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Highland Farms was founded in 1963 by brothers Charles Coppa and John Louis "Louie" Coppa, with their first location at 1558 Queen Street West in Toronto. Highland Farms grew from operating a single moderately sized grocery outlet to five locations (at its peak) across the GTA in Vaughan, Scarborough, Mississauga and North York.
Coppa's Fresh Market is a Canadian family-owned regional supermarket chain in the Greater Toronto Area.Charles and John Louis "Louie" Coppa [1] originally founded the Highland Farms grocery store chain in 1963; however, the Coppa family split the company between the two brothers in 2013 with three former Highland Farms stores (the North York, Vaughan, and one of the Scarborough locations ...
3 Non-conventional banners with in-store grocery markets. 4 Defunct chains. 5 See also. ... (downsized in 2024 to one store location plus one food service outlet) [1 ...
The ice retail stores later began staying open longer hours and selling grocery goods. In 1946, the growing chain of stores came to be called 7-Eleven to mirror their operating hours: 7 a.m. to 11 ...
Cee Bee Food Stores (Kentucky, Tennessee) Central Market (Texas) County Market - H.E.B; Crest Foods (Oklahoma) Cub Foods (Minnesota and one location in Freeport, Illinois) D'Agostino Supermarkets (New York City) Dave's Markets (Ohio) Dierbergs Markets (St. Louis area) Erewhon Market (California) Fairway Market (New York City area) Festival ...
Knob Hill Farms was a supermarket chain in the Greater Toronto Area, Ontario, Canada that operated from 1953 to 2001 and was owned by businessman Steve Stavro.It began as a single produce store in the east end of Toronto in 1953 before growing into one of Canada's largest grocery chains, all with only 10 locations in and around Toronto.
The first Real Canadian Superstore location opened in March 1979 in a former Loblaws location in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan under the name SuperValu. Numerous other SuperValu locations opened across Western Canada before most gradually expanded into Superstore sites; the SuperValu name is still in use in British Columbia.
The store was founded in 1932 by brothers Pasquale and Nicola D'Agostino. At D'Agostino's peak in the 1990s, the chain operated at 26 locations in New York City and adjacent Westchester County, with annual sales exceeding $200 million. Later, D'Agostino's consolidated to nine stores (now ten), in Manhattan. [3]