Ralphs Grocery Company was founded in 1873 in Los Angeles by
George Albert Ralphs and his brother, Walter Benjamin Ralphs. Ralphs teamed with S. A. Francis in 1873 to open the
Ralphs & Francis store at 5th and Hill – an area which would become the
Historic Core of the city in the early 20th century, but was then a mostly residential area with many single-family houses. In 1875, Ralphs’s brother Walter bought out Francis’s share, and the business became the Ralphs Bros. Grocers, specializing in produce. The business boomed. In 1876, they constructed a two-story building at the southwest corner of Sixth and Spring. In the 20th century, Ralphs became a grocery pioneer, offering self-service markets with checkout stands in distributed locations. The company employed notable architects in designing its stores, and the former
Ralphs Grocery Store building built in 1929 in
Westwood Village has been photographed by
Ansel Adams, declared a Historic Cultural Monument, and listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. In the 1980s, it created a chain of hybrid supermarket/warehouse stores called
The Giant, which failed, but the concept returned with the company's merger with the
Food 4 Less discount chain. In 1968, Ralphs was acquired by
Federated Department Stores, based in Cincinnati. In 1988, Canada-based
Campeau Corporation launched a $4.2 billion hostile takeover of Federated, Ralphs's parent. Ralphs would then be put up for sale, with
American Stores (owner of rival chain
Lucky) making an offer. In 1992, Federated, now known as Macy's, Inc., sold Ralphs to a group of owners, led by
Edward J. DeBartolo Corporation, after filing for bankruptcy two years earlier in 1990. In 1994, Ralphs was acquired by the
Yucaipa Companies for $1.5 billion. Yucaipa owned ABC Markets,
Alpha Beta, , and
Cala Foods. Soon, all ABC Markets, Alpha Betas, and Boys Markets were rebranded as Ralphs. At the same time, Food 4 Less was merged with Ralphs. In 1997, Yucaipa sold Ralphs to
Portland-based
Fred Meyer, owner of several chains in the west. Soon,
Ralphs Marketplace stores started opening in suburban areas; these stores are based on the Fred Meyer model but without apparel. At the same time, they also acquired the 57-store Hughes Family Markets chain. In October 1998, the parent company, Fred Meyer, merged with
Kroger of Cincinnati, Ohio. In 1999, Ralphs purchased about 30
Albertsons and
Lucky stores, mostly in
Northern California, as well as stores in the
Central Coast region, and one store each in
Bakersfield and
Laguna Beach. The stores were divested as a result of the Albertsons and
American Stores merger and marked the chain's reentry into Northern California after a short-lived expansion in the 1970s. In 2005, Ralphs exited the Bakersfield market, closing 3 stores. Ralphs operated in Northern California until January 2006, when they announced that all but one Ralphs in northern California would close. In August 2006, the one remaining Ralphs in northern California, in
Grass Valley, was given a 60-day notice of closure, ending Ralphs' presence in northern California for the second time. Also, in August 2006, Ralphs finalized plans to sell eleven (of thirteen remaining)
Cala-Bell Stores to Harley DeLano, who previously ran the chain. On July 20, 2007, Ralphs opened a new store on 9th and Hope Street in the
South Park neighborhood of
downtown Los Angeles. This was the first full-run supermarket downtown in 50 years. In 1950, Ralphs closed a store at 7th Street and
Figueroa Street. In 2024, Ralphs president Tom Schwilke announced plans to open a new Ralphs store within the next two years, the first new store opening in over 10 years. In 2026, Tom Schwilke, president of the Ralphs Division, announced his plans to retire after seven years with Kroger. Kendra Doyel, president of the Food 4 Less/Foods Co Division, was announced as his successor. Ralphs competes with chains
Albertsons (including
Vons/
Pavilions),
Stater Bros.,
Trader Joe's, and
Smart & Final in the Southern California grocery sphere. Its slogan is "Fresh for Everyone", also used by all other Kroger grocery store brands. Ralphs is the current market share leader in Southern California. which closed in January 2020 (Store #219) ==2003–04 strike==