Beginnings Brooks Pharmacy's roots are traced back to the defunct
Adams Drug Company of
Pawtucket, Rhode Island, a family owned operation founded in 1933 by the Salmanson family. Adams acquired several stores under the Brooks Drug banner in Vermont and New York, and also operated stores under several other trade names throughout the Northeast.
Sale to Pantry Pride In 1984,
Pantry Pride, a Florida-based supermarket chain, acquired the Adams Drug for $100 million. The acquisition included 420 stores in 10 Northeast states, 70% of which operated under the Brooks name. The following year,
corporate raider
Ronald Perelman engineered a takeover of
Revlon, and all of Pantry Pride's assets, including Adams, were moved to the new company. In 1986, all Adams stores were converted to the Brooks trade name. For a period of time, ownership of Brooks was continually transferred between different Perelman-owned subsidiaries, including California-based
Compact Video.
Acquisition by Hook-SupeRx Perelman sold Brooks to the
Indianapolis, Indiana-based
Hook-SupeRx drug chain in 1988. Under Hook-SupeRx, Brooks assumed a new management team with Gayl W. Doster as COO, William Welsh in charge of operations, and David Morocco in charge of purchasing. They attempted to modernize the store base and turn around what had become a struggling chain. In 1991, Brooks developed the innovative RxWatch computerized prescription service. In 1992, Brooks began an aggressive attempt to expand into the New York City suburbs in the lower
Hudson Valley and southwestern Connecticut. By 1993, it has 77 stores in New York and 356 overall.
Sale to Revco and Jean Coutu In 1994,
Revco acquired Brooks as part of its larger purchase of the Hook-SupeRx chain. At the time, the Brooks store base stretched from
Maine to
Maryland. Revco had no interest in operating the Brooks outlets in New England due to the company's positioning in the market. As a result, that same year, Revco sold 221 Brooks stores in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont, as well as the Brooks warehouse and distribution facility in Connecticut, to the
Quebec-based
Jean Coutu Group for $147.5 million. Jean Coutu had already been operating stores in
Rhode Island and
Massachusetts through its U.S. subsidiary, under the Maxi Drug and Douglas Drug trade names. Revco continued to operate 96 Brooks stores in New York and 31 in Pennsylvania, Under the management of Jean Coutu, Brooks was successful for several years, growing and acquiring smaller chains and pieces of larger chains throughout the New England region. In 1995, Brooks acquired 30 Rite Aid locations in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. In exchange, Brooks sold 18 stores in Maine to Rite Aid. Brooks retained 121 stores in Massachusetts and 48 in Rhode Island. In 1999, Brooks acquired the
Burlington, Vermont-based City Drug chain, increasing its
Vermont store count to 30 and re-entering the New York market for the first time since the 1994 Revco acquisition. By 2001, Brooks had 250 stores in six states. That December, the chain purchased 80
Osco Drug stores in Maine, Massachusetts, and New Hampshire from
Albertson's.
Merger with Eckerd Shortly after the Osco acquisition, President Michel Coutu made a commitment to significantly increase the size of the chain by the year 2004. This expansion was accomplished in August 2004 with Coutu's acquisition of about 1,539
Eckerd Pharmacies as well as Eckerd's headquarters in
Largo, Florida, from its then-parent company,
J.C. Penney. Shortly after the acquisition, Brooks-Eckerd announced plans to build a $30 million headquarters in East Greenwich, Rhode Island. By 2005, Coutu had merged the operations of the Brooks and Eckerd chains together at Brooks headquarters in Warwick, Rhode Island, shuttering the former Eckerd headquarters in Florida. Between 2005 and 2006, Coutu ran into many difficulties integrating the Brooks and Eckerd chains together, and as a result, Coutu's Brooks and Eckerd outlets experienced a significant decline in market share.
Acquisition by Rite Aid In August 2006,
Rite Aid announced it would buy Jean Coutu's US division, consisting of the Eckerd and Brooks chains, for $2.55 billion. The
acquisition included 1,854 stores, six
distribution centers, and made Rite Aid the largest drugstore chain on the
East Coast. In 2007, Rite Aid acquired 31 Brooks stores in Vermont. All Brooks and Eckerd locations were either
rebranded as Rite Aid, sold, or closed, and its proposed Rhode Island headquarters was abandoned. On May 5, 2025, Rite Aid filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy for the second time in 2 years, listing assets and liabilities between $1 billion and $10 billion. Rite Aid will sell all of its assets as part of its procedure, as it overcomes financial challenges such as debt, increased competition, and inflation, including Brooks Pharmacy. == References ==