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Henry's Market
Artwork and Commentary by Brandon Mason
Henrys Market is North Beverlys most admired landmark.
However, this marketplace was not always a flourishing enterprise.
It has undergone many years of immortalization and sequences
of intersection.
In the early nineteen-forties the marketplace was officially
established as Henrys Market. At the start of WW II the
market was off and running in the grocery business and soon
set high standards for fine grocery and meat products in the
greater Beverly area. Henry Swanson, United States Navy veteran,
was the founder of Henrys. As a boy, Henry delivered milk
from the back of a horse drawn carriage and was soon working
for Alexander Galper, purchasing meats and vegetables for Bostons
Faneuil Hall Marketplace. Swanson worked his way up to being
the owner of Henrys Market, which was turned into a mini
strip plaza in the nineteen-fifties. Henrys brilliance
for Catering to a clientele that preferred nothing but the highest
quality in products protected his business from the pressure
that other markets were experiencing during the growth of "chain
stores," which were populating the nation in the nineteen-fifties.
Henrys Market was a private enterprise and was not considered
to be a "chain store" since it was one of as kind.
This popular landmark locate din North Beverly was established
at the start of World War II, however the stores immortalization
dates back as early as 1880. Before the first station was built,
the lot of land that the market now occupies was once known
as "Bakers Corner." Bakers Tavern, where
the first station is now located, was a colonial-era tavern
that served the people of Beverly as a stagecoach stop. With
the establishment of Horace Fosters store across the street
in about eighteen-eighty and with the tearing down of the tavern
in nineteen-o-six, the people of the new twentieth century stopped
calling the area "Bakers Corner" and began calling
it "Fosters Corner." Horace died in the year
of nineteen-sixteen. The store at 588 Cabot Street remained
vacant until nineteen-twenty two when a variety store was opened.
This venture did not last long and was quickly followed by Fisher
and Perleys Grocery in nineteen-twenty six, a first national
store opened and things settled down on the corner for the next
fifteen years. The building became known as Henrys Market
in the nineteen- forties, and has celebrated over sixty years
of success ever since.
Henrys Market was established in a key time for development
of chain stores and supermarkets. Chain stores had increased
business risk with the market, but large supermarket corporations
did not provide the same quality shipments of groceries as the
innovative Henrys Market. Henry saw the quality and value
in the people of Beverly as much as he in the products he sold
in his market.
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