Macy's has continued the trend begun by May Co in the late 80's. The May Co rampage began when they acquired Associated Dry Goods, parent company of "carriage trade stores" such as Lord & Taylor(NY), Hahne's(Newark), JW Robinson(LA), Joseph Horne(Pittsburgh), H&S Pogue(Cincinnati), LS Ayres(Indianapolis), Powers Dry Goods (Minneapolis), The Denver Dry Goods Co(Colorado, Robinsons of Florida and Goldwater's (Arizona). Each of those stores was the highest end store in their market and their merchandise reflected the geographic differences of their individual locations.
The first thing May Company did was close all downtown flagship stores and then merge each group of stores into their existing geographic grouping keeping only the names they believed would have the most recognition. Of course the merchandise mix was overhauled to reflect their mass market buying strategy relying on high volume middle market goods. The funny thing was that by the time they were finished with a store, they didn't even need the original names anymore. Every single May Co store looked the same, was laid out in the same way and even smelled the same. If you didn't see the name, you really wouldn't know if you were in Kaufmann's or Foley's.
They repeated the same exercise with their acquisition of Carter Hawley Hale Stores, former parent of the Broadway, John Wanamaker, Weinstock's, Thalheimer Bros, etc.... Luckily Bergdorf Goodman and Neiman Marcus were not part of that acquisition and were part of a leveraged buyout.
And let's not even get into what they did when they acquired Filene's and Foley's from Federated as a result of the Robert Campeau induced bankruptcy.
Macy's was no better- when Federated sold Filene's and Foley's to May Co, they also sold Bullock's and I Magnin to Macy's. What a disaster - to see a beautiful store like I. Magnin reduced to a mid line almost department store was like a knife in the chest.
As to Macy's, well, their stores in my area are some of the most depressing - badly maintained, dirty with poor merchandise selections unattractively displayed. I feel like we are being held hostage since we really have no other department store choices.
I believe you will see more Macy closings - they had their year of playing nice, now the gloves are off. I say good for Chicagoans who have showed their loyalty to Marshall Field's. It may not appear that they are making any impact - but they are speaking out and their actions are making a statement.