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  2. In 1963, Goldstein co-founded CVS Health along with his brother Sidney and business partner Ralph P. Hoagland III. [5] Goldstein was chairman [6] and chief executive officer of Melville [7][8] during the 1980s and 1990s.

  3. Jun 1, 2024 · The customer focus and attention to detail of CVS co-founder Stanley Goldstein, who has died aged 89, are among the reasons why. What began with a pair of Consumer Value Stores in...

  4. CVS quickly grew to a chain of three dozen stores before the Melville Corp., a specialty retailing chain run by Francis A. Rooney Jr., W’43 (see p. 58), acquired it for $12 million in 1969. Goldstein stayed on as president, and in 1987, became CEO of Melville.

  5. May 22, 2024 · Stanley Goldstein, a kid from Woonsocket who grew up humbly and founded a tiny company called Consumer Value Stores that grew into the gigantic CVS Health corporation, sadly left us Tuesday...

  6. Jul 14, 2024 · 1. Early beginnings. The first Consumer Value Store opened in Lowell, Massachusetts, in 1963, according to the company's website. CVS was founded by brothers Stanley and Sidney Goldstein and...

  7. 1963: The first Consumer Value Store (CVS) opens in Lowell, Massachusetts, as a discount health and beauty aid store in which customers bag their own merchandise; founders are brothers Sid and Stanley Goldstein and Ralph Hoagland. 1964: The CVS name is used for the first time.

  8. May 27, 2024 · Stanley P. Goldstein, who in the early 1960s helped start a retail chain named Consumer Value Stores, which, after shortening its name to CVS — because, he said, fewer letters meant cheaper...

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