whirlcool
Well-known member
Does anyone here remember them? They were a giant appliance sales store/center where just about every model of every major name brand was available at the cheapest price available.
When I was growing up, I remember going to their main "Polk City" shopping center at 2820 N. Central Ave in Chicago. It acually was quite a few buildings adjacent to each other. One building was for major applicances, another one was for household furniture, another one was for Radio/Television. The pioneered the concept that is still used today by Circuit City, Best Buy, etc.
I am reading a book (a rather thick one, btw) titled "I bought it at Polk Bros." Which I find extremely interesting. While Polk Bros made a ton of money (they estimate that almost EVERYONE in Chicago over the age of 40 probably bought at least ONE thing at Polk Bros in their lifetime). There were newlyweds who furnished their entire house, appliances and all, at Polk Bros.
Service, Service & Service was their retailing motto. But they always gave back to the community. In 1955, they celebrated the chains 20th anniversary and they rented the Chicago Stadium ( a 20,000 seat barn) and broadcast the Ed Sullivan Show, complete with old stiff bod himself and the Ice Capades there. They GAVE away tickets to the show free of charge to anyone who could provide a Polk Bros receipt, from anything sold at anytime, even 20 years earlier!
Even though the chain was Jewish owned and operated, every Christmas they gave away a Christmas tree with the purchase of a major appliance. In the later years they had a huge warehouse store on North Avenue in Melrose Park. Every last appliance that Polk Bros. sold wasn't paid for by Polk Bros until it sold, they had such power with the appliance manufacturers everything they sold was sold on consignment!
A lot of people think that they went bankrupt and closed in 1992, but that's not exactly right. What happened was the original founding familys principals had all passed away and nobody else from the family wanted to keep the chain going, which by the way had many locations. So they closed the stores,
and converted all the assets into cash and created the "Polk Bros. Foundation" which, to this day, hands out grants to various charities all over the Chicago area.
Does anyone here remember this chain? My parents bought a sofa there, the Zenith Color TV there, and even an Amana refrigerator there.
The thing I remember most (oddly enough) besides the huge amount of appliances in the place was their computer room. It was right in the middle of the sale floor at their Melrose Park location in a room that had glass walls. They had a huge IBM mainframe. It was interesting to watch all the goings on in there.
When I was growing up, I remember going to their main "Polk City" shopping center at 2820 N. Central Ave in Chicago. It acually was quite a few buildings adjacent to each other. One building was for major applicances, another one was for household furniture, another one was for Radio/Television. The pioneered the concept that is still used today by Circuit City, Best Buy, etc.
I am reading a book (a rather thick one, btw) titled "I bought it at Polk Bros." Which I find extremely interesting. While Polk Bros made a ton of money (they estimate that almost EVERYONE in Chicago over the age of 40 probably bought at least ONE thing at Polk Bros in their lifetime). There were newlyweds who furnished their entire house, appliances and all, at Polk Bros.
Service, Service & Service was their retailing motto. But they always gave back to the community. In 1955, they celebrated the chains 20th anniversary and they rented the Chicago Stadium ( a 20,000 seat barn) and broadcast the Ed Sullivan Show, complete with old stiff bod himself and the Ice Capades there. They GAVE away tickets to the show free of charge to anyone who could provide a Polk Bros receipt, from anything sold at anytime, even 20 years earlier!
Even though the chain was Jewish owned and operated, every Christmas they gave away a Christmas tree with the purchase of a major appliance. In the later years they had a huge warehouse store on North Avenue in Melrose Park. Every last appliance that Polk Bros. sold wasn't paid for by Polk Bros until it sold, they had such power with the appliance manufacturers everything they sold was sold on consignment!
A lot of people think that they went bankrupt and closed in 1992, but that's not exactly right. What happened was the original founding familys principals had all passed away and nobody else from the family wanted to keep the chain going, which by the way had many locations. So they closed the stores,
and converted all the assets into cash and created the "Polk Bros. Foundation" which, to this day, hands out grants to various charities all over the Chicago area.
Does anyone here remember this chain? My parents bought a sofa there, the Zenith Color TV there, and even an Amana refrigerator there.
The thing I remember most (oddly enough) besides the huge amount of appliances in the place was their computer room. It was right in the middle of the sale floor at their Melrose Park location in a room that had glass walls. They had a huge IBM mainframe. It was interesting to watch all the goings on in there.