Strawbridge's

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Strawbridge's
IndustryRetail
Founded1868 (as Strawbridge & Clothier)
DefunctSeptember 9, 2006
FateAcquired by Macy's
SuccessorMacy's
Headquarters8th and Market Streets,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
ProductsClothing, footwear, bedding, furniture, jewelry, beauty products, and housewares.
ParentMay Department Stores (1996-2005)
Federated Department Stores (2005-2006)
WebsiteOfficial website (2004 archive) at the Wayback Machine (archived 2004-06-30)

Strawbridge's, formerly Strawbridge & Clothier, was a department store in the northeastern United States, with stores in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware. In its day a gracious urban emporium, the Center City Philadelphia flagship store added branch stores starting in the 1930s, and together they enjoyed annual sales of over a billion dollars by their zenith in the 1980s.[1] By the 1990s Strawbridge's found itself part of May Department Stores until that company's August 30, 2005, acquisition by Macy's Inc. May had operated it under its Arlington County, Virginia-based Hecht's division. Macy's announced March 10, 2006, that the store would be closed on June 1, but it actually shut its doors on May 23, 2006.[2]

On February 1, 2006, the former May Company divisions were dissolved and operating control of the Strawbridge's stores was assumed by Macy's East. On September 9, 2006, the Strawbridge's and Hecht's nameplates were completely phased-out in favor of Macy's.

Early history[]

Building the 1931 limestone flagship building nearly bankrupted the company during the Depression
From 1870 to 1930, the 5-story S&C stood at 8th and Market (1910s postcard)

1800s[]

Strawbridge & Clothier began as a dry goods store founded by Quakers Justus Clayton Strawbridge (1838–1911) and Isaac Hallowell Clothier (1837–1921)[3] in Philadelphia in 1868. Strawbridge & Clothier purchased the 3-story brick building on the northwest corner of Market and 8th Streets in Center City Philadelphia that had been Thomas Jefferson's office from 1790 to 1793 while he served as Secretary of State,[4] and opened their first store. They soon replaced the old building with one of 5 stories, and then expanded into neighboring buildings as well.[5]

1900s[]

In 1928, the company decided to replace all but one of its buildings with a new edifice, and began construction in phases on the 13-story building which stands on the corner of Market and North 8th Street today. Designed in the Beaux Arts-style by the Philadelphia architectural firm Simon & Simon, the cost of the limestone building was expected to be $6.5 million, an amount which caused some concern to the store's owners.[4] By the time of the ribbon-cutting in 1931 in the depth of the Great Depression, the staggering $10 million cost of such grand construction nearly suffocated the cash-strapped company.[4]

The building subsequently became the eastern anchor in 1977 of The Gallery, an urban mall connecting Strawbridge & Clothier with Gimbels, which had relocated from across Market Street to join the mall. It was the vision of S&C Chairman Stockton Strawbridge that was instrumental in revitalizing the Market East retail district in the 1970s, a vision that is still apparent today despite the demise of both Gimbels and Strawbridge's. He once said that his goal was to transform fading east Market Street into "the Champs-Élysées of Philadelphia."[6]

Late 20th-century demise[]

After successfully fighting off a hostile takeover attempt by Ronald S. Baron in 1986, Strawbridge & Clothier survived as an independent, locally owned department store into the 1990s.[7] In 1995, in an attempt to become the dominant retailer in the Philadelphia region, S&C partnered with Federated Department Stores, Pomeroys, and the Rubin Brothers real estate development company to acquire their rival Wanamaker's,[8] but were outbid in bankruptcy court by May Department Stores Company. Subsequently, the 13 Strawbridge & Clothier department stores were themselves bought by May in 1996, when the Strawbridge & Clothier directors (mostly members of the Strawbridge and Clothier families) elected to liquidate operations[9] over the vehement objections of patriarch Stockton Strawbridge. Strawbridge died not long after the sale. "He was the store, and the store was him," said his attorney Peter Hearn to the Philadelphia Daily News.[6] Store employees and the public-at-large felt a sense of loss as well: many employees rushed to pay off their credit card accounts in full before the sale was finalized, "hoping that the proceeds would go to the founding families rather than [the new buyers]."[1]

After the sale, the stores operated simply as "Strawbridge's", although exterior signage reading "Strawbridge & Clothier" remained in place at many locations until the stores became Macy's in 2006.[10] May had merged the former John Wanamaker into its Hecht's banner, but converted them to Strawbridge's as well (except for Wanamaker's former flagship on Market Street, which eventually became a Lord & Taylor and is now Macy's). However, the Strawbridge & Clothier head office was closed and its operations were consolidated with Hecht's in Arlington, Virginia.[1]

Cultural significance[]

Radio station[]

For 13 years, from 1922 to 1935, the store operated WFI, an AM radio station.[11] In 1935, the station merged with WLIT, owned by the Lit Brothers store across the street, to form WFIL, an NBC Blue network affiliate.[12] WFIL remains on the air today on its original frequency, AM 560.

Suburban branch stores[]

Refurbished Strawbridge's (2014)
The S&C "Seal of Confidence" (1911-2006), depicting William Penn and a Lenape tribesman shaking hands, their "never written, never broken" treaty; it stood for S&C's Quaker-based tradition of fairness and honesty, which included a money-back guarantee on all merchandise[5]

In May 1930, Strawbridge & Clothier helped remake the American retail scene by opening one of the first suburban branch department stores in the nation, located in the Suburban Square shopping center in Ardmore, Pennsylvania.[9] In 1931, it followed with its second suburban "satellite" store at Jenkintown, Pennsylvania, the building for which was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988.[10] Strawbridge's opened up a number branch stores throughout Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware. These branch stores typically were opened in shopping malls. Prominent stores throughout the Philadelphia area included the stores in Jenkintown, Pennsylvania, Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania, Bensalem Township, Pennsylvania, Exton, Pennsylvania, and Wilmington, Delaware. By the 1970s, Strawbridge's had nearly a dozen branch stores in malls across eastern Pennsylvania, southern New Jersey, and northern Delaware. The branches proved to have been a wise step, as the flagship store posted only a few years of actual profitability, all of them during the 1940s. The last S&C store built was at Burlington Center Mall in 1982. [4]

In 1969, Strawbridge set his sights on competing with the emerging Target-grade retailers,[6] launching the Clover discount store chain; the first Clover store opened in 1971. Located in strip centers rather than malls for the most part, Clover grew to have 26 locations, more than the 21 full-service S&C stores. Most Clover stores closed in the winter of 1997.

Store features and branding[]

Some Strawbridge's stores had restaurants inside, like at Christiana Mall in Newark, Delaware as well as the Strawbridge & Clothier store at Exton Square Mall. The Jenkintown store also had a restaurant. The company also revolutionized retailing with their introduction of revolving charge account cards. Strawbridge's was well known for its handled shopping bags which kept up with the fashion of each era. It was a paper bag, with navy blue handles with Strawbridge's printed in blue twice and red once on one side of the bag, and vice versa on the other. Once May assumed the company, the Strawbridge & Clothier Seal of Confidence was no longer a prominent marketing image. Late 1970s and 1980s bags were a bright glossy yellow with that era's pseudo calligraphic trademark in a vertical orientation in black along the bag's edge. 1960s bags featured a "modern" script-like trademark with their famous "seal of confidence". Strawbridge's was also known for its friendly employees. In the center of the flagship store was a large bronze statue of a wild boar, a replica of Pietro Tacca's Il Porcellino. The legend had it that good luck would follow those who rubbed the boar's nose. The boar consequently had a very shiny nose from all the rubbing.

Repurposing of flagship store[]

In July 2006, The Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust (PREIT), owners of The Gallery at Market East, agreed to purchase the lower floors of the flagship Strawbridge's store. PREIT sought retail tenants for the areas of the building closest to street level and converted some higher floors to office space. The uppermost floors had previously been sold and converted to offices; they are currently owned by American Financial Realty Trust of Jenkintown.[13]

On February 26, 2009, it was announced that the developers of Foxwoods Casino Philadelphia were looking into locating their new casino on three floors of the former Strawbridge's flagship store currently owned by PREIT.[14]

In April 2012, it was reported by one of the sub-contractors that the building was undergoing additional renovation for both office and residential use.[15] In July 2012, The Philadelphia Inquirer and Philadelphia Daily News relocated to the third floor of the building from their former headquarters at 400 North Broad Street.

On October 23, 2014, the Century 21 Department Store company of New York City opened its first location outside of the greater New York City area on a portion of the street level, and the entire second level of the Strawbridge building.[16]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c "Philadelphia Keeps Strawbridge Name But Loses Retail Tradition." The New York Times (July 22, 1996)
  2. ^ "Strawbridge's Closes Its Doors" WPVI-TV website[dead link]
  3. ^ Strawbridge genealogy Clothier genealogy The Pennocks of Primitive Hall
  4. ^ Jump up to: a b c Milford, Maureen. "Upper Floors of Philadelphia Store to Become Offices" The New York Times (April 7, 2002)
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b Smith, Sandy. "Buildings Then and Now: 'Think Strawbridge & Clothier first'" Philadelphia Real Estate Blog (January 12, 2012)
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Gilpin, Kenneth N. "G. Stockton Strawbridge, 83, Dies; Retail Industry Executive." The New York Times (February 11, 1997)
  7. ^ "Strawbridge Receives Offer," The New York Times, April 22, 1986, p D-4
  8. ^ Shope, Dan, "Strawbridge, Others To Buy Wanamaker, Federated, Boscov's Are Part Of $640 Million Deal For 14 Sites," Allentown Morning Call, June 22, 1995
  9. ^ "May In Accord To Buy Strawbridge & Clothier," The New York Times, April 5, 1996
  10. ^ "Historic Strawbridge's site back in limbo," Philadelphia Business Journal, March 10, 2006
  11. ^ "Governor Sproul, Mayor Moore". Philadelphia Broadcast Pioneers. March 18, 1922. Retrieved May 28, 2019.
  12. ^ "WFIL advertisement". Philadelphia Broadcast Pioneers.
  13. ^ "PREIT's landmark Strawbridge's site has a tenant in Philadelphia", Philadelphia Business Journal, June 24, 2008
  14. ^ Lin, Jennifer (February 26, 2009). "Another casino shift possible in Phila". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved 2019-05-28.
  15. ^ "The Renovation of Strawbridge & Clothier Building, Philadelphia, PA"
  16. ^ Arvendlund, Erind. "Shoppers check out Century 21, new Center City department store" Philadelphia Inquirer (October 26, 2014)

External links[]

External video
video icon 1990 Visa commercial featuring Strawbridge & Clothier


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