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  1. When Stanley Goldstein started a new business with his brother, Sidney, and a friend, Ralph Hoagland, he picked a name that he thought said it all, “Consumer Value Stores”—CVS.

  2. May 27, 2024 · 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...

  3. May 29, 2024 · With his brother Sidney and a third partner, Ralph Hoagland, Goldstein started the health-care conglomerate, now with revenues of more than $350 billion, at a single, open-layout store in...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › CVS_HealthCVS Health - Wikipedia

    The first Consumer Value Store (CVS), selling health and beauty products, was founded in 1963, in Lowell, Massachusetts, by brothers Stanley and Sidney Goldstein and Ralph Hoagland. By 1964, CVS had 17 stores that sold primarily beauty products.

  5. Dec 5, 2017 · I wondered how that first one got started, so I called Stanley Goldstein, one of the founders. Now 83, he was 28 when he and his brother Sid launched CVS along with a partner named Ralph...

  6. Jun 1, 2024 · It was only after his brother Sidney asked for his help that Goldstein returned to brainstorm ways to revive the ailing business with Ralph Hoagland, a former Procter & Gamble salesman who...

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  8. Jan 23, 2020 · In the 1960s, Ralph Hoagland was a hard-charging, Harvard-educated entrepreneur whose idealistic crusades for social justice disrupted a promising business career. He teamed up with brothers...

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