showing. I'm glad I had a date
and money for concessions.
Generals64 09-09-2009, 09:50 AM Where was it from Clark's Bakery? Was it west or east of N. College?
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I don't really know Bethany Streets but, it was on the corner of a street and 39th st....I think there is an antique mall there now...
Prunepicker 09-09-2009, 12:50 PM I don't really know Bethany Streets but, it was on the corner of a street and
39th st... I think there is an antique mall there now...
Clark's is still there! The antique store is next door and to the west.
Driver's Music was on N.W. 39th Exp and N. Peniel, the next street west is
N. College and the next is N. Asbury. Clark's is just off of N. Asbury.
N. Asbury is the west street boundary of SNU.
Prunepicker 09-09-2009, 12:55 PM Hey Gen64, I just found my Golden T 5 Band radio! I'll bring it to the get
together at Coit's.
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