Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Kmart's longest lasting logo, used from 1969 to 1990. Under the leadership of executive Harry Cunningham, S.S. Kresge Company opened the first Kmart-named store, at 27,000 square feet (2,500 square meters), which was referred to by Kresge as a "bantam" Kmart and was in fact originally intended to be a Kresge store until late in the planning process, on January 25, 1962, in San Fernando ...
The plan at the start was to have stores opened in London, St. Catharines, Niagara Falls, Fort William (part of modern-day Thunder Bay) and Saint John, New Brunswick as part of an effort to establish a Canada-wide chain of department stores. The London store had a street frontage of 53 feet (16 m) and a depth of 137 feet (42 m).
Pascal — hardware/furniture store chain; Nordstrom Canada — Department store; Nordstrom Rack Canada — Department store; SAAN Stores — discount department store chain; Shop-Rite — catalogue store chain; Sears Canada — Canadian division of US-based department store chain Sears; Simpson's — department store chain
Only three Kmart stores remain, but those who loved shopping at the retail chain are sharing special memories of time spent in the stores. Kmart shoppers share memories as store closures continue ...
He renamed the store Kresge-Newark, expanded it, and started branch stores. The new department store company was completely independent from the S.S. Kresge discount department store company. [ 1 ] By 1924, Kresge was worth approximately $375,000,000 ($3.83 billion in 2009 dollars [ 2 ] ) and owned real estate of the approximate value of ...
Sears and Kmart said the stores would combine in late 2004, but the decision "merely merged two battered retailers into one large, troubled organization, and it’s been failing ever since ...
Only three brick and mortar Kmart stores remain in the U.S., located in Miami, Fla., Westwood, N.J. and Bridgehampton, N.Y., and news of the superstore chain becoming nearly extinct has prompted ...
Payless (footwear retailer) – Filed for bankruptcy twice and closed all stores in Canada and the US in 2019. Raleigh's – also known as Raleigh Haberdasher; a men's and women's clothing store in Washington, D.C., 1911–1992; Robert Hall – clothing store that existed from 1938 to 1977. At its peak, the store had locations in both New York ...