At 33, Jim Pessek of Stewart, Minn., is barely old enough to remember a Red Owl supermarket.
But Pessek recalls that, in 1990, the Red Owl Agency stood as the only grocery store remaining in his small city of about 600 residents. In fact, it was one of only seven Red Owls left in Minnesota by that time. At its peak, Red Owl had more than 170 stores, but the numbers dwindled as the company was bought and sold by various owners, including Supervalu.
"My stepdad's family owned the building from 1940 to around 1958, just a small space about 20 by 30 feet," he said. "I've enjoyed Red Owl all my life."
Now, he's trying to create a small museum for fans of Red Owl. He already has plenty of mementos to put into it, things he has been collecting since he was barely a teen.
There's a Red Owl chocolate syrup bottle from 20 years ago, a Harvest Queen coffee can, which was Red Owl's brand, paper grocery bags, wall calendars and spice tins.
"People clean out their houses and say, 'You're the Red Owl guy. Here, take these,' " he said.
Pessek has purchased some larger items, including artist Les Kouba's iconic red owl on a porcelain sign, for $500. He also paid for a re-creation of the "Red Owl Agency" sign that hung on the wall of the original store. Pessek used old photos of the exterior to estimate size and design.
His biggest investment to date is paying $1,000 in 2013 to buy the original Red Owl building in Stewart. The turn-of-the-century building at 820 Powers St. became a Red Owl in 1939. Agency stores were franchised, not corporate-owned, and usually were placed in existing buildings in cities with fewer than 10,000 residents.