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  • Earth 2 Chris
    replied
    The same with department stores that still have the old basement staircases, the toy department was always in the basement of our local zellers. I sometimes go down those stairs hoping to see an endcap of Kiss dolls or something...
    Our old town Ben Franklin has been a clothing store, an antique mall, and various thrift shops. When I go in there, I still sometimes think that the magical stairs will take me through some wormhole in time to the old toy land that awaited at the bottom of the stairs.

    Great thread Scott!!!

    Chris

    Leave a comment:


  • palitoy
    replied
    You really touched upon something here Scott. My local Sears had and still has this long concrete ramp that used to lead to their toy department. It doesn't anymore but I still like seeing it, it reminds me of childhood excitement.

    The same with department stores that still have the old basement staircases, the toy department was always in the basement of our local zellers. I sometimes go down those stairs hoping to see an endcap of Kiss dolls or something...

    Leave a comment:


  • AAAAA
    replied
    ah i remember mimi's discount store and Johns Hardwear (both sold toys) up the street on treemount ave in the Bronx where I live in the 60's gone in 71-72.
    You can always go home .....you can never go back.
    Last edited by AAAAA; Sep 20, '09, 4:25 PM.

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  • VintageMike
    replied
    Great memory! It's always cool to see stuff like that. It's amazing to me that even in the current state it pretty much looks the same as the original photo. A real piece of history. The only two places still around where I got any my childhood toys are Toys R' Us (Still the same location/building) and oddly enough, The Sears in one of the local malls.

    Leave a comment:


  • drmego
    replied
    My earliest MEGO was the RC Batman and Robin in 1972 at a store
    on Willis Ave. and Hillside Ave. in Mineola called Big D - as in big
    Discount. It was a 5 and 10 and for once I learned to drive in
    my non-mego years (1978-1988), I used to go there hoping to
    still find a stray superhero on a back shelf.

    A few years ago the building was leveled and they built a
    generic Chase or Citibank on the spot. I still sometimes drive
    past it, but the thrill is gone.

    That's the problem with then and now - it almost always is a
    sad ending - although I like the idea that a college is teaching
    at what used to be a cheap store.

    Leave a comment:


  • UnderdogDJLSW
    replied
    Great pictures, Scott. What was the original website that you were looking through that had the shopping mall pictures in it? That sounds like a neat one in and of itself. I'd love to search through that. The 1960's picture is so beautiful, but if I came upon the building today, I would have never guessed it was a Sears.

    The Sears I went to as a kid is still around, but the TRU and a store called Juvenile Sales where I got most of my WGSH and CAH are long gone. Still TRUs in the area, but the building that was the one my folks took me to, near the University of Maryland, is now a supply store or something.

    Leave a comment:


  • Goblin19
    replied
    That's a nice story, Scott. My major toy store was Children's Palace and it is a grocery store now, and has been for a long time.

    Leave a comment:


  • TEXASFETT
    replied
    I had a local K-mart that also had a lot of mego memories,it sat there for more than a decade,and recently got turned into a college.

    Leave a comment:


  • wayne foundation 07
    replied
    Some where inside is a sad empty toy aisle.Gotta love a look back into the past like that,thanks for sharing.

    Leave a comment:


  • Evel KMego
    replied
    Very nice story Scott. I understand that feeling. All the stores I used to get my childhood toys from have closed too. The buildings are still being used by other stores though, but it's not the same. My K-mart is now a Rural King (farming/ hunting kind of store) I swear it still smells like I remember it as a kid inside though!!!!

    Leave a comment:


  • WheresRICHARD
    replied
    The OLD MEGO HAUNTS Picture Challenge

    I'd like to add a challenge to other members with this incredibly fascinating thread. I wondered if I could use either Google Earth's "Street View" feature or Bing Maps' Aerial view to find the store where EACH OF US used to buy most of our Megos when we were kids. So that's my challenge to you. Put your memory through its paces....See if you can remember the exact location of that 1970s store where you went to find Megos, and use the tools available to see if you can track down that location now, capture a picture of what the building (or parking space) looks like now...and best of all, describe how it was "back in the day."

    It was difficult remembering, but I think I tracked mine down. In the first picture below you'll see a link to picture labeled "Murphy Now."

    http://s560.photobucket.com/albums/s...=murphynow.jpg

    When I was, oh 10 or 11, my mom was the manager of a Goodwill store down the road from here, in South Charleston, West Virginia, so my brother and I would frequently walk to this building. Back in those days, it was the late, great, historic G.C. MURPHY'S; today it is a large Chinese restaurant. The big protruding sign with the restaurant name on it was not there at the time...You can kind of make out the original building behind it, where the big letters spelling out "G.C. MURPHY" were. That first door, over toward the right, was the entrance, and over to the right was a diner area. So kind of in the area of the door, after you walked past the diner, was the shelf where carded WORLD'S GREATEST SUPERHEROES hung.

    The second photo is entitled "Indian Mound"
    http://s560.photobucket.com/albums/s...ndianmound.jpg

    This would be right behind you as you faced the GC Murphy store. It is and was an Indian Burial Mound. Second largest such burial mound in the state. I posted this because after my brother and I got our Megos, we would take them to the burial mound and play with them. Interesting that today, of course, this has been declared some kind of protected park, but I have distinct memories of easily finding an actual Indian arrowhead there back in the 1970s. Thought it was interesting for a few minutes and then put it back.

    I'd love it if someone else would accept the challenge to find YOUR former Mego haunt.
    Last edited by WheresRICHARD; Sep 18, '09, 7:40 PM.

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  • jessica
    replied
    Thanks for sharing some time on memory lane. It's sad to see how the building is now, but at least you have great memories of it from when you were younger.

    Leave a comment:


  • MegoMark71
    replied
    Thanks Scott, i love then and now pics.

    Leave a comment:


  • toysforlife
    replied
    that is really cool. there needs to be a book published with " then and now" images like that where you can go visit them. Would be interesting to dig around in a place like that to see what came up..in the attic or storage

    Leave a comment:


  • HardyGirl
    replied
    What a cool memory. Thanks for sharing it w/ us.

    Leave a comment:

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