I grew up and still live pretty close to the Wonder Bread factory. My parents & I used to drop by frequently to buy some sugary goodness. The pervasive aroma of freshly baked bread was heavenly. You could smell it from several blocks away. I miss it.😣
Buffalo native here, they’ve turned similar buildings into apartments, offices, and restaurants, hopefully this one will be preserved someday in a similar fashion.
Yup corrupt politicians give developers sweetheart deals yet the poverty in that neighborhood continues. Poverty pimps. Help the people in the neighborhood not multimillionaires with sweet heart taxpayer funded deals.
I love this... I was actually THERE when my second grade class was brought for a tour of it. The year was 1965. It was a moment I will never forget... I can still remember the smell of the bread being made!!!
One thing I like about Buffalo, compared to the many other cities I have been to, is there seems to be a great respect for the history and their wonderful architecture. While other places couldn't wait to tear down architectural gems down to put up new construction, Buffalonians seem to understand the value of what they have. Edited for typo..
I grew up a few blocks away, on Donovan Drive, and remember going by on the way to school, PS 62 & Genesee-Humboldt Junior High (PS 91), both of which were on Urban Street (we walked down the tracks 'cause it was faster than walking down Box St, to Moselle, then to Urban!) and spent more than one extra nickel in the "day old store" in the corner of the factory building! Thanks for the great many memories!!!! I can even imagine the smell of the fresh bread right now as I type this comment!
now buffalo just smells like cheerios. and im ok with it some days working construction downtown smell so freaking good. especially when they cooking up the strawberry cheerios
@@toastedfoolery7137 I remember seeing t-shirts for sale that said, "My city smells like Cherios!". So cool! I'll have to check and see if they still make them.
Most of them had regular "school trip tours". Being just up the street from our school, we had them a lot! And we always got a small loaf of bread, and usually a cupcake, or Twinke at the end!
I love the smell of fresh baked bread. We had a Merita Bread factory in Orlando that was on the south side of town right next to I-4 and I loved driving by it when they were baking their bread. It is now gone and was replaced by an International truck shop.
I remember in the 60s growing up in Tampa Fl. We had a Wonder Bread Bakery Factory just outside of Tampa. The site area is now incorporated inside the Tampa City Limits. We also had indepent bakery and and pastry shops. The go to before Dunkin Doughnuts.😊
I spent 34 years as route driver for Wonder Bread Hostess Cake. Private label killed wonder bread and poor management, when the atkins diet was popular that was the final nail, plus managment wanted to get rid of the union.
0:00: There is a story about Buffalo City Hall, the building in the center of this shot. Back in the 1970's, a despondent man went up to the observation deck near the top, and jumped. Unfortunately, due to having to jump away from the building to avoid the next terrace below the observation deck (as seen in this view), he landed squarely on the flagpole (also seen in this view...) impaling himself some 80' up in the air. It was a gory mess, and it took the fire department better than an hour (using the highest ladder truck they had) to remove his now-deceased corpse from the pole. People said the pole remained stained with his blood for weeks afterwards.....
There is a Milk-Bone plant next to it that is still in operation you can see the back of it at 00:30 and to the left across the train tracks which are still used. . I used to be the yard jockey there moving trailers in and out of the loading docks. When Milk-Bone was making bacon treats you could smell the bacon coming out of the plant, and the bread baking next door.
*Nearly every abandoned factory and infrastructure you see was related to greed, profit is never enough. They always want more, until there is no more*
Indeed, greed is an element. Also globalization. But mostly, it is currency debasement. Everything gets old, forgotten, worn out, trimmed down, cut back, reduced, diluted. Both things and human capital alike. Human incompetence and building degradation reign as the value of the dollar is diminished by centralized theft.
Sadly, Buffalo has many empty factories and buildings and more on the way. New York State makes it very difficult for companies to invest & stay here. The economic cycle is to to run companies like this out of New York State. We have lost Steel Mills, bakeries, tire plants, multiple automotive plants,and on and on. The city is littered with what used to be. We spend far too much time on the past and not enough time looking towards sustaining the future. While other Rust Belt cities recover, we continue to decline.
My hometown, Buffalo is full of history from the WB factory to the Trico buidling. A lot of things where invented in Buffalo to from the A.C to the pacemaker to the first ever street lighted with streetlights and even more. Buffalo was no is a very historic cool city
yeah but everyone knows that, I’m talking about all the cool stuff no one talks about like the first horse carousel being made in north tonawanda, The electric chair being made in buffalo, or American Express, can’t forget we had the first city park system in the United States or the first cancer only laboratory in the United States… Buffalo is so much more then just chicken wings
I remember the Wonder Brea factory in St. Paul, MN. I got a tour in the 5th grade. The workers there were not very happy from the looks of it. Lots of heavy equpipment.
The mills along Buffalo’s water front probably provide the flour for this bakery. Farmers from the Northern Plains likely sent their wheat via rail to Lake Superior and it was trans loaded onto bulk carriers.
@@andrewfischer8564 Remember dad driving over the 59 bridge to Queens at nite , just about midway I’d say Dad ! Smell the Bread ? Yea , smells Good . Lots of great plants around back then . Long gone are the bread ,beer , milk processing plants that kept New Yorkers working ! Great Times !
back in the 50's there used to be a Helms Bakery the next town over. my mom and dad told me about the wonderful smells when the back of the delivery van was opened, and the awesome products they sold. It closed for good in the late 60's early 70's was empty until the 80'sm and the building was another bakery for a while, don't know what they are using it for now, but wish I had been around to experience the baked good that they sold before they went out of business...
Try Our Lady of Fatima Shrine in Niagara County, NY. Or the free spring water flowing out of the garden hose outside the entrance of Letchworth State Park(THE GRAND CANYON OF THE EAST) in Mt.Morris NY
I can’t stand to see empty buildings like this when there are so many homeless people. I really hope this building can be saved and turned into a residential or mixed use building. Hopefully one day it will happen.
I remember they closed them all pretty much. There was a factory and outlet store in Tulsa Oklahoma off 11th and Sheridan where they used to bake bread. After 7 at night the whole mile smelled like toast and the store had fresh breads and goods and also things that needed to be eaten within the week making them cheaper. When it closed so many lost jobs and the community lost a steady source of good but cheap breads pastries and pies to eat.
You need to check out the oldest museum in America - The Steinheim Museum on the campus of Alfred University in Alfred, NY and the bell tower next to it!
Certain situations/sandwiches are best with the WB. I gave the birds a half loaf of WB this morning, they couldn't find it in the snow. I have a skull full of Indiana stuff and I had never heard WB started here in Indy. Well done and thanks.
I'm always curious about abandoned factories; we have quite a few in Frackville, PA.. I envision them becoming a new part of the community, but alas,,they just stand there and decay. So sad.
This place had a twin. The old Wonder building in The Bronx is designed and looked exactly the same as these photos. Today it’s lofts and apartments in the South Bronx.
The Will And Baumer candle company in Syracuse Ny ,we use to make candles form the everyday consumer to The Pope ,please shed light on this ,no pun intended .
If the building is still structurally strong, it will probably be turned into condos or a bitcoin server farm. Of course, the latter requires a power infrastructure to provide enough energy for it. On a side note, my last name is Wonder and I do have a beard. Also, in the 50s through 70s, I ate an awful lot of Wonder Bread, also to be called Wonder Bread in grade school.
The circles are red, blue, and yellow on a white background,. The bright circles are not "red, white, and yellow". FYI, team. Sent you an email about the misspelling the title. Nothing I can do about content inaccuracy, though. The circles are red, yellow, and blue. The background is white.
Our St Paul family Grandparents, Parents, Kids and Grandkids did not like the sweetness of Wonder Bread but we were aware a lot of folks did. My other Grandmother, my oldest Aunt and her daughter my cousin baked bread from scratch as long as they had kitchens. That cousin lost a twin to what killed baby Patrick Kennedy in the 1960's. When she grew up and married she started fostering at risk premies n Santa Clarita. She never lost any baby. As her own kids grew up they started adopting some of the kids, now kids with complex health problems. When she passed, her oldest daughter, a Nurse took those siblings in who were not able to live independent lives.
i switched cars in frontier yard -the sidings that serviced wonderbread were full of rats from piles of flour that spilled off the cars when they got bumped ,each rotting pile of flour smelled like loaded baby diapers and had flies /maggots and huge rats at night swarming all over it , never liked wonderbread esp after that experience
Would you possibly make a video about all the positive traits that borderlines do have? Like an example- how they love more intense and how they are more passionate than regular people.... I'd like to know more. Maybe some benefits would be good to hear lol
Many cities in NY had local baking industries. Freihofer had a chocolate chip factory in Albany. Over the years the anti-business climate in the state chased them all out.
@@cjninebot13 They had one right across the street from our high school in Ohio.We took a tour through the plant and they gave us a miniature loaf of Wonder Bread at the end of the tour.
I worked at flowers food ,holsum foods in tollesion az.we made wonder bread,i was made in automated dough makermachine line,it became too expensive to maintain and was replaced with conv mixer proofed dough system,at this bakery wonder bread was bagged in 6 to 8 different brand name bags ,same bread,never the same,flowers owns and produces many breads,romanmeal,daves killer bread,too many to list,many the same breads just in different bags.they do buns also,jack in the box,mcdonalds,which they lost the contract on,many burger chain buns,food city,
We Wonder about that bread!! Sunbeam bread had a yellow wrapper!! A tisket, a tasket, a Sunbeam yellow basket, sunbean bread is wrapped in yellow so it can be found!!
Funny this should come up. Wonder Bread is still being made by someone and I bought a loaf the other day in WV. I was expecting that white bread with holes in it but what I got was a very tasty slightly coarse texture bread, quite good. I grew up near Bridgeport, CT and there was a large Wonder Bread bakery there. My Dad was friends with the Manager, John Allen. We made several trips touring it as Cub and Boy Scouts. And yes it smelled great. I never told them my Mom only bought Pepperidge Farm Bread. 🤣
The Landmark Red Osier Restaurant in Stafford, NY on Rt.#5. They sell more Prime Rib of Beef than any other restaurant in NYS !! AND have for over 50 yrs that i know of!! This is 1 of the Best well kept secrets in WNY state, 7:24 i have ever heard of !! They have the 5# challenge! Eat the entire meal and its FREE!! Don Moore and his wife ran it back them, its the best meal i ever ate for FREE !! That was 50 yrs ago! ENJOY!!
It is like the industrial age chrewed up and spit out Buffalo and other cities. I don't member the name but there is one street with gorgeous homes near a river. Or maybe that is Niagra.
I'm a fan of Buffalo, but not Wonder Bread. It's a wonder they can call it bread. Poor Buffalo. Rust Belt stained. Oh, but the weather. Today, Buffalo is getting smacked with Lake Effect Snow. Go Bills Go.
Yeah, yeah, yeah ... "Wonder" Bread -- yes, I wonder what "bread" it is. But BFO is WAY beyond the Rust Belt, snow capital, of stereotypes. Would rather live there than 115' Phoenix in the shade.
That taggert bakery became Campbell taggert bakery which at its prime was the largest in the world. Bakeries in Europe south America and Asia. They owned Merico biscuits the refrigerator dough folks etc. Later sold to Bushe beer than to sara Lee now bimbo
I grew up and still live pretty close to the Wonder Bread factory. My parents & I used to drop by frequently to buy some sugary goodness. The pervasive aroma of freshly baked bread was heavenly. You could smell it from several blocks away. I miss it.😣
There used to be one in St. Paul, MN. They tore it down to put up a "tax palace" for State employees to collect taxes.
Buffalo native here, they’ve turned similar buildings into apartments, offices, and restaurants, hopefully this one will be preserved someday in a similar fashion.
20 years of lake effect snow and other weather has not been kind to this factory
Yup corrupt politicians give developers sweetheart deals yet the poverty in that neighborhood continues. Poverty pimps. Help the people in the neighborhood not multimillionaires with sweet heart taxpayer funded deals.
WOW! I’m 71 and remember going on a field trip there while going to school PS62.
And at the end of the tour getting a miniature loaf of fresh bread.
@@pucmahone3893 I went and took my own self guided tour there. There's some good graffiti in it now
Same in Utica ,New York.
I love this... I was actually THERE when my second grade class was brought for a tour of it. The year was 1965. It was a moment I will never forget... I can still remember the smell of the bread being made!!!
One thing I like about Buffalo, compared to the many other cities I have been to, is there seems to be a great respect for the history and their wonderful architecture. While other places couldn't wait to tear down architectural gems down to put up new construction, Buffalonians seem to understand the value of what they have.
Edited for typo..
In this season, we need to remember; "not by bread alone."
Life is everything sacred.
I'm from Buffalo born and raised and still live here. I love your channel this is amazing content
I grew up a few blocks away, on Donovan Drive, and remember going by on the way to school, PS 62 & Genesee-Humboldt Junior High (PS 91), both of which were on Urban Street (we walked down the tracks 'cause it was faster than walking down Box St, to Moselle, then to Urban!) and spent more than one extra nickel in the "day old store" in the corner of the factory building! Thanks for the great many memories!!!! I can even imagine the smell of the fresh bread right now as I type this comment!
exploring these old buildings can be fascinating. but once the vandals and graffiti artists get in, it's the beginning of the end.
Guys, guys! Read the description!
😂🤣💀
@@StevenFuller55 I’m confused. I get that beard is a typo but the description is about actual beard products.
You got a problem with Wonder Beard, them's fighting words Gillette boy !! 😂
@@SouthObeauty And so, it turns out it was me, who was not looking deeply enough. I’m baffled.
💀
now buffalo just smells like cheerios. and im ok with it some days working construction downtown smell so freaking good. especially when they cooking up the strawberry cheerios
@@toastedfoolery7137 I remember seeing t-shirts for sale that said, "My city smells like Cherios!". So cool! I'll have to check and see if they still make them.
Love to see things from the Great NY State. Thank you Ryan!
When I was a kid I toured the Wonder Bread factory in Paterson, NJ. It was a great experience...🍞🥪
Most of them had regular "school trip tours". Being just up the street from our school, we had them a lot! And we always got a small loaf of bread, and usually a cupcake, or Twinke at the end!
I love the smell of fresh baked bread. We had a Merita Bread factory in Orlando that was on the south side of town right next to I-4 and I loved driving by it when they were baking their bread. It is now gone and was replaced by an International truck shop.
I remember in the 60s growing up in Tampa Fl. We had a Wonder Bread Bakery Factory just outside of Tampa. The site area is now incorporated inside the Tampa City Limits. We also had indepent bakery and and pastry shops. The go to before Dunkin Doughnuts.😊
I spent 34 years as route driver for Wonder Bread Hostess Cake. Private label killed wonder bread and poor management, when the atkins diet was popular that was the final nail, plus managment wanted to get rid of the union.
sounds like an all to common business model sell off whats got value and junk the rest
0:00: There is a story about Buffalo City Hall, the building in the center of this shot. Back in the 1970's, a despondent man went up to the observation deck near the top, and jumped. Unfortunately, due to having to jump away from the building to avoid the next terrace below the observation deck (as seen in this view), he landed squarely on the flagpole (also seen in this view...) impaling himself some 80' up in the air. It was a gory mess, and it took the fire department better than an hour (using the highest ladder truck they had) to remove his now-deceased corpse from the pole. People said the pole remained stained with his blood for weeks afterwards.....
There is a Milk-Bone plant next to it that is still in operation you can see the back of it at 00:30 and to the left across the train tracks which are still used. . I used to be the yard jockey there moving trailers in and out of the loading docks. When Milk-Bone was making bacon treats you could smell the bacon coming out of the plant, and the bread baking next door.
Before that it was a Nabisco Plant!
I find wonder bread to soft and milk bone biscuit to hard
Another great slice from the It's History "loaf"!
When I used to fly into NY, the limo always drove by this huge SILVERCUP bakery sign. It was a popular bread here in chitown when I was youngster
*Nearly every abandoned factory and infrastructure you see was related to greed, profit is never enough. They always want more, until there is no more*
Indeed, greed is an element. Also globalization. But mostly, it is currency debasement. Everything gets old, forgotten, worn out, trimmed down, cut back, reduced, diluted. Both things and human capital alike. Human incompetence and building degradation reign as the value of the dollar is diminished by centralized theft.
Seems to be the case. Look at all the American jobs that went overseas due to NAFTA.
If I'm not mistaken, Wonder Bread was once owned by industrial conglomerate ITT Corporation.
I grew up on Wonder Bread, it was Skippy Peanut Butter and Welch's Grape Jelly.
"Hmmmmmmmm"
had to be Wonder bread that crumbly stuff mom tried to cheap out with wouldn't cut the....jelly !
Also, Buffalo has access to plentiful electric power from nearby Niagara Falls. NF had a big Nabisco factory.
Sadly, Buffalo has many empty factories and buildings and more on the way. New York State makes it very difficult for companies to invest & stay here. The economic cycle is to to run companies like this out of New York State. We have lost Steel Mills, bakeries, tire plants, multiple automotive plants,and on and on. The city is littered with what used to be. We spend far too much time on the past and not enough time looking towards sustaining the future. While other Rust Belt cities recover, we continue to decline.
They should reopen that place and make bread 🍞 again
There was a Wonder Bread factory in Springfield, Missouri. Smelled so good!!!!
I love anything Buffalo ❤
Do the Wildroot Cream-Oil factory in Buffalo next.
There should be watchpersons in all abandoned factories to prevent the deterioration of the buildings and equipment.
I remember this factory being featured on the show Abandoned Engineering.
My hometown, Buffalo is full of history from the WB factory to the Trico buidling. A lot of things where invented in Buffalo to from the A.C to the pacemaker to the first ever street lighted with streetlights and even more. Buffalo was no is a very historic cool city
@NotAjosh..Buffalo Wings
yeah but everyone knows that, I’m talking about all the cool stuff no one talks about like the first horse carousel being made in north tonawanda, The electric chair being made in buffalo, or American Express, can’t forget we had the first city park system in the United States or the first cancer only laboratory in the United States… Buffalo is so much more then just chicken wings
I remember the Wonder Brea factory in St. Paul, MN. I got a tour in the 5th grade. The workers there were not very happy from the looks of it. Lots of heavy equpipment.
There was lots of Wonder bread factories all over the United States.
The mills along Buffalo’s water front probably provide the flour for this bakery. Farmers from the Northern Plains likely sent their wheat via rail to Lake Superior and it was trans loaded onto bulk carriers.
we had 2 in queens tastey and silvercup... they smellled gret... tastey is a home depot and silvecup is a famous movie studio
@@andrewfischer8564 Remember dad driving over the 59 bridge to Queens at nite , just about midway I’d say Dad ! Smell the Bread ? Yea , smells Good . Lots of great plants around back then . Long gone are the bread ,beer , milk processing plants that kept New Yorkers working ! Great Times !
Silvercup bread was the sponsor for Rocky Jones, Space Ranger TV show.
Utica, New York also . It smell fantastic.
As a kid I loved Wonder Bread. Today it's pretty much inedible.
back in the 50's there used to be a Helms Bakery the next town over. my mom and dad told me about the wonderful smells
when the back of the delivery van was opened, and the awesome products they sold. It closed for good in the late 60's early 70's
was empty until the 80'sm and the building was another bakery for a while, don't know what they are using it for now, but wish I
had been around to experience the baked good that they sold before they went out of business...
Try Our Lady of Fatima Shrine in Niagara County, NY.
Or the free spring water flowing out of the garden hose outside the entrance of Letchworth State Park(THE GRAND CANYON OF THE EAST)
in Mt.Morris NY
I can’t stand to see empty buildings like this when there are so many homeless people. I really hope this building can be saved and turned into a residential or mixed use building. Hopefully one day it will happen.
I remember they closed them all pretty much. There was a factory and outlet store in Tulsa Oklahoma off 11th and Sheridan where they used to bake bread. After 7 at night the whole mile smelled like toast and the store had fresh breads and goods and also things that needed to be eaten within the week making them cheaper. When it closed so many lost jobs and the community lost a steady source of good but cheap breads pastries and pies to eat.
I worked at trico down the street from Wonder bread! I loved the smell when I went to work
You need to check out the oldest museum in America - The Steinheim Museum on the campus of Alfred University in Alfred, NY and the bell tower next to it!
Certain situations/sandwiches are best with the WB. I gave the birds a half loaf of WB this morning, they couldn't find it in the snow. I have a skull full of Indiana stuff and I had never heard WB started here in Indy. Well done and thanks.
I'm always curious about abandoned factories; we have quite a few in Frackville, PA.. I envision them becoming a new part of the community, but alas,,they just stand there and decay. So sad.
And the GLEN IRIS INN that is in the Letchworth Park!! Stay overnite and dine there too!!
This place had a twin. The old Wonder building in The Bronx is designed and looked exactly the same as these photos. Today it’s lofts and apartments in the South Bronx.
The Will And Baumer candle company in Syracuse Ny ,we use to make candles form the everyday consumer to The Pope ,please shed light on this ,no pun intended .
It used to be a beautiful neighborhood.
Yes it was…I loved La Pizzaria! On Genesee st.
explored every floor with some friends a year or so ago it’s in disrepair 😢
If the building is still structurally strong, it will probably be turned into condos or a bitcoin server farm. Of course, the latter requires a power infrastructure to provide enough energy for it. On a side note, my last name is Wonder and I do have a beard. Also, in the 50s through 70s, I ate an awful lot of Wonder Bread, also to be called Wonder Bread in grade school.
I'm old enough to remember when Wonder Bread only built strong bodies EIGHT ways. LOL!
The circles are red, blue, and yellow on a white background,. The bright circles are not "red, white, and yellow". FYI, team. Sent you an email about the misspelling the title. Nothing I can do about content inaccuracy, though. The circles are red, yellow, and blue. The background is white.
I think it was a great video
Our St Paul family Grandparents, Parents, Kids and Grandkids did not like the sweetness of Wonder Bread but we were aware a lot of folks did.
My other Grandmother, my oldest Aunt and her daughter my cousin baked bread from scratch as long as they had kitchens. That cousin lost a twin to what killed baby Patrick Kennedy in the 1960's.
When she grew up and married she started fostering at risk premies n Santa Clarita. She never lost any baby.
As her own kids grew up they started adopting some of the kids, now kids with complex health problems. When she passed, her oldest daughter, a Nurse took those siblings in who were not able to live independent lives.
A bread factory is actually called a bakery.
Not when it produces 10,000 loaves/day.
What oven company did they use ?
Rumor has it that in one of the office safes are 3 prototype "wonder bread" he man figures. Complete and still in the factory sealed bags.
i switched cars in frontier yard -the sidings that serviced wonderbread were full of rats from piles of flour that spilled off the cars when they got bumped ,each rotting pile of flour smelled like loaded baby diapers and had flies /maggots and huge rats at night swarming all over it , never liked wonderbread esp after that experience
Can you please do a video on the Pilgrim State mental health facility you can also do one on Kings Park mental health facility also😊
Would you possibly make a video about all the positive traits that borderlines do have?
Like an example- how they love more intense and how they are more passionate than regular people....
I'd like to know more. Maybe some benefits would be good to hear lol
I see you fixed the title, but "Wonder Beard" gave me a good laugh.
Many cities in NY had local baking industries. Freihofer had a chocolate chip factory in Albany. Over the years the anti-business climate in the state chased them all out.
The same thing is happening here in Madison, Wisconsin.
The former Wonder Bread factory in Hoboken NJ is now million dollar condos
💛💛💛
There was also one in Hoboken nj.
@@cjninebot13 They had one right across the street from our high school in Ohio.We took a tour through the plant and they gave us a miniature loaf of Wonder Bread at the end of the tour.
"Builds strong bodies 8 ways." "Builds strong bodies 12 ways." "Builds strong bodies."
So when did the factory produce iconic beard care products that were ahead of their time, as mentioned in the video description?
I worked at flowers food ,holsum foods in tollesion az.we made wonder bread,i was made in automated dough makermachine line,it became too expensive to maintain and was replaced with conv mixer proofed dough system,at this bakery wonder bread was bagged in 6 to 8 different brand name bags ,same bread,never the same,flowers owns and produces many breads,romanmeal,daves killer bread,too many to list,many the same breads just in different bags.they do buns also,jack in the box,mcdonalds,which they lost the contract on,many burger chain buns,food city,
We Wonder about that bread!!
Sunbeam bread had a yellow wrapper!!
A tisket, a tasket, a Sunbeam yellow basket, sunbean bread is wrapped in yellow so it can be found!!
Thank god for the wonder beard
i love in buffalo I would love for someone to turn this into an apartment building or something
We don't need more people, we need less.
My grandfather sold light bulbs to that place,back when salesmen called and drove to places.
would have been cool if his initials were G.E , because he brought good things to light 😁
I must've missed the part where he talked about how this relates to men's grooming?
He fixed the title but not the Description.😂😂😂😂
🎶 Wonder Beard, what is the secret of your power 🎶
I often wonder about wonder 🍞
Pat, I'd like to solve the puzzle: Wonder Bread.
I remember when Wonder Bread started selling wheat bread and that Wonder Bread brought out Hostess Bakery that made Hostess Cupcakes
It'll take a lot of dough to bring that bread factory back.
I thought it said beard first time I saw this in my feed 😂
went there as a kid
Unfortunately, this crisis scenario is replicating throughout the USA.
I miss the smell of freshly banked beard.
Actually it was not the Buffalo one that I went to but one in Brooklyn / Queens, New York....
Funny this should come up. Wonder Bread is still being made by someone and I bought a loaf the other day in WV. I was expecting that white bread with holes in it but what I got was a very tasty slightly coarse texture bread, quite good.
I grew up near Bridgeport, CT and there was a large Wonder Bread bakery there. My Dad was friends with the Manager, John Allen. We made several trips touring it as Cub and Boy Scouts. And yes it smelled great. I never told them my Mom only bought Pepperidge Farm Bread. 🤣
If the word bread wasn’t in the title Wonder Bread it would be hard to recognize it as bread.
Everyone roasting the title 💀
The Landmark Red Osier Restaurant in Stafford, NY on Rt.#5. They sell more Prime Rib of Beef than any other restaurant in NYS !! AND have for over 50 yrs that i know of!! This is 1 of the Best well kept secrets in WNY state, 7:24 i have ever heard of !! They have the 5# challenge! Eat the entire meal and its FREE!!
Don Moore and his wife ran it back them, its the best meal i ever ate for FREE !! That was 50 yrs ago!
ENJOY!!
It is like the industrial age chrewed up and spit out Buffalo and other cities. I don't member the name but there is one street with gorgeous homes near a river. Or maybe that is Niagra.
You might be thinking of Love Canal.
Here before the title was corrected.
I preferred Sunbeam bread back then
I've always wondered who pays the property taxes on abandoned factories, cause they are littered all over this country.
My mom would never let her 10 kids eat Wonder bread. I have never eaten it to this day 🤙🤙🤙
How come it says read not eard
I'm a fan of Buffalo, but not Wonder Bread. It's a wonder they can call it bread. Poor Buffalo. Rust Belt stained. Oh, but the weather. Today, Buffalo is getting smacked with Lake Effect Snow. Go Bills Go.
Yeah, yeah, yeah ... "Wonder" Bread -- yes, I wonder what "bread" it is. But BFO is WAY beyond the Rust Belt, snow capital, of stereotypes. Would rather live there than 115' Phoenix in the shade.
And we are still WONDERING what it was made of. This nasty, overprocessed "bread" dissolved in water!
That taggert bakery became Campbell taggert bakery which at its prime was the largest in the world. Bakeries in Europe south America and Asia. They owned Merico biscuits the refrigerator dough folks etc. Later sold to Bushe beer than to sara Lee now bimbo