Excellent, excellent! The city map still needs an update to include the post-59 info...but Wisconsin is looking very good indeed!
Some thoughts on the supermarket history of this particular city, and the peculiarities thereof...
* A&P's store base in Green Bay was strangely devoid of centennials. Two stores opened there smack dab in the middle of that era (1029 W Mason and 510 James in De Pere); both were standalone stores, yet both had generic flat rooflines! (Manitowoc, Sheboygan, Oshkosh, and the Fox Cities are
also strangely devoid of centennials, so what was going on with A&P in northeast Wisconsin in that era?! Beats me.)
* Back in 2010 when I was travelling to Green Bay twice a week, I did some cursory research on my surroundings and discovered that 2080 University Ave was listed as a "Red Owl Family Center" in a 1977 directory. That sounds like some sort of food and general merchandise combination; but I know nothing about the specifics.
* I had been wondering about the fate of the Sure Way chain...which emerged in the 1950s, thrived for years, then sunk without a trace. Thanks to your research, I now know that Sure Way morphed into Jubilee by 1998. Near as I can tell, the company went bankrupt and shut down their GB outlets in 2004.
Jubilee still exists as a franchised brand in some places: There are references on the web to extant Jubilee stores in Minnesota, Michigan, New York, and Maryland, all with the same logo. Jubilee also is (or was) an IGA affiliate, which might account for that strange geographical footprint and these stragglers.
* The stonework on 3823 S. Webster Ave. is fantastic!
* Directory coverage of Green Bay's suburbs has always been inconsistent, but I'm surprised that 2110 S. Ridge Rd. in Ashwaubenon and 1220 S. Webster Ave. in Allouez didn't get a mention. Both of these are documented Sentry locations, and one of them will
forever be associated as "Joel Hodgson's Sentry" in my mind.