I started working at T Whittaker's in 1980 as part-time Christmas help. Thomas Whittaker hired me the following year to manage the Lloyd Center store. He also had a store at Clackamas Town Center. The fellow who managed that store was Jim. Thomas later added a third store in Salem when he purchased Cascade Tobaccos. around 1984, he combined his cutlery store with the tobacco shop, which proved to be a very successful product mix in the Salem market.
I think it was about 1986 that I became the general manager of all three stores and started attending the RTDA shows to purchase products for the upcoming holiday seasons. At that point I was in all three stores, sometimes all three in one day. I put a lot of miles on my Honda Civic!
In the later half of 1992 I left Whittaker's to help start a store in Milwaukee, Oregon, called Cascade News and Tobacco. I left there in December 1992 due to a back injury.
I don't know if I met any of you while working at Whittaker's, but if you came to the Lloyd Center store in the 1980s and early 90s, we probably met.
The Lloyd Center store was originally a satellite store of Arthur Leonard's Tobacco. Leonard's was an old-fashioned tobacco store, and Arthur was a real gentleman! In the 1980s, I heard multiple stories from World War II veterans about how Arthur had sent them there tobacco, wherever they were in the world. One gentleman told me that when he returned home from World War II, one of the first places he went was to Leonard's. Arthur greeted him, shook his hand, welcomed him home, and said, "Follow me." Arthur took him to the back room, and there was an area of lockers. There was one with this gentleman's name on it, and Arthur opened the locker and handed him every check he had mailed in for tobacco during the course of World War II. Arthur had not cashed a single check from this gentleman the entire time he was in the military. Arthur returned to him every check and would not take payment for what he had said to him during the war.
That is just one of many stories I heard about Arthur Leonard! He sat a high standard for tobacconists in Portland! Since we were originally one of Leonard's stores, our customers had high expectations of us and we always tried to live up to those expectations and to the standards of Arthur Leonard even though he had been long gone before I ever stepped foot into T Whittakers.
(Sorry, I didn't intend to write a book.)