During the Great Depression in the 1930s, most Americans were just trying to get by, and few had the luxury of coming home from the grocery store with extra items. But that didn’t stop an Oklahoma grocer from coming up with the idea of a shopping cart, an invention that started out almost as disdained as it was practical.
The man behind the idea was Sylvan N. Goldman, owner of the Humpty Dumpty grocery chain. Interested in increasing his sales, he often paid close attention to how people shopped. One thing stood out: Customers would stop shopping once their handheld baskets got too heavy. Goldman started thinking: What if there were a way for shoppers to carry more with less effort? As an experiment, he took a folding chair, added wheels to the legs, and placed a basket on the seat. He then attached a platform between the chair’s supports to hold a second basket, creating a two-tiered cart that shoppers could push.
When he rolled out these new grocery carts in 1937, he expected a runaway hit, but the reaction wasn’t exactly enthusiastic. Women, already used to pushing strollers, weren’t eager to push another one at the store. Men, on the other hand, preferred not to push something stroller-like at all, they felt it was too feminine. To get people on board, Goldman got creative. He hired store greeters to hand shoppers a cart, and even paid female and male actors/models to walk around shopping with them. Slowly, the idea caught on, and once it did, there was no going back.
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‘why do I always choose the shopping cart with the squeaky wheel?
it is my bad luck, or are all the carts dysfunctional?’
-rachel nichols
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source credits: history facts, npr, mallory yu
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Very interesting!!! Thanks for posting it!!! I had never read it before!
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yes, interesting back story I think
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Wow! That is so interesting. Clever man!
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he really got it
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what an interesting and fun read
thank you beth, learned something
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funny why everyone was so resistant
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Very innovative thinking.
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it makes so much sense
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Very true.
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I love learning new ‘history’ – thank you for sharing this, Beth.
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yes, me too, I really love how things came to be
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I hope he took out a patent! We call them ‘trolleys’ over here, and I first remember seeing them being used in the late 1960s.
Best wishes, Pete.
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he did, but never came up with the ‘nesting’ idea and someone else did
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I would be the one to get the cart with a squeaky wheel or a wheel that doesn’t turn correctly. Interesting photo. It looks like everything is in cans or glass bottles?
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back in the day, yes. and me too
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And a great invention it is too.
Thanks Beth.
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a no-brainer, really
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💯💯
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Well, that’s something I’ve learned today!
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so funny that everyone was freaked out about it resembling a stroller )
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I wonder what he would think about the super-sized carts that many stores have today and how much stuff gets put in them.
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can you imagine?
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Oh my! That’s fascinating! I never knew, or thought about the origin of the carts!
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The reasons for the original resistance are kind of funny looking back at it now
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Interesting. A cart certainly makes carrying a case of beer easier.
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An excellent point, and the reasons for the resistance were kind of funny
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If I’m only getting a few items, I still go for the hand basket, Beth. Otherwise, yay for the big wheels!
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Same!
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When I do shop, which isn’t very often, I always get the cart with at least one flat wheel or one that won’t swivel.
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same here!
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And those nice big carts made it all too easy to pick up lots of items not on one’s shopping list.
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so very true!
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WOW! Fascinating how things start and evolve
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it really is, and we rarely think about them. as you can tell, I love a good origin story
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So glad you do – we appreciate it 🤗
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keep them doggies rolling!
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that’s right!
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Great interesting fact ♥
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<3
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A very good story. My parents, grandparents, and great grandparents survived the great depresion.
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Thank you for teaching me something new today, Beth. And thank you, Sylvan, for inventing the shopping cart. His idea was brilliant. He never gave up either. Great marketing skills.
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he just kept trying, in spite of the resistance
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Fascinating story — I’m intrigued by his marketing efforts as much as the creation itself. How interesting!
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yes, that was clever and interesting the resistance to it
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So, that is another interesting and funny fact. I never thought that there was a time without baskets or shopping carts in the store. However, I had not thought either that people needed to be introduced to them with such tricks.
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it’s funny that they resisted the idea
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Interesting but also a little sad that the reason he came up with the idea of a shopping cart was to make more money and not to make shopping easier for people. And yeah, who wants to push around something that resembles a stroller…that’s only for women. :( Chris
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well, of course a business owner would see it that way, and so funny that the men couldn’t handle it )
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What a remarkable and little known bit of history! Thanks for sharing this!
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my pleasure, I love origin stories
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Just read it again so my adult daughter could hear it! Great piece of historical ‘trivia’! 🤗
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I love this SO MUCH. I don’t know if it’s a Michigan thing, Beth, or just my rural Ohio roots coming through, but it never mattered how far away Sue was from her small-town days. Any time she was out shopping and needed a cart she’d bellow for a “buggy”. Let’s just say she was quite the spectacle in some of the swankier gourmet food shops when she and Sonny moved to California. Thank you for prompting a fun memory and offering a history lesson, too! 🥰😜🥰
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oh, that’s great!
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Men are so fragile…pushing a cart too feminine. Glad that’s over, now if we could change a LOT of other things about them…. I can’t even imagine shopping without a cart. And a lot of carts pull to one since, or make noise, or just don’t work at all. So funny. :)
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I think that is so ridiculously funny, and I love that he had to hire male models too, so the men could handle it
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Agree so ridiculous. 🤣 Think we could hire male models to teach other men to stop being sexist and violent? Or is it just the shopping cart thing???? Fragile egos afraid of doing female things. LOLOLOL Ridiculous.
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right, not sure that would do it unfortunately
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Nothing will do it. Sad but true.
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Such a practical idea.
“So tell me about your acting experience.”
“Well, I’ve never been on stage or in the movies, but I gave an award-winning performance at the Humpty Dumpty pushing a shopping cart around last week.”
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exactly, so funny
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Thank you for sharing this with us Beth. Who would have thought that the story of the cart began like this. Great invention, intelligent inventor.
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Interesting history. They keep getting bigger, too. Or I’m shrinking. 🤔 My first job was as a courtesy clerk – I pushed my share of them!
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they are definitely huge, now. a flashback for you
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Gee and I thought I was the only one that gets trolleys that have a mind of their own
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ah, indeed not –
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Cool story!!!
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I love a good origin story, everything starts somewhere
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Interesting story! And yes, I do end up with the squeaky wheel at times!
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I feel the odds are that we all will
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An interesting bit of history. We seldom stop to think about how the familiar things around us came to be familiar things around us.
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we just assume they always were -)
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I learned something new again, Beth! Thank you! 🥰
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funny how they resisted it )
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This was so awesome to learn! Thanks for sharing. 😁
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funny how they resisted it
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This was interesting!
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This was so fascinating to read about, Beth! I never ever thought before about how shopping carts were invented. From humble beginnings to now something we take for granted. I love the cleverness of which the inventor overcame the initial resistance to using carts too!
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Fascinating!
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Interesting history!
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And funny how people resisted it
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I thought it was for convenience, but to think it was so we’d conveniently shop more. Thanks for sharing this info!
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Always a financial incentive)
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