The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Sears was Amazon of the 20th century

Its catalog of everything under the sun could be more than 700 pages.

- By Ron Grossman Chicago Tribune

For decades, one of the most recognizab­le return addresses in America was 925 S. Homan Ave. in Chicago, and it’s no wonder.

From 1906 to 1987, Sears, Roebuck and Co. shipped the ingredient­s of a middle-class life from a sprawling distributi­on center there. One building alone was a block wide and a quarter-mile long, and every inch of that space was needed. As the Chicago Tribune reported July 4, 1906, Sears was receiving 75,000 letters a day. In response, the mail-order company sent its 6 million customers everything from the prosaic (clothing, shoes, furniture) to the exotic (Brown’s Vegetable Cure for Female Weakness or a Giant Power Heidelberg Electric Belt for would-be he-men).

It offered kits to build a two-bedroom home, a fully assembled Sears Motor Buggy and white leghorn chickens. Many of Sears’ early customers were farmers, and as stores were few in rural America, the prices there were often exorbitant — until the Sears catalog provided an alternativ­e. Its cover proclaimed Sears the “Cheapest Supply House On Earth.”

“The poor dirt farmer ain’t got but three friends on this Earth: God almighty, Sears Roebuck and Gene Talmadge,” observed Eugene Talmadge, Georgia’s populist governor in the 1930s and ’40s.

Sears dubbed its 1933 Christmas catalog a “Wish Book,” an honorific customers extended to its basic catalog, which could run to more than 700 pages. Reportedly President Franklin Roosevelt said he’d like to give every Soviet citizen a Sears catalog. It was an encycloped­ia of the American dream.

Sears’ role in that dream is fast fading. Sales are plummeting, and stores are closing. Its recent annual report confessed doubts about the company’s “ability to continue as a going concern.” Its death might occur just as retailing has come full circle to where it was when Sears built its massive plant in what is now Chicago’s Homan Square neighborho­od.

Today’s flourishin­g internet business is a 21st-century update on Sears’ 20th-century mail-order model. Ironically, Sears shifted to brick-and-mortar retailing, which now seems as antiquated as the buggy whips and corsets on the yellowing pages of its catalogs.

On Chicago’s West Side, the beginning of the end for Sears came March 2, 1987. On their lunch break, 1,800 workers were told that the distributi­on center was closing because the “facility was worn out.” Many lived nearby in an impoverish­ed black neighborho­od.

Sears’ story began on April 1, 1887, when Alvah Roebuck answered a want ad in a Chicago newspaper: “Watchmaker wanted who can furnish tools, State age, experience, and salary required. Address T 39.” Two days later, he got a letter from Richard Sears, who was selling watches by mail.

Sears and Roebuck became partners, establishe­d their firm in Chicago and revolution­ized the mail-order business by offering a money-back guarantee if customers weren’t satisfied with their merchandis­e.

From watches, the partners branched out to jewelry, silverware and eventually a cornucopia of goodies. According to Kenan Heise, a former Tribune reporter and Chicago historian, Sears’ success so threatened storekeepe­rs that some filched the catalog from mailboxes.

In 1897, Roebuck sold his interest in the company. Hit hard by the stock market crash of 1929, he returned in 1933.

Sears was a talented salesman, but that virtue was offset by his inattentio­n to detail. Railroad cars of wholesaler­s’ products sat unloaded. Customers’ orders went missing or were belatedly filled. By contrast, Julius Rosenwald, whom Sears brought into the firm in 1895, was orderly to a fault.

His insistence on rational planning was embedded in the blueprints for Sears’ corporate headquarte­rs on Homan Avenue.

In 1911, a Scientific Laboratory was added, so Sears could test the products it sold. The lab was known as “the watchdog of the catalog,” and promoted as a means to “give our customers the service they have a right to expect.”

The centerpiec­e of the complex was a 250-foot tower. Then the tallest building outside the Loop, and Sears’ corporate signature, it appeared on the catalog’s cover. Beginning in 1924, it housed a radio station on its 11th floor. Its call letters, WLS, stood for “World’s Largest Store.”

Rosenwald was not only a businessma­n but also a notable philanthro­pist. His donations created the Museum of Science and Industry and built schools in myriad Southern towns that lacked educationa­l facilities for black children. He felt a responsibi­lity to use his wealth for the benefit of those less fortunate than he was. That included his employees, Richard Sears having retired in 1908.

Accordingl­y, the North Lawndale complex included an athletic field, a running track and tennis courts.

A year after Rosenwald retired as Sears’ president (though staying on as chairman), the company set off in a new direction. In 1925, it opened a retail store in the Homan Avenue complex that was so successful that others followed. The company became a retail chain with a mail-order business on the side. In 1993, it issued its last general-merchandis­e catalog. Eventually, a slow slide began that escalated into its current free fall.

 ?? CHICAGO TRIBUNE HISTORICAL PHOTO ?? Stacks of Sears catalogs roll down a conveyor in the bindery in 1989. The first Sears catalog was published in 1888. The Sears Christmas Book catalog, first published in 1933 and nicknamed the Wish Book, included children’s toys, fruitcakes and a...
CHICAGO TRIBUNE HISTORICAL PHOTO Stacks of Sears catalogs roll down a conveyor in the bindery in 1989. The first Sears catalog was published in 1888. The Sears Christmas Book catalog, first published in 1933 and nicknamed the Wish Book, included children’s toys, fruitcakes and a...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States