![]() |
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (February 2011) |
![]() |
|
Type | Subsidiary of Supervalu Inc. |
---|---|
Industry | Retail |
Founded | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1891) |
Headquarters | East Whiteland Township, Pennsylvania, U.S. |
Number of locations | 117 |
Key people | Dan Sanders, President Craig Herkert, Chairman and CEO Mike Jackson, COO John Hooley, Executive Vice President; President, Retail East |
Products | Bakery, dairy, deli, frozen foods, general grocery, meat, pharmacy, produce, seafood, snacks, liquor |
Website | acmemarkets.com |
Acme Markets is a supermarket chain in the mid-Atlantic, southern, and northeastern United States. Acme is owned by Eden Prairie, Minnesota-based corporation SuperValu. Acme has its headquarters in East Whiteland Township, Pennsylvania, near Malvern, a Philadelphia suburb.
Acme began in 1891, when Irish immigrants Samuel Robinson and Robert Crawford set up shop in South Philadelphia. The company operates 117 supermarkets[1] under the Acme name in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland.
As of 2002 and as of 2008, Acme is the largest retailer of food in Greater Philadelphia.[2][3]
Contents |
In 1891, Irish immigrants Samuel Robinson and Robert Crawford began what is now Acme in South Philadelphia. (Some sources trace Acme's beginnings to be 1887 or 1872.) In 1917, Robinson and Crawford merged Acme Markets with four other Philadelphia-area grocery stores; and the new company was named American Stores. Ten years later, smaller rival Penn Fruit began in Philadelphia's Center City, which in the 1950s would compete with Acme in urban shopping centers. In the 1920s, supermarkets under the American Stores banner rapidly sprouted throughout the Philadelphia region, rivaling New Jersey-basedA&P, which then featured downtown stores up and down the East Coast, and to New Orleans. American Stores' first round of introducing self-service stores in shopping centers was in the early 1950s.
American Stores' new logo, popularly known as the "teardrop" or "fish eye", was rolled out in 1961, effectively replacing the inconsistent "Acme Markets" or "Acme Super Markets" script logos of the 1950s; however, its implementation was not used throughout the chain. American Stores' distribution center, on US 30 in West Philadelphia, retained the gold script "Acme Super Markets" signage until its closure in 1993. The complex remained abandoned, complete with sign; the last Acme store in West Philadelphia had been sold in 1980.
The new Acme logo coincided with a building style known as "A-Frame." These stores were meant to compete with A&P, Food Fair, and Penn Fruit, all of which had trademarked architecture of their own. (Larger chains Safeway, Kroger, and Grand Union competed with Acme as well, but only in a few locations.) Most if not all Acmes built in the 1960s were a variant of this design. These could be adapted to main streets and shopping centers alike, and averaged 30,000 square feet (2,787 m2). Trademark features included a full peaked roof and signage that resembled the then-popular lava lamp, along with a standardized emergency exit location. The latter two elements were retained in Acme's 1970s prototype which succeeded many A Frame units. In turn, the A Frame's footprint was very similar to Acme's first standardized building model which had been rolled out in 1955.
Many of Acme's stores in the 1960s and 1970s were paired with a regional drugstore chain, PLCB liquor store (in Pennsylvania), Kmart or a similar chain at the time such as Woolco (earlier centers had a Woolworth), and in rarer cases a department store such as Sears or JCPenney. American Stores even bought the Philadelphia franchise rights to the then fast-growing restaurant chain Pizza Hut in 1968. Acme would also acquire a number of stores from Kmart Foods, as did A&P, Safeway, and Kroger; however, in the later 1970s, many recently closed 1950s-era supermarkets in Philadelphia and close suburbs were reopened as independents IGA or Thriftway/Shop 'n Bag. Starting in the 1980s, these independents themselves were overtaken by family chains Genuardi's (later acquired by Safeway and soon to be defunct) and Clemens (now defunct) along with Giant-Carlisle and Giant-Landover in newer suburbs, and modernized Acme, Super Fresh (A&P), and Pathmark stores in the city and older suburbs not long after.
Between 1978 and 1982, Acme acquired many stores during Food Fair's bankruptcy, including both ex-Food Fair (known as discount grocer Pantry Pride by this time) and Penn Fruit units. The bulk of these dated to the 1950s. The former Food Fair/Pantry Pride stores were replaced by or remodeled into stores with the standard Acme prototype of the 1970s, as were many expanded A Frame buildings and a few former Pathmark (also once known as ShopRite) stores. Former Penn Fruit buildings, with their trademark barrel roof, could not be adapted to this model. Even many A Frames were replaced by the often older but larger acquired stores.
In the later 1960s into the 1970s, Acme introduced a chain of stores that were high volume but in high crime and low income areas, Super Saver, using the jingle, "Acme and Super Saver - you're going to like it here!" The brand was retired in the 1980s, only to be resurrected in the 1990s in Western states.
American Stores was sold in 1979 to The Skaggs Companies, Inc. which took the American Stores name, and relocated the headquarters to Salt Lake City, Utah. That same year, the company announced that it would be closing most of its store locations in New York state. In the 1980s, American Stores undertook various acquisitions including Chicagoland chain Jewel, which ran the "Jewel-T" chain which operated in many former urban Acme buildings. American Stores was acquired by major Western and Southern chain Albertsons in November 1999, which in turn was acquired by SuperValu in 2006.
The company is the second-largest food and drug retailer in its competitive market,[4] where it competes with such chains as Ahold's Giant-Carlisle, Giant-Landover, and Stop & Shop; A&P's Pathmark, Super Fresh, A&P, and Food Basics; Safeway and its subsidiary Genuardi's; Wakefern Food Corporation's ShopRite; Wal-Mart and its warehouse club subsidiary Sam's Club, and warehouse club competitor Costco, natural and organic products retailer Whole Foods Market, Wegmans Food Markets, Trader Joe's and its discount sister Aldi, North Carolina-based Food Lion and Bottom Dollar Food, Sears Holdings Corporation's Kmart, as well as other smaller chains in various markets. Acme was market leader for decades before losing market share, as well as the top sales position in its dominant Philadelphia market, to ShopRite in 2011.
Acme offers online grocery shopping[5] for orders that can be picked up at the store. Prior to 2009, Acme also delivered to customers through online orders. In 2004, Acme introduced self-checkout stands, where shoppers could scan and bag their own groceries. In 2008, many Acme locations began adding hot foods bars to the deli section.
In addition to its stores in 5 Pennsylvania counties (Bucks, Chester, Delaware, Montgomery, and Philadelphia) the company also operates stores in 2 counties in the state of Delaware (Kent and New Castle), 5 counties in the state of Maryland (Cecil, Harford, Kent, Queen Anne's, and Talbot), and 16 counties in the state of New Jersey (Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Cape May, Cumberland, Gloucester, Hudson, Mercer, Middlesex, Monmouth, Morris, Ocean, Passaic, Salem, Sussex, and Union). Acme withdrew from Sussex County, Delaware and Wicomico County, Maryland in the early 2000s, citing rising costs and increased competition.[citation needed]
The headquarters of Acme are in East Whiteland Township, Pennsylvania, near Malvern.[6][7][8] The company previously had its headquarters in Center City, Philadelphia. In 1974, Acme moved its headquarters to Malvern. Acme continued to house some support departments, including its accounting department, in Center City.[9]
|
A forest is a large area of land covered with trees or other woody vegetation. Hundreds of more precise definitions of forest are used throughout the world, incorporating factors such as tree density, tree height, land use, legal standing and ecological function. According to the widely used United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization definition, forests covered an area of four billion hectares (15 million square miles) or approximately 30 percent of the world's land area in 2006.
Forests are the dominant terrestrial ecosystem of Earth, and are distributed across the globe. Forests account for 75% of the gross primary productivity of the Earth's biosphere, and contain 80% of the Earth's plant biomass.
Forests at different latitudes form distinctly different ecozones: boreal forests near the poles tend to consist of evergreens, while tropical forests near the equator tend to be distinct from the temperate forests at mid-latitude. The amount of precipitation and the elevation of the forest also affects forest composition.
Forest (hangul: 숲; RR: Sooph) is the first mini album (often refer as 5.5th Mini Album) by South Korean pop singer-actor Lee Seung Gi. It was released on November 22, 2012 by its artist label Hook Entertainment and distributed by LOEN Entertainment. Epitone Project participated as producer for this album. This is his first release after 1 year of hiatus since his 5th album Tonight (2011) released. The album consists of 5 songs, which the lead single, 되돌리다 (Return) took over the chart by storm. "Return" topped the Gaon Digital Chart for 3 weeks and set a new record in Korea K-pop Hot 100 by topping it for 6 weeks.
Forest is the seventh album of pianist George Winston and his sixth solo piano album, released in 1994. It was reissued on Dancing Cat Records in 2008. The album won the 1996 Grammy Award for Best New Age Album. "Japanese Music Box (Itsuki No Komoriuta)" is a traditional Japanese lullaby that means Lullaby of Itsuki, a region in southern Japan.
A vision statement is a declaration of an organization's objectives, ideally based on economic foresight, intended to guide its internal decision-making.
A vision statement is a company's road map, indicating both what the company wants to become and guiding transformational initiatives by setting a defined direction for the company's growth. Vision statements undergo minimal revisions during the life of a business, unlike operational goals which may be updated from year-to-year. Vision statements can range in length from short sentences to multiple pages. Vision statements are also formally written and referenced in company documents rather than, for example, general principles informally articulated by senior management. A vision statement is not limited to business organizations and may also be used by non-profit or governmental entities.
A consensus does not exist on the characteristics of a "good" or "bad" vision statement. Commonly cited traits include:
Vision, in comics, may refer to:
The Vision is the name of multiple fictional superheroes appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The first Vision was an alien created by Joe Simon and Jack Kirby that first appeared in Marvel Mystery Comics # 13 (November 1940). The second Vision is an android and a member of the Avengers that first appeared in The Avengers #57 (October 1968) by Roy Thomas, Stan Lee and John Buscema. The third Vision was the time traveler previously known as Iron Lad, who was fused with the operating system of the second Vision. The second Vision was portrayed by Paul Bettany in the 2015 film Avengers: Age of Ultron; he will reprise the role in the 2016 film Captain America: Civil War.
The first Vision was created by the writer-artist team of Joe Simon and Jack Kirby in Marvel Mystery Comics #13 (Nov. 1940), published by Marvel predecessor Timely Comics during the 1930s and 1940s, a period which fans and historians call the Golden Age of Comic Books.