Hook's Drug , in 1974 In October 1900, pharmacist John A. Hook opened the first Hook's Drug Store at the corner of South East and Prospect Streets in what is now the
Bates-Hendricks neighborhood, and at the time populated mainly by residents of German descent. A second location opened in 1907 at the corner of New Jersey and East
Washington Streets and Hook hired Edward F. Roesch to run the store. By 1912, the chain had expanded to twelve stores. Many of Hook's interwar drug stores were designed by
Kurt Vonnegut Sr. of
Vonnegut & Bohn. Roesch became president of the company in 1943 upon Hook's death. In 1956, following Roesch's death in a traffic accident, Roesch's son, Edward J.F. Roesch, became vice president and a long-running member of the company's board of directors. The original Hook's location was demolished in 1941. In 1963, a new company headquarters was built in Indianapolis. Between 1946 and 1972, all but two of the chain's stores were replaced with 150 modernized locations. By 1978, the chain had 250 stores. By 1982, Hook's had 267 stores in Illinois, Indiana, and Ohio. It ranked 14th nationally by number of sales units and 19th in overall sales volume.
Hook's-SupeRx In 1985,
Rite Aid attempted a takeover of Hook's. Looking to avoid the deal, Hook's sold out to
Kroger instead. Kroger had been in the drugstore business for 25 years, having purchased a small chain in New Jersey in 1960. By the following year, Kroger launched its own SupeRx Drugs chain. By 1969, the company operated 361 stores in 23 states. The purchase of Hook's was expected to enhance its drug chain operations. However, just one year after the acquisition, Kroger initiated a restructuring plan that ultimately saw it sell off its division of 540 Superx and 330 Hook's drug stores. In December 1986, Kroger sold 662 Hook and SupeRx stores to an investment group as part of a leveraged buyout. That same month, five stores were sold to
Medicare-Glaser in the St. Louis area. Another 115 Superx stores in Florida and Georgia were sold to Rite Aid. By February 1987, Kroger divested its last drug stores by selling 48 SupeRx stores in Arizona, Alabama, and Georgia to the chain's former president. Hook's became a division of the privately held '''Hook's-SupeRx'''. Operations moved from Indianapolis to Cincinnati. Hook's-SupeRx acquired the New England–based
Brooks Pharmacy chain in 1988. By this time, it operated 400 drugstores in Indiana, Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, and Kentucky. Hook's-SuperRx stores in Michigan and the Chicago area were also sold off. The rest became Revco stores. Revco moved Hook's-SuperRx headquarters from Cincinnati to
Twinsburg. Three years later, Revco was subsequently acquired by
CVS in 1997. Many former Hook's locations are now CVS Pharmacies, though the Hook's-SuperRx name remained in use internally. ==Legacy ==