Sunday, June 5, 2022

$5+ GAS but NO CLEAN GAS STATION BATHROOMS?!?!?

 

Believe it or not, gas station bathrooms used to be squeaky clean. Here's what changed. 

New York (CNN Business)Gas station bathrooms are the last place most people want to stop to do their business. 

But that wasn't always the case. Spotless bathrooms were once a crucial selling point for gas stations. 
In fact, oil giants' gas station ads in the early and mid-20th century assured travelers that their bathrooms were as clean as those in drivers' own homes. 
    Texaco, Gulf, Shell, Sunoco, Esso, Phillips and other companies plastered billboards on roads, ran color ads in national magazines and created catchy slogans such as "Registered Rest Rooms" and "Clean Restroom Crusade" to highlight their facilities. The companies battled to surpass each others' bathrooms, with some companies even sending out "White Patrol" and "Highway Hostess" teams to inspect and certify them.
      Companies tried to make their bathrooms feel more like home in response to the growing number of women who were driving and traveling around the country. By 1928, women bought half of gas stations' fuel that year, according to an industry journal. 
          Trailers stopping into a gas station in New Jersey in the early to mid-20th century. Gas stations upgraded their bathrooms to appeal to women.
          Oil companies believed women would be the ones deciding where to stop with their families, even if they weren't driving, said Susan Spellman, a historian at Miami University who wrote her thesis on how women influenced the development of gas stations. 
          "She will remember the dirty rest room and avoid the station on her next trip," read a 1938 article in trade journal National Petroleum News with the headline "Women Shun Dirty Stations."
          At the same time, companies' efforts excluded Black women and men, who were barred from using these restrooms in the segregated South and were not a focus for these companies in the North until the 1950s and 1960s.

          Real Estate

          Wenston DeSue is a realtor, organizational consultant, design, construct, build expert and developmental networker.  Real estate is the business of exchange and affects every person on the planet.  Real estate on all levels represents resources, access and ultimately, power.  Knowledge is power…


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