Friday, October 21, 2022

Shoreway Shopping Center Ad – October 19, 1962

Many of the shopping centers in the area dating back to the 1950s and 60s have been having a rough time for decades. Lorain Plaza is still hanging on, with stores like Apples and Dollar Tree, and newer tenant Defender Self Storage. Roughly half of the old Westgate shopping center in Lorain has been leased by Auxilio, the company that handles bus transportation for Lorain City Schools. Vermilion is a little bit luckier, with both of its shopping centers (South Shore Shopping Center and Lakeside Shopping Center) on U. S. Route 6 doing pretty well, which isn't too surprising as it is a tourist town for much of the year.

Sheffield Lake's Shoreway Shopping Center, which was reconfigured a few years ago, also seems to be doing pretty well, with Apples as its anchor store. Sixty years ago, the well-promoted shopping center ran the ad below in the Journal on October 19, 1962.

"Come see the Shoreway Clown," the ad announces. "Everyone is eligible to try and give the clown a new name. Free suckers for the kiddies was also part of the promotion.

It's a quaint idea – from the vantage point of sixty years later – to think that all it took was a clown and some suckers to drum up some traffic for the shopping center. 
Today, an appearance by a clown at a shopping center would be more likely to send the kiddies fleeing in terror.
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Hey, that clown is the same one that appeared in an 1962 ad for Meyer Goldberg (here). I guess the artist at the Journal that designed the shopping center ad had a limited supply of clip art.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Who was the clown?Did anybody have a friend who played the Clown or know who the Clown was?The Shoreway Shopping Center Clown looks a little like that other clown from Sheffield Lake,Anthony Campo.Remember he was the police chief that abruptly retired after making racist comments towards another fellow officer?Yes he looks just like Anthony.That's all Sheffield Lake needs is racist clowns running all over the place.

Don Hilton said...

I had a good friend who was a clown.

I mean an honest-to-goodness professional clown.

While in makeup, the clown never spoke.

A good thing, because out of makeup, he swore like sailor.

So...
I guess I've looked at clowns from both sides, now!