"How about favorite Department Stores"???..Either defunct or still extant ones apply....

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We had Woolworth and Federal here in Michigan. I remember them from the '70s when I was a kid. Here are some others: Naums (a catalog showroom) and Joshua Door (furniture).

This is a little off topic, but I also remember Chatham (groceries) and Great Scott (groceries). Sadly, we no longer have walk-in Sanders stores here. I remember eating ice cream sundaes and chicken salad sandwiches there, always with ice water served in a paper funnel set inside of a metal base.
 
Kinda small but here is Knapp's

Okay here it is...1959

IN the left hand foreground is Washington Avenue.

The penthouse was the executive offices

This building has changed little except being long vacant from the 1959 photo.

Chad
 
My favorite department store was the now-defunct Wieboldt's. It was a complete department store, in that it had clothing, hardware, appliances, a sewing department, furniture, candy, WIGS, etc. I remember the wig department had a sign, "The Wiggery". Wieboldt's was a two story anchor in a now-demolished shopping center. A year or so after Wieboldt's went out of business, our grade school and junior high school were severely damaged by a flood. In a weeks time, they had relocated the schools to the vacant Wieboldt's store, the junior high on the second floor. My homeroom was in the boys department. My "locker" was a drawer in the former lingerie dept, dymo-labeled "34C". We had band rehearsals in a stockroom, PE in the former budget-buy area (it was all tiled...I think we played floor hockey for an entire semester). Art classes were in the beauty salon, the "main office" was the men's shoe department, the nurse was staked out in the stockroom behind men's shoes, and the drama classes made use of the "proscenium" opening to men's formalwear. Our computer lab (TRS-80s!) was set up in the lamp department--plenty of electrical outlets there. Of course, all the deparments were carpeted, linked by tile, and if you were on the tile during class, you'd better have hall pass. It was interesting to be "backstage" in that store and find out that what had appeared to be air vents actually had crows nests behind them for security personnel to watch through.

It was a neat experience and certainly a testament to the resourcefulness of our schools' faculty.

T.
 
OH! And I just remembered that a children's book was written based on our experience of going to school in the department store. I was in high school by the time it came out, so I never read it, but my mother teaches fourth grade and her students read it.

We weren't permitted into to mall area--the security door to the mall was closed and covered with plywood. We did have one band concert in the center court of the mall, though.
T.

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Chad, I'm glad you got the picture to work. That is a neat-looking building. One place I know of in Michigan I'm sorry I never got to see was that mammoth Hudson's in downtown Detroit.

Deeptub, one time on a visit to Chicago, I was with some friends from the area and we passed a vacant Wieboldt's. They had fond memories of the store, and later I saw some very old advertising detailing a fashion show and some other events that were going to be going on.
 
There were two independent appliance stores in Buckhead when I was a kid. One specialized in Maytag, neither one was very "child friendly". Then the Sears opened. The old Sears on Ponce De Leon was fun, but the new one in Buckhead had a great appliance department. There were always three or four machines going. A LK Combo nearly always faced an aisle, spraying away at colorful towels revolving around. And then a LK top loader, complete with poker chips and Roto-Swirl agitating away. The people who worked there never said a word to me about my noseyness. Always had a great time. Sharps Appliance over in "Little Five Points" was also lots of fun. They specialized in Frigidaire, they even had a few older used types for sale from time to time. I used to spend summers with my Grandparents in Miami, and they used to turn me loose at some appliance store near them. I remember the old Burdines downtown and the Richards, but don't remember appliances there. I wonder where the Apex's I used to see down there came from? Since my Grandfather knew all the good 'ole Boys in Miami at the time, I'm sure some independent dealer had them. The old Rich's Department store in downtown Atlanta had a fairly large appliance department, and specialized in GE.and Hotpoint. Atlanta Gas Light Co. sold Maytags and always had fun showrooms with everything Maytag sold at the time. J.C. Penny sold "Penncrest" (Hotpoint) and they had a pretty good appliance department, but not nearly as much fun as Sears. Oh, the good old days---------------
 
Sears in the Gables

Steve:

You sure brought back memories of that Sears in Coral Gables (actually on Douglas Road- 37th Ave. and Coral Way). Do you remember their candy department? I loved the counter with the roasted nuts. They carried those red pistachios that would stain the heck out of your fingers. We would get a 1/4 pound in those little paper sacks. My other favourite were the Maple Nut Goodies and Pecan Divinity. Oh yum! This was the only Sears store near us. We got everything from Easter shoes (black patent MaryJanes, of course) to our lawnmower. I also used to love the Lawn and Garden department. They would always have something turning on the spit in one of the model barbeque grills. I was always hoping they would give out samples. Sears just made me flat out hungry!

As a young woman, my mom lived in Atlanta for many years. We went back there many times when I was young. I remember Rich's Department Store. We also tried staying at the Henry Grady Hotel (mom remembered it being "so nice"). What a dump! I could tell you stories.....Needless to say, we stayed at the Hyatt. Loved the rotating restaurant. My mom wouldn't let us go up the small set of stairs to the restroom. She was afraid that the thing would break off and we'd plunge all the way down to Peachtree.

These memories are making me chuckle. Thanks for sharing.

Venus
 
Hudson's

Scott?

I never saw the Hudson's in downtown Detroit either. My mom growing up in 1950's Detroit however has told me several stories about that location. But it WAS a VERY huge deal when they tore it down. Up here many groups tried to give it a stay of excecution, but eventually after no one did anything with it, the demolitioners had their way, and it finally came down. I think in 2001?

For instance, ever winter Santa Clause would appear (magically) during the winter parade,to her and my young uncles and aunt; and the hundreds of other children from the roof and he would wave down to the children. Aparantly Hudson's spent big at Christmastime.

And my mom also got her communion dress from there also. She told me that it cost my grandmother $14.95 in 1958. She said that it was fifth floor young ladies,ladies floor? You must understand that even tho my grandfather worked for Lincoln Mercury, he still only made as an office clerk at the new Wixom facility $7.02 an hour.

Basically he had to work 2 hours to buy that dress. That kind of money was nothing to sneeze at in 1958 either. But there was six of them so money was still tight.

She remember's absolutly nothing about appliances in many cases but did say that appliances were in the basement (pattern here?) and that it also held their bargain area.

The few Hudson's that I rememember was the one in of course the Lansing Mall, and there was another one down in Battle Creek at Lakewood Square (their mall). Both stunk horribly and becasue I have asthma would soon have to huff my inhaler after being in there like 2.5 seconds. Now their all changed over to the Marshall Field's name.

Sears- I remember them having a dual action agitator machine with the white red and blue poker chips in it agitating the same tub of water over and over again. By the time I rememeber washers as I have stated around 1988 or so... anything really cool was gone. However over at Monkey Wards, they did have a Signature 1000? top-loader that had several pairs of jeans that you could stuff into the tub, showing , I guess how big the tub was.

And then again, they did put alot of todo into the Front Load Westinghosue built automatic's also. They stuffed a full or queen size comforter in the model that had the controls in the rear backsplash.This one I just remember purely becasue it was this horrid floral print thing that no one should be caught dead sleeping under, let alone washing. The stackable had towels stuffed in it..ususally.

Does anyone besides me remember that a few K-Marts had restraunts in them? I remember that the main one on Cedar Street here in Lansing had one, and later the on on West Saginaw had one too. You could get breakfast, lunch or dinner there.

So yes there is a few more things I remeber.

Chad
 
Oh yeah one more thing

I forgot Jacobsen's.

Jacobsens was a multi story department store downtown East Lansing. Went there a few times. It was mainly laides shtuff tho. Had some stuff for guys. I remember getting my first leather coat from Jacobsen's, it was brown with a tan furry inner lining. Grandparents bought it for me for my 10th birthday. Jacobsen's was one place that had an escalator that my brother and I would ride endlessly until we were shooed off by the nasty sales ladies.

This store was left about 2000 where they moved out to a new wing in the Meridian Mall when then a year later, Jacobsen's, which was based out of Jackson Michigan, left the scene forever. The old store downtown East Lansing was reconverted on the main and lower floors into a Barnes and Noble. Upper floors into Apartments and a banquet hall.

The mall location became a Galyan's which is an outdoor store.
 
Reply to Retromom

Hi Venus, I'm telling you I could smell the fresh cashews roasting the moment I walked through Sear's door! I loved the orange jellied candies as well and our housekeeper would make the most wonderful cookie bars with them! Comming from a family of Funeral Directors, I always thought it was funny that they tore down the old Greenberg & Flynn Funeral Home to build that Regency Hyatt House. Back in the late '60's when it opened that revolving restaurant was the spot! It is now antiquated and completely dwarfed by surrounding skyscrapers. Now a rather famous Atlanta (tourist trap) restaurant is now located in the old Autrey & Lowndes Funeral Home. Would'nt care to eat anything from that walk-in!
 
Candy departments

Sears had the best double-dipped peanuts. It was always difficult deciding whether to get them or some cashews.

The smell of caramel corn will forever remind me of Wards. The store always used to reek of it!

veg
 
Jacobsen's

Programcomputer,

I attended MSU in the late '80s and remember the Jacobsen's on E. Grand River. I had a side job that required me to call on some of their staff from time to time, and remember that it was probably one of the smaller Jacobsen's around, although it still had three stories with the escalators up the center, and was very glitzy. It seemed out of place among the myriad of ever-changing (sometimes dumpy) student-based stores around it. I remember asking a salesperson where I could find the Old Spice. She chuckled at me and said "Oh, we don't sell that here, but we have plenty of other nice things".
 
Now I remember..

Woolco of course. We had one, maybe 2, until the late 70's or early 80's. They had a complete line of Whirlpool, GE, and Tappan products. I saw the last Whirlpool dryer with a window in the door(in coppertone) there about 1966, the sunshine dryer by GE, and a V12 washer there. They always had neat appliances. I believe most of the stores were closed by 1980. We also had 2 predecessors of Walmart called "Globe shopping City", with the entire shopping experience concept featuring automotive, clothing, electrics and a grocery department. These only lasted a few years before the company went belly up. I've always been a sucker for discount department stores.
 
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