From 1950 until 1995, the Wholf Hardware store was in business in the 600 block of Hancock Street. Alton “Bud” Wholf began the business. William Poeschl, Sr., a German immigrant, took over the business from Mr. Wholf in 1963. In an article in the Sandusky Register of March 25, 1984, Mr. Poeschl said that he did not change the name of the store because people would have a hard time pronouncing Poeschl, which sounded like “Po-Shell.” The major part of the store’s sales was basic hardware, like bolts, nuts, fasteners, hinges, and hand tools. Plumbing supplies were also popular with local customers.
In 1984 about 300 customers visited the business each day. If you needed to, you could purchase just one nail or bolt at the store. If you had a problem at your house, you could go to Wholf Hardware, and the staff would help you determine just what you needed to make the necessary repair. Eventually Mr. Poeschl’s son and grandson helped run the business. Business began to decline at Wholf Hardware as larger retail stores began to carry more hardware products. At the end of April, 1995, members of the Poeschl family thanked local customers for their many years of patronage, as they announced the closing of the Wholf Hardware store in a letter to the editor of the Sandusky Register.
In a two-page article in the July 5, 1992 issue of the Sandusky Register, Virginia Steinemann and Helen Hansen wrote about the history of the section of Sandusky around Hancock and Monroe Streets, which had been the location of several homes and businesses owned by people of German descent.
The paint stirrer pictured below is now in the
collections of the Sandusky Library Archives Research Center.
1 comment:
My guess is that the section of Hankock Streeet near Monroe contained several retail businesses because that corner was a stop on the interurban trolley line that ran between Sandusky and a town further inland (Milan, Norwalk...?). Otto's ice cream, H&S Bakery, and Sam Stein's initial location for what later became Grill Meats were some of the businesses located at that intersection when I was a kid (1940's-50's). This was long after the trolley had stopped running, altho I recall that the rails still ran down the middle of Hanckock at that time.
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