What remains of an East Harlem five and dime store that opened almost a century ago

It doesn’t look like much, just another semi-vacant commercial building—this one on the southeast corner of 106th Street and Third Avenue—now occupied by a Duane Reade.

But give it a closer look, and Art Deco decorative touches come in to view, like the patterns in the light bricks and small geometric shapes above the first and second floors. With its enormous windows, this space was meant to be welcoming and accessible.

On the 106th Street side is a slab in the middle of the facade by the roofline. It proudly carries a name: Kress. What was Kress?

Similar to Woolworth’s, S. H. Kress & Co was a five and dime retail chain that at its height had more than 250 stores across the country. Houseware, toys, accessories, candy, goldfish, underwear, notions, paper goods, and all kinds of random thingamajigs could be found in a Kress store.

The chain was founded by Samuel W. Kress in 1896 in Memphis. As stores expanded nationwide, Kress moved his company headquarters to New York City. He also purchased a Fifth Avenue penthouse for his family and his growing art collection.

Several Kress outlets soon opened in Gotham, including one on Fifth Avenue and 39th Street (shuttered in the late 1970s) and another at 256 West 125th Street. Opened in 1920, it was likely the very first New York City Kress store, according to Walter Grutchfield.

The Kress on East 106th Street made its debut five years later, stated Grutchfield, adding that it closed up in 1994. “It seems to have been the last surviving Kress store in New York,” he wrote.

Five and dimes were very popular in their 20th century heyday; they were utilitarian versions of more glamorous department stores that sold a variety of usually more expensive items under one roof.

Imagine this enormous Kress store in its 20th century prime, when the neighborhood was a shopping corridor bustling with middle- and working-class customers. The store would have been partly obscured by the Third Avenue Elevated tracks until the 1950s. (Above, in 1940)

Perhaps it’s fitting that Duane Reade now operates in the former Kress space. The pharmacy chain might be the closest replacement New Yorkers have for five and dimes like Kress and Woolworth—which had a store not too far away on Third Avenue and 121st Street.

[Third photo: NYC Department of Records & Information Services]

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18 Responses to “What remains of an East Harlem five and dime store that opened almost a century ago”

  1. Benjamin P. Feldman Says:

    Us geezers remember the late, lamented HQ of S.H. Kress and Co. on Fifth Avenue: https://daytoninmanhattan.blogspot.com/2018/12/the-lost-1935-s-h-kress-co-bldg-444.html

  2. andrewalpern Says:

    Five and Dime stores were accessible emporia for essentials. We bought most of our ordinary non-food items there. The big ones were Woolworth’s, W.T. Grant, Kresge’s, Kress, and Lamston’s. Here is a photo of the Lamston’s at 23rd Street and Eighth Avenue where I bought much of the small stuff I needed when I moved into my apartment two blocks from it 61 years ago.

    • ephemeralnewyork Says:

      Lamston’s—I have many memories of shopping there with my mom when I was a kid. We shopped at the one on Eighth Street and Sixth Avenue, which is long gone as well.

  3. fabulouslululolo Says:

    Growing up in East Harlem I remember this Kress five and dime store! Part of East Harlem History

  4. Greg Says:

    I suppose the Family Dollar type stores of today would also be a close analogue.

    • ephemeralnewyork Says:

      That’s a good analogy. But the Family Dollar stores didn’t have a lunch counter, an essential part of a New York City five and dime. I know Woolworth’s had them, and I think Kress as well.

      • Sis Val ❤️ Says:

        I would love to sit on the stool in between my parents and spin spin spin. The height of the stool was just right.

        That was pure and simple and safe fun.

  5. VirginiaLB Says:

    By coincidence, I am rereading a wonderful book, ‘Florentine Art Under Fire’ by Frederick Hartt, a Renaissance art expert and monuments man who wrote a gripping account of his experiences saving art during the war. He mentioned Nazi propaganda against Samuel H. Kress, founder of the Kress stores. The Nazis thought Kress was Jewish and accused him of stealing and selling Italy’s art, part of their anti-Semitic crusade.

    Kress was in fact a Gentile (Hartt’s word) Pennsylvania German who donated much money for the restoration of damaged art treasures after the war and also donated his large art collection to many museums in cities where his stores were located, beginning in the 1920s. He made a very large donation of art to the National Gallery in Washington.

    He lived in Manhattan and is buried at Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx. Note, middle initial is H, not W.

    • ephemeralnewyork Says:

      Thanks for the backstory on Samuel Kress, and I will make that correction! His art collection has many treasures.

  6. Vic Says:

    Great

  7. writingroma Says:

    Wow, and a five and dime with art deco trappings, and the street outside that was cobblestone not so long ago. Today’s Dollar Store has only a superficial resemblance. Everything has become so ugly these days.

  8. Alex Says:

    I’d mention seemingly untouched wooden frames of the great windows on the upper floors but without lower cross-bars seen on the 1940 photo – probably easy job to remove them.

  9. Sis Val ❤️ Says:

    McCrory’s stayed around too but Woolworth’s was absolutely the best.

    Kress was before my time but glad we can still see some archictecture of the Kress locations.

    • fmlondon Says:

      I loved and miss Woolworths. When I was in high school, sometimes I ate lunch there. A small can of soup and a burger totaling 95 cents, so no tax. The soup was single serving and heated in a little metal appliance. And, around the holidays, all the different candy bins, to get a little of this and a little of that. I wish it had been saved. Also, Kress and Kresges. I do not recall McCrorys.

  10. MarisolPearls Says:

    I worked at this exact location of Kress Co in the early 1980s. It was my very first job as a teen. Fond memories. Glad to be a part of such an empire! Art Deco is actually my favorite. Great article. Brought me back and learned a little more.

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