The Greentown Glass Museum features locally-made glass items and is located at 112 N Meridian Street in Greentown City Hall, Greentown, Indiana . Items include vases, mugs, pitchers, salt cellars, toothpick holders, covered dishes topped by hens, cats, and rabbits, and other decorative items. There is also an exhibit with examples of all the patterns and colors of glass made by the local factory. The items were created beginning in 1894 by the Indiana Tumbler and Goblet Factory, which was sold in 1899 to the National Glass Company, and then shut down the factory in 1903 when a fire destroyed the building.
7-464: The museum was incorporated in 1969. Turn-of-the-century pharmacy cases were donated to the museum by Hook's Drug Stores in order to display the glass. "The Greentown Glass Museum displays over seven hundred glassware articles, and the town hosts an annual Greentown Glass Festival on the second weekend in June, marking the anniversary of the factory's demise and the close of a short but significant period in
14-665: A hostile takeover, and acquired the Hook's chain. Kroger divested itself of Hook's and its own SupeRx drugstores a year later, and Hook's became a division of the privately held Hook's-SupeRx . Hook's-SupeRx acquired the New England–based Brooks Pharmacy chain in 1988. Hooks-SupeRx stores traded under three different names – Hook's Drug and SupeRx in the Midwest and Brooks Pharmacy in New England. Hook's-SupeRx
21-483: A partner. By 1912, the chain had expanded to twelve stores. Many of Hook's interwar drug stores were designed by Kurt Vonnegut Sr. of Vonnegut & Bohn . Roesch became president of the company in 1943 upon Hook's death. In 1956, following Roesch's death in a traffic accident, John Hook's son, August F. "Bud" Hook, assumed leadership of the company. The chain added 150 new stores between 1946 and 1972. In 1985, The Kroger Company outbid Rite Aid , which had attempted
28-532: The history of this Howard County town." This article related to an art display, art museum or gallery in the United States is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article about a building or structure in Indiana is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Hook%27s Drug Stores Hook's Drug Stores was an Indianapolis, Indiana –based drug store chain which
35-444: The late 1990s and rebranded their stores as CVS. The Brooks Pharmacy stores were divested by Revco after the purchase; most of them operate as Rite Aid stores. In October 1900, pharmacist John A. Hook opened the first Hook's Drug Store in an Indianapolis German community at the corner of South East and Prospect Streets. A second location opened at the corner of New Jersey and East Washington Streets and Hook added Edward F. Roesch as
42-718: Was acquired by Revco in 1994. Revco was subsequently acquired by CVS in 1997. Many former Hook's locations are now CVS Pharmacies. A restored 19th-century Hook's drug store stands at the Indiana State Fairgrounds , and is a popular attraction at the annual Indiana State Fair . It was originally built in 1849 and has been restored with authentic 19th century cabinets. In 2000, the great-grandchildren of John A. Hook opened Hook's Apothecary in Evansville, Indiana . The store specializes in compounding prescriptions. It has no corporate ties to CVS. After Hook's
49-666: Was founded in 1900 by John A. Hook. The chain flourished throughout central Indiana for most of the 20th-century. Hook's did business under its own banner, the SupeRX Drug Stores banner outside its core market, and the Brooks Pharmacy banner after acquiring the New England pharmacy chain. The entire company was eventually purchased by fellow Midwestern drugstore chain Revco . Most former Hook's locations that are still open operate as CVS , which bought out Revco in
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