Furryanimal
Y gath o Gymru
- Location
- Wales
Do you have a favourite?Is there a long closed one that you miss?
I really miss the old five and dime stores. Woolworths, Grants, etc. You could see and touch the merchandise and it didn’t take a jack hammer to get the package open. Needed a comb? Right there, usually for a dime. Not a fancy package that cost more to display.
I really miss those department stores, with the elevator ladies announcing what was on each floor....."Fifth Floor, Notions and Ladies Finer Dresses!"
G.Fox & Co., Howland Hughes, Grieve Bissett and Holland.
G. Fox & Co. was a large department store that originated in Hartford, Connecticut. The store was also the largest privately held department store in the nation when it was sold in 1965 to the May Department Stores Company. In 1992 May Department stores phased out the G. Fox & Co. name converting them into the Boston-based department store Filene's. In 2005, the May Company was merged with Federated Department Stores which converted the store and all of the other regional chains to Macy's. (Wiki)
It's said that Beatrice Fox Auerbach used her clout and higher up friends to influence the construction of I-84 to not bypass the store, but provide easy off ramps to access it directly. This resulted in one of the most poorly designed pieces of Interstate in the nation, causing many accidents back then.
The original downtown store closed, but went into the malls before it changed ownership a few times.
Boy Jujube, Do I remember that. The J. L. Hudson store. I remember that TOYS were on the 13th floor.
The elevator ladies were always neatly dressed in their crisp uniforms.
I never shopped at Kerns nor Crowley-Milners. Did YOU ? (Maybe that was before your time.)
Chicago: Marshall Field's, on State Street, was the gold standard for window decorating for the holidays. I loved that store, and my family took special outings to it, for the holidays. I was sickened when it was sold, resold, sold again, and lost all of its soul and quality. I believe the building houses a Macy's, now. I could not bring myself to even pass by the building, on my last trip to Chicago, many years ago.
Sears was magical, too, when I was a little kid. The ones that remain, now, are pathetic.