Hanover Co-op Food Stores

Hanover Co-op Food Stores

Retail

Hanover, NH 458 followers

Supporting a well-nourished community cultivated through cooperation.

About us

Member-owned consumer cooperative owned by over 27,000 area residents. Anyone can shop, member or not! We run three full-sized supermarkets, one community market, two full-service auto service centers, an off-site production kitchen and off-site administrative offices. Together, our Co-op employs 342 Upper Valley residents with reported total sales of over $80 million in 2023 . Founded in 1936, the Hanover Co-op is best known for our food stores, where we prioritize bringing locally grown and produced food and products to our members, as well as many fine grocery items. We work to make healthy food accessible and affordable for our members and community in store through our merchandising choices and programs like Double up Bucks. We take our responsibility in the food system and our local community very seriously-- building the resilient food system we want to see one day at a time. Adding our second auto-service center in 2019 we now operate two full-service auto service centers in our Hanover, NH and Norwich, VT locations.

Website
http://www.coopfoodstore.coop
Industry
Retail
Company size
201-500 employees
Headquarters
Hanover, NH
Type
Partnership
Founded
1936
Specialties
specialty foods, including imported items, full-service meat and seafood counters, wide selection of prepared foods from our Co-op Kitchens, best selection of locally grown and produced items, and knowledgeable staff ready to help!

Locations

Employees at Hanover Co-op Food Stores

Updates

  • How can we make grocery stores of all types in New Hampshire work more integrally within our food system-- especially in sourcing products grown and produced here? Give us your insights during the public comment period for the Grocery Stores & Retail Food Cooperatives brief below! 🥩 🥕 🥦

    View profile for Rebecca Joy Henrietta White, graphic

    Public & Government Affairs Associate

    Hi folks! I'm happy to share about the work I embarked on as a part of the NH Food and Agriculture Strategic Plan. As a part of a team of subject matter experts, I authored the Grocery Stores & Retail Food Cooperatives brief, which is now open for public comment through November 20. Food system folks, farmers, and eaters: I welcome your thoughts and feedback, and hope you’ll take a few minutes to review the brief and provide comments through this link: https://lnkd.in/eQHzukX6 The Grocery Stores & Retail Food Cooperatives seeks to highlight the unique opportunities and challenges of sourcing local and regional food through retail food stores (including independently-owned markets, regional and national chain supermarkets, and cooperative food stores). This is one of 27 briefs that make up the core of the NH Food and Agriculture Strategic Plan. Each week, the NH Food Alliance sends a Brief Public Comment Period Alert where briefs that are open for public comment are available. This is a meaty topic and the public comment process plays an important role to bring the final strategic plan into a representation of many perspectives and voices within our food system. You can check out the NH Food and Agriculture Strategic Plan as it unfolds on nhfoodalliance.org.

    Home

    Home

    nhfoodalliance.org

  • Today marks the 60th national recognition of Cooperative Month! Growing since the first celebration in 1964, today over 65,000 cooperatives and credit unions across the United States join the Hanover Co-op, our members, and our community to pause and reflect on the cooperative difference! Check out what's happening across food co-ops and policy makers in New England in the latest Neighboring Food Co-op Association newsletter here: https://lnkd.in/eJMEyjd4 2024's theme: The Future is Cooperative. Shout it out with us!

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  • View profile for Allan Reetz, graphic

    Director Public & Government Affairs at Hanover Co-op Food Stores

    Whenever I host special guests—ranging from local farmers, political leaders, to diverse, young food-system pros—I invariably come away feeling grateful about opportunities to create new and deepened relationships. So, when my community affairs colleague Heather Drinan of Dartmouth College asked me about co-hosting a luncheon for visitors from Nihonmatsu, Japan, I jumped at the chance. They were in Hanover, NH as part of a sister-city exchange. Guests included the Mayor of Nihonmatsu City, Miho Keiichi (center in group photo). The reason for this cross-global connection dates to Japanese scholar Kan’ichi Asakawa who left Nihonmatsu to study at Dartmouth, graduating in 1899. I believe in life-long learning, whether it is a lunch-and-learn or a casual conversation about building a better world. And for this gathering, the perfect topic was at my fingertips. In 1936, the founders of Hanover Co-op Food Stores were deeply influenced by their meeting with world-renowned Japanese cooperator Toyohiko Kagawa. Kagawa spoke at Dartmouth that spring. It was one of more than 100-stops during his tour of the United States during which he addressed more than 700,000 people and discussed parts of his book, ‘Brotherhood Economics.’ At our luncheon, I shared details of Kagawa’s life, work, and lasting impact. In Japan today, more than 130 million people belong to cooperatives across most business sectors that were spurred by Kagawa’s vision. Following World War II, as the Marshall Plan was being developed, Kagawa used his position of prominence to guide Gen. MacArthur and others to shift Japan from its long-standing feudal agriculture system to one supporting land ownership for small farmers. In the closing lines of ‘Brotherhood Economics,’ he wrote;      “…let us without delay endeavor to cooperatize the economic system of the world. With this accomplished, we shall find that we have built the only sure foundation for the establishment of world peace.” True then. True today. My thanks to Heather (second from right) for sharing this opportunity with me, and to my Hanover Co-op colleague and private chef Josh Eichman (far right) for his planning and skill in preparing our meal…classic lobster rolls that were a big hit! And my deep appreciation for our interpreter, Michiya Nagashima (second from left) who made our language barrier vanish for the three-hours that we spent together. Oh, and that evening, Mayor Keiichi threw out the first pitch at the Upper Valley Nighthawks game. How cool is that?!

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  • How do our food stores support local in a global food system? Listen in to this conversation between Agricultural Economist & Strategist Michelle Klieger, Grower & Food System Researcher Peter Konjoian, and our own Rebecca Joy Henrietta White. 🍓 🌽

    View profile for Michelle Klieger, graphic

    Agricultural Economist & Strategist

    In the most recent episode of The Grower and The Economist podcast, Peter Konjoian and I spoke with Rebecca White of the Hanover Co-op Food Stores. We discuss how the Hanover Co-Op has a local purchasing goal, and they purchase from small and large farms, alike. Learn how they make decisions and how they work with farmers to get their products on their shelves. Listen to the whole episode at stratagerm.com/thegate

    Podcast | Stratagerm

    Podcast | Stratagerm

    stratagerm.com

  • Calling all food and farm entrepreneurs: our team crafted this sell sheet to highlight categories we aim to grow with. We believe a strong food system is one that is built on relationships, not just transactions. We prioritize products that are sourced and produced locally, ethically, sustainably, and in ways that align with our Co-op Values. The products we carry are a vital part of our expression of and commitment to these values. Links to both our Co-op Values and our New Vendor Submission Form available here: https://lnkd.in/ejzQ559z

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