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A little history of State Street
Fruit Store, Deli, Wines & Spirits and Cooper's
Corner
In the early 1900's there were dairies all over
Northampton, almost the way there were gas stations all
over town in the 1960's. Our father, Russ Cooper, worked
for Bridgman's Dairy in Florence while he attended
Northampton High School in the 1930's. When he was 18,
Dad recognized that combining these small neighborhood
dairies would make running the businesses more efficient.
With a loan from Smith Charities, he bought Bridgman's
and began processing milk at the dairy at 126 North Main
St. in Florence. He soon bought other small neighborhood
dairies, which he consolidated into a modern facility on
the corner of Main and Chestnut streets in Florence.
Dad picked up milk from Hampshire and Franklin county
farms and pasteurized, homogenized, and bottled it at
Cooper's Dairy. He then delivered it to homes, stores,
schools, and other institutions throughout the two
counties.
My mother recalls the dairy days of the early 1950's,
when there was no market for low fat milk, so after the
cream was skimmed from the whole milk, the resulting skim
milk was dumped down the drain! I vividly remember our
father getting up at 2 or 3 a.m. to begin his day and not
coming home until suppertime. I also remember Cooper's
Dairy getting a lot of recognition for having what I
think was the state's first female "milkman."
In the mid 50's, as cars were becoming more common,
Dad noticed that more and more of his home delivery
customers were stopping at the dairy to pick up their
milk. They were asking if he could start carrying bread
and cereal as well. He obliged, and part of the office
became devoted to grocery shelves. This was the start of
Cooper's Dairyland and an early example of one of our
core values: customer responsiveness.
In the late 60's the dairy part of the business was
sold to All Star Dairy of South Hadley, and we
concentrated our efforts on retail. Mom and Dad had
three sons, and as each of us graduated from college, we
joined the business, assuming full responsibility and
ownership upon our father's retirement in 1980.
In 1974 we bought State Street Fruit Store, which had
been informally known as "Charlie's," from the
Composeo brothers, who had started it in the 1930's. We
connected Douyard's barbershop to the main building and
renovated it to become the State Street Deli. A few years
later we build on to the other site of the Fruit Store,
creating State Street Wines & Spirits.
My father passed away in 1984, my oldest brother Ed in
1996 and Ron in 2004. I continue to expand the business with the
help of our great managers, Will, Judy, Rebekah, Peggy
and Wesley, and longtime dedicated folks like Liz, and
Mark, and Barb. Today we have grown to 98 employees
(including one "volunteer," my mother,
Evelyn). Staff members are split pretty evenly between
State Street Fruit Store, Deli, Wines & Spirits in
Northampton, and Cooper's Corner in Florence.
That core value of customer responsiveness has
been demonstrated in major ways over the years. In the
early 80's we were supposedly the first store in
Massachusetts to ever scratch State Lottery vending.
Although there was a waiting list for stores that wanted
to be authorized to sell Lottery tickets, we found that
our customers didn't like having to wait behind people
who were scratching tickets or trying to decide which
numbers to play, so we stopped selling Lottery tickets.
In 1983, when Massachusetts passed the Bottle Bill
creating mandatory deposits on beverage containers, it
met with great opposition from retailers across the
state. We saw this as an opportunity and advertised
heavily "Return to Us. Bring us your deposit bottles
and cans." We were flooded with customers - and
bottles and cans! - and hired a whole crew of disabled people
through Incentive Community Enterprises to be sorters.
In June 2000, we made the unprecedented move of
turning in our Cigarette Retailer's Licenses to the
Northampton Board of Health. We had struggled for years
with the incongruity of being personally against
cigarette smoking on one hand and providing a product
that a segment of our customers wanted, on the other. When
my 6 year-old daughter, Rebecca, asked at dinner one
night why we sell cigarettes when they are bad for
people, my response that we tried to sell what our
customers want had a hollow sound.
That decision, which my business colleagues criticized
as being economically foolish, turned out to be one of
the best moves we have ever made, both morally and
economically. Customers came in as never before - old
faces, new faces, smokers, and non-smokers, locals and
out-of-towners. Many came with words of praise and
congratulations and stories of personal and family
battles with cancer. To this day, months and months after
those cigarette displays came down and those hundreds of
packs were destroyed, customers still remark about the
bold decision and about the business people who put
what's right ahead of what's profitable.
-Rich Cooper
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