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Crossroads Mall – Oklahoma City (1974–2017) Eastland Mall – Tulsa (1984–2007) Heritage Park Mall – Midwest City (1978–2010) Oakwood Mall – Enid (1984–present) OKC Outlets – Oklahoma City (2011–present, outdoor) Penn Square Mall – Oklahoma City (1982–present) Quail Springs Mall – Oklahoma City (1980–present)
At the 2000 census there were 881 people, 353 households, and 261 families living in the town. The population density was 1,082.2 inhabitants per square mile (417.8/km 2). ...
The store is located in the space first occupied by Macy's, then Proffitt's, and later Belk. [citation needed] On February 27, 2013, it was announced that Von Maur would be opening a new location in Oklahoma City as the fourth anchor store at Quail Springs Mall, replacing Sears.
Branch stores were opened in Clinton, Iowa and Geneseo, Illinois in the 1880s. The J.H.C. Petersen's Sons' Store was built in Downtown Davenport in 1892. The structure was designed by Frederick G. Clausen, a German immigrant who moved to Davenport. It followed the latest marketing principles of the day with specialized departments under one roof.
Initially, commerce focused on dry goods, groceries, specialty stores, and wholesale goods before fashionable department stores were built, including the J.H.C. Petersen's Sons' Store (1892) and M.L. Parker (1922). Multiple theaters were located in the district, but only two remain the Capital Theatre (1922) and the former RKO Orpheum (1931 ...
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It was the only tall building in Davenport that housed a department store. [5] The Fair Store opened before World War I and changed its name to the M.L. Parker Department Store in 1922. [7] The W.C. Putnam Estate had reached a lease agreement with the store in 1916, but high building costs because of World War I delayed construction.
Its location was bounded by Harvey and Robinson on the west and east, and Park and Main on the north and south. [3] A book about Brown's, and the other main downtown Oklahoma City department stores, Kerr's and Halliburton's, was released in 2016 under the title "John A. Brown's, Kerr's, and Halliburton's: Where Oklahoma City Loved to Shop."