Stewart's Shops

Stewart's Shops
Privately held company
Industry Convenience store
Founded 1945 Ballston Spa, New York (1945)
Headquarters Saratoga Springs, NY, US
Number of locations
330
Area served
eastern Upstate New York and southwestern Vermont
Key people
chairman: William Dake
President: Gary Dake
Treasurer: David Farr
Products Ice cream, coffee, gasoline (most)
Revenue $1.5+ billion
$30 million
Number of employees
4,500+
Website stewartsshops.com
Stewart's headquarters, Malta NY

Stewart's Shops is a US chain of convenience stores located primarily in eastern Upstate New York and southwestern Vermont.

Headquartered in Saratoga Springs, the company is well-established, particularly in the Capital District. Within New York, its stores can be found as far north as the Canadian border towns, as far west as Oswego and as far south as Goshen at the northern fringe of the New York metropolitan area. Its Vermont outlets can be found in Rutland and Bennington counties.

Known for branded ice cream, potato chips, milk, coffee and other drinks, the stores often include gasoline pumps. In addition, most also feature a small dining area, not common in U.S. stores of this type.

There are now 330 shops in operation.[1]

History

Stewart's has always been a business of the Dake family, which traces the chain's origins to Percy and Charles V. Dake making Dake's Delicious Ice Cream beginning in 1921 at the family farm in Greenfield, New York.

Fourteen years later, the brothers started Saratoga Dairy in an old barn in Saratoga Springs. This move occurred in the same year that New York began requiring all milk to be pasteurized. Without this new local plant available, many local dairy farmers would have had to go out of business, and they were grateful vendors.

In 1938 they expanded into the city's old water works, and then went into making cheese, powdered whey and casein two years afterward, following another new property purchase, this time in Greenfield. That and the milk this plant produced were sold all over the Northeast, as far south as Maryland.

As the war ended, the brothers bought an ice cream production facility in Ballston Spa from Donald Stewart. Charles S. Dake, newly discharged from the military and looking for something to do, decided to start selling Stewart's Ice Cream to the public fresh off the line. This is considered to be the first Stewart's Shop.

A one-story brownish building with flat, flared roof and the script "Stewart's" in white on the roof on the right. In the center, in the foreground, are several gas pumps under a small canopy. At left is a maroon-and-white sign with another script "Stewart's" and gas prices.
A typical Stewart's; this one in Walden, NY
Stewart's alludes to its Adirondack origins with ice cream flavors that play on regional place names. These reference Mount Marcy and Kayaderosseras Creek.

Two others quickly followed, in Saratoga Springs and South Glens Falls. They were popular since ice cream and other sweet foods had been tightly rationed during the war. In 1948 the company introduced the folding paper ice cream carton so customers could bring home fresh ice cream more cheaply. The more notable innovation of the year, however, came from the younger Charles Dake's wife Phyllis, who suggested allowing people to make their own sundaes from a choice of toppings, a practice which continues today and has been widely imitated. The company's Philly Vanilla ice cream was named in her honor.[2]

Saratoga Dairy and Stewart's Ice Cream were formally incorporated with the state in 1950, and ice cream production was moved back to the Greenfield facility, which could handle the increased demand. By 1955 there were over 50 Stewart's Shops.

1957 saw a regulatory battle between the companies and the U.S. Department of Agriculture for the right to sell the company's own milk in its own stores. It was resolved in Stewart's favor, and as a result of this vertical integration, retail milk prices in the stores dropped by 25%.

The younger Dake took over the company from his uncle in 1959 and the following year brought his brother William in. The holder of a graduate degree in engineering from Cornell University, William was able to solve some production problems at the dairy, and as a result it began running at a profit. Over the course of the 1960s, the new Dake brothers turned the company into one of the East's largest private dairies.

Charles died of cancer in 1978, leaving William Hodge to carry on the business for six years until his son Gary could join the company. A decade later, the company built a new dairy facility and bought the Bonfare chain, adding 40 stores at a single stroke. In the late 1990s, it began aggressively expanding out of its base in the Saratoga area, pushing south into the mid-Hudson Valley for the first time.

William Hodge retired to become chairman of the board in 2003, and Gary became president of the company.

References

External links