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Charles Von der Ahe

Charles Theodore Von der Ahe
Born (1882-08-29)August 29, 1882
Copenhagen, Denmark
Died June 4, 1973(1973-06-04) (aged 89)
Los Angeles, California
Resting place Holy Cross Cemetery, Culver City, California
Occupation Founder of Vons Groceteria and Vons, businessman, Philanthropist
Spouse(s) Linda Augusta Luer (m. 1907–73)
Children 8
Parent(s) Rudolph Peter Von der Ahe, Caroline Larsen

Charles Theodore Von der Ahe (August 29, 1882 – June 4, 1973) was an American businessman, best known as an early innovator in the grocery business in Southern California, and founder of Vons supermarket chain in Southern California along with his two sons, Wilfred and Theodore.

Von der Ahe's parents were Charles Rudolph Peter Von der Ahe (1858 – 1918) and Caroline Sophie Larsen (1858 – 1917).

Von der Ahe's family moved from Denmark to the United States in 1889, and they eventually settled in Illinois. Even though Charles was born in Denmark, the Von der Ahe family was of German extraction, having moved to Denmark one or two generations earlier.

Von der Ahe was married to Linda Augusta Luer (1887 – 1973, née Linda Luer) in 1907. The Von der Ahes had eight children, with five boys and three girls: Theodore (Ted), Wilfred (Wil), Karl, Walter, Virginia, Clyde, Muriel, and Dorothy.

Von der Ahe began his career as a delivery boy for a meat shop and grocery store in Illinois. Then, he headed out west to seek his fortune. He arrived in Los Angeles, and in 1906 with a $1200 investment, he opened Von's Groceteria, a 20-foot store at the corner of 7th and Figueroa streets. Von der Ahe pioneered a system of cash and carry (as opposed to charge and deliver). He also pioneered the combination store concept, through his idea of leasing open storefronts to produce vendors and butchers, innovation which would eventually lead to the development of the first supermarket in California. His business grew quickly, and he had expanded to 87 stores by 1928, but he sold the business to MacMarr Stores in 1929, in anticipation of the stock market crash, and retired from the business.

A few years later, Von der Ahe's sons Wilfred and Theodore convinced him to provide financial backing, and the Von der Ahes opened the Vons Grocery Company in 1932. In 1948, Vons opened a pioneering store which offered self-service, pre-packaged produce, meat, and deli items, which has been called by some the first supermarket and established Vons and the Von der Ahes as leaders in the industry. Many features of supermarkets today, such as volume buying, the big store, the open refrigerated case, centralized meat-cutting, and the cent-off food coupon stem from the early days of competition between Vons and Ralphs. By 1958, Vons was the third-largest grocery chain in greater Los Angeles. When the company went public, Vons had annual sales of $100 million and 28 stores. In 1960 it acquired the sixth-largest competitor Shopping Bag Food Stores, a merger that was challenged by the Federal Trade Commission on antitrust grounds. In 1966 the United States Supreme Court ruled against Vons in United States v. Von's Grocery Co. (384 U.S. 270), forcing a re-divestiture of the stores. The Von der Ahe family sold the chain to Household Finance Corporation in 1969. In 1970, Vons had 128 stores, making it the 2nd largest supermarket chain in southern California behind Safeway. By the end of 2011, Vons had 325 stores across Southern California and Nevada.


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