South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

How did Publix supermarke­t get its name?

It’s a Florida story made for the movies

- By Howard Cohen

The popcorn, soda and candy aisles at Publix go right back to the supermarke­t’s roots.

That’s because the Florida supermarke­t’s roots stretch back to a movie theater company called Publix Theatres Corporatio­n.

Grocer George Jenkins liked the name of the once-popular chain so much, he took it.

And so Publix the grocery store was born. Jenkins recounted the story about the supermarke­t name’s origins in a speech he included in his 1979 memoir, “The Publix Story.”

Talk about the ultimate movie theater concession­aire.

How Publix got its name

“The name ‘Publix’ was borrowed from a chain of theaters which was operating throughout Florida at the time. Most of them were closing up, and I liked the sound of the name so I just took it for my store,” Jenkins wrote.

Who knew?

And here we thought Jenkins branded Publix as the public’s supermarke­t.

That’s what Tony Diego believed. And he was close to Jenkins, too.

“I thought he got it because he wanted it to say ‘Publix’ so it would be for the public,” Diego, a Miami Beach store manager in the 1970s who rose to an executive’s position before retiring in South MiamiDade, told the Miami Herald in a text. The grocer adopting a movie theater chain’s name bemused the longtime Publix champion.

“I never heard that and I talked to Mr. Jenkins quite a bit,” Diego said.

Publix spokeswoma­n Lindsey Willis confirmed the origin of the name by sharing a page of company history. “The first store Mr. George opened was in downtown Winter Haven, Florida. The idea for the name came from a chain of theaters Mr. George was fond of. He liked the name, so he decided to open his own store with the corporate name Publix Food Stores, Inc. Doors opened on Saturday, Sept. 6, 1930,” Publix notes.

The Georgia-born Publix founder died in Lakeland at age 88 in 1996.

That first Publix Jenkins opened was, indeed, theatrical­ly inspired. The Winter Haven store had an Art Moderne design, which would be used in many Publix supermarke­t locations through the years, as well as terrazzo floors and air conditioni­ng — a rarity in 1930. The fancy Publix theater chain movie palaces were also air-conditione­d, Jenkins observed.

About Publix Theatres

Publix Theatres was founded in New York City as an affiliate of Paramount Studios in 1925, according to the Florida Memory website of the State Library and Archives of Florida.

“By 1929, Publix had the most powerful theater company in the United States because they modeled their business after large corporatio­ns,” the Florida archive said.

The Florida headquarte­rs for Publix Theatres was in St. Petersburg and the corporatio­n operated about 20 theaters in the state from the mid-1920s to the early-1930s, including The Olympia in downtown Miami.

Publix Theatres also ran other theaters in Miami: the Fairfax Theatre, which it had acquired in 1929, the Hippodrome and the Paramount. Other Florida Publix theaters were the Stanley, Ketler and Arcade in West Palm Beach; the Tampa Theatre in Tampa; the Florida Theatre in St. Petersburg and Jacksonvil­le; and locations in Lake Worth, Gainesvill­e and Daytona.

At its peak by 1929, the company ran 1,200 Publix theaters around the U.S., including in New York City and Chicago, and in the South, Midwest and Northeast.

The chain operated in Canada, too.

An estimated two million people daily patronized a Publix theater to see a Hollywood film, Carolina Theatre — one of its still existing theaters in Charlotte, North Carolina — reported on its website.

“Although the success of Publix Theatres in Florida was short-lived due to the stock market crash of 1929, Publix had a significan­t influence on Florida’s theater market because of the high standards the company establishe­d and the availabili­ty of their theaters,” according to Florida Memory. After the Great Depression in 1929, Publix began to shut down its operations.

The Publix-Paramount Corporatio­n was reorganize­d by 1935.

By that point, the Publix name would live on as the unrelated, but observant, supermarke­t chain.

Today, there are 1,407 Publix stores in eight states, with the majority of stores — 884 — in Florida, as of Feb. 26, 2024, according to data firm, Scrape Hero.

How other Florida supermarke­ts were named

Here’s how some of Publix’s Florida supermarke­t competitor­s got named:

Winn-Dixie dates its origins to the family of William Milton Davis, who bought Miami’s Rockmoor Grocery on Dixie Highway in 1925.

The Davis family also bought a chain of stores they called Table Supply.

After the senior Davis died in 1934, his sons acquired Winn & Lovett’s chain stores in 1939. In 1955, Winn & Lovett’s bought 117 Dixie Home Stores and the name Winn-Dixie was born. Aldi announced earlier in March it had completed its acquisitio­n of Southeaste­rn Grocers, the Jacksonvil­le parent company of Winn-Dixie.

Aldi was founded by brothers Karl and Theo Albrecht in 1946 after they served in World War II. Their mother gave them a small Albrecht store she had opened in Germany in 1913. They grew her store into a chain of hundreds in Germany and in 1962 introduced the name Aldi as a syllabic abbreviati­on for Albrecht Diskont. Aldi opened its first U.S. store in Iowa in 1976, according to BusinessIn­sider.started as a

Sedano’s 4,000-square-foot bodega opened by Cuban exile Rene Sedano in Hialeah in 1961. In 1962, fellow Cuban exile Armando Guerra Sr. bought the store from Sedano, kept the name, and in 1971 he encouraged a family member by marriage, Manuel Herrán, to move to Miami and help with the store. Guerra and Herrán grew the supermarke­t business into the nation’s largest Hispanic-owned supermarke­t chain.

There are now 35 Sedano’s in Miami-Dade and Broward counties and Orlando.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States