"Louis Caplan Grocery Co." 798 Merchant St. ad Daily Citizen August 25, 1954 |
Before 798 Merchant was Louis Caplan's grocery, the building was home to Ambridge's first furniture store, a branch of Martsolf's Furniture, which opened on March 26, 1904, the year before Ambridge was incorporated.
"Martsolfs" Furniture Ambridge store opening ad Beaver Times March 29, 1904 |
Here's a Martsolf's Furniture ad from 1929:
Martsolf's Furniture ad Daily Citizen August 10,1929 Louis Vukovcan Collection |
I've been unable to pin down exactly when Marsolf's closed, or when Louis Caplan's store moved into 798 Merchant, but it was in the 1930s.
The 1931 photo below, which came from the late Eddie Dzubak, Sr.'s collection, shows a June 21, 1931, flood on 8th and Merchant, according to a note on the reverse. The 798 Merchant St. store in the background still has a Martsolf's Furniture Co. sign on it.
Flood at 8th and Merchant Sts. Martsolf's Furniture store in background June 21, 1931
Eddie Dzubak Sr. collection
courtesy of Lesabeth Trzcianka and Eddie Dzubak, Jr.
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The 1954 ad that accompanied the photo of Caplan's Grocery at the top of this post, indicated the business began in 1927. But as late as 1932, Caplan's grocery was on Duss Ave.
Caplan had moved his business into the 798 Merchant building by 1939, because that year's Beaver County Mercantile Appraiser's Report shows Caplan then doing business there.
People who worked in Ambridge area businesses remember buying a range of bulk supplies, from paper bags to candy and cigarettes, at Caplan's, sometimes having to brave the building's old, rickety elevator to get them.
Here's a photo that shows Caplan's in the background, also from Dzubak's collection. The circa mid-1970s photo was taken from Dzubak's Arco station, across 8th St. from Caplan's.
Caplan Wholesale Grocery across from Eddie Dzubak's Arco Station circa mid-1970s Eddie Dzubak Sr. collection courtesy of Lesabeth Trzcianka and Eddie Dzubak, Jr. |
According to Louis Caplan's grandson, Glen Russell Slater, Caplan worked in his store until his death in 1988, despite his Parkinson's disease. Slater remembered:
I used to love to work in his store when we visited when I was a kid. I loved being there! My mother, Louise, and my uncle, Ralph, used to work there every day after school. My grandmother, Ruth Caplan, worked as the bookkeeper there. It's really sad that it was demolished, and was replaced by a soulless CVS parking lot. My grandfather, grandmother, mother and uncle's life revolved around that store!
After Caplan's death, at least one other business, Capp's, another grocery business, moved into the 798 Merchant building.
The 798 Merchant building was razed, I believe in 2000, to make room for the current CVS parking lot.
I remember the Caplan's building well, although I remember being in it only twice, both visits in the summer of 1970. One time was to buy supplies for my bridal shower, and the second was to buy supplies for the Ambridge Rec Center's summer playground program's penny carnival. The two events were not related.
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The name of the furniture company in various ads and articles over the years is given as: Martsolf, Martsolfs, and Martsolf's.
You can see a photo of the intersection of 8th and Merchant in 1922 in my April 24, 2014 blog article, cleverly titled, "Eighth and Merchant Sts., 1922". Slater's memories are in that post's comments.
Just found Martsolf Furniture Co., aged label on the back of a very old mantle piece.
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