Sears Roebuck And Co Popular Books

Sears Roebuck And Co Biography & Facts

Sears, Roebuck and Co. ( SEERZ), commonly known as Sears, is an American chain of department stores founded in 1892 by Richard Warren Sears and Alvah Curtis Roebuck and reincorporated in 1906 by Richard Sears and Julius Rosenwald, with what began as a mail ordering catalog company migrating to opening retail locations in 1925, the first in Chicago. In 2005, the company was bought by the management of the American big box discount chain Kmart, which upon completion of the merger, formed Sears Holdings. Through the 1980s, Sears was the largest retailer in the United States. In 2018, it was the 31st-largest. After several years of declining sales, Sears's parent company filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy on October 15, 2018. It announced on January 16, 2019, that it had won its bankruptcy auction, and that a reduced number of 425 stores would remain open, including 223 Sears stores. Sears was based in the Sears Tower in Chicago from 1973 until 1995, and was later headquartered in Hoffman Estates, Illinois from 1993 until 2021, the year when it announced that it would be selling its Hoffman Estates headquarters complex. On December 12, 2022, Sears Authorized Hometown Stores, LLC, and affiliated debtor Sears Hometown, Inc., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, and on December 26 announced the liquidation of the 115 largely owner-operated Hometown stores. As of April 2024, there are 11 Sears stores remaining, with 10 in the mainland US and one location in the US territory of Puerto Rico. History Beginnings Richard Warren Sears was born in 1863 in Stewartville, Minnesota, to a wealthy family which moved to nearby Spring Valley. In 1879, his father died shortly after losing the family fortune in a speculative stock deal. Sears moved across the state to work as a railroad station agent in North Redwood, then Minneapolis. While he was in North Redwood, a jeweler refused delivery on a shipment of watches. Sears purchased them and sold them at a low price to the station agents, making a profit. He started a mail-order watch business in Minneapolis in 1886, calling it the R.W. Sears Watch Company. That year, he met Alvah Curtis Roebuck, a watch repairman. In 1887, Sears and Roebuck relocated the business to Chicago, and the company published Richard Sears's first mail-order catalog, offering watches, diamonds, and jewelry. In 1889, Sears sold his business for $100,000 ($3 million in 2021 dollars) and relocated to Iowa, planning to be a rural banker. He returned to Chicago in 1892 and established a new mail-order firm, again selling watches and jewelry, with Roebuck as his partner, operating as the A. C. Roebuck watch company. On September 16, 1893, they renamed the company Sears, Roebuck, and Co. and began to diversify the product lines offered in their catalogs. Before the Sears catalog, farmers near small rural towns usually purchased supplies, often at high prices and on credit, from local general stores with narrow selections of goods. Prices were negotiated and relied on the storekeeper's estimate of a customer's creditworthiness. Sears built an opposite business model by offering in their catalogs a larger selection of products at published prices. By 1894, the Sears catalog had grown to 322 pages, including many new items, such as sewing machines, bicycles, sporting goods and automobiles (later produced, from 1905 to 1915, by Lincoln Motor Car Works of Chicago [no relation to the current Ford line]). By 1895, the company was producing a 532-page catalog. Sales were over $400,000 ($12 million in 2021 dollars) in 1893 and over $750,000 ($20 million in 2021 dollars) two years later. By 1896, dolls, stoves, and groceries were added to the catalog. Despite the strong and growing sales, the national Panic of 1893 led to a full-scale economic depression, causing a cash squeeze and large quantities of unsold merchandise by 1895. Roebuck decided to quit, returning later in a publicity role. Sears offered Roebuck's half of the company to Chicago businessman Aaron Nusbaum, who in turn brought in his brother-in-law Julius Rosenwald, to whom Sears owed money. In August 1895, they bought Roebuck's half of the company for $75,000 ($2.7 million today), and that month the company was reincorporated in Illinois with a capital stock of $150,000 ($5.5 million today). The transaction was handled by Albert Henry Loeb of Chicago law firm Loeb & Adler (now Arnstein & Lehr); copies of the transaction are still displayed on the firm's walls. Early 20th century Sears and Rosenwald got along well with each other, but not with Nusbaum; they bought his interest in the firm for $1.3 million in 1903 ($44.1 million today). Rosenwald brought to the mail-order firm a rational management philosophy and diversified product lines: dry goods, consumer durables, drugs, hardware, furniture, and nearly anything else a farm household could desire. Sales continued to proliferate, and the prosperity of the company and their vision for more significant expansion led Sears and Rosenwald to take the company public in 1906, with a stock placement of $40 million ($1.4 billion today). They had to incorporate a new company to bring the operation public; Sears and Rosenwald established Sears, Roebuck and Company with the legal name Sears, Roebuck and Co., in the state of New York, which effectively replaced the original company. The current company inherits the history of the old company, celebrating the original 1892 incorporation, rather than the 1906 revision, as the start of the company. Sears's successful 1906 initial public offering (IPO) marks the first major retail IPO in American financial history and represented a coming of age, financially, of the consumer sector. The company traded under the ticker symbol S and was a component of the Dow Jones Industrial Average from 1924 to 1999. In 1906, Sears opened its catalog plant and the Sears Merchandise Building Tower in Chicago's West Side. The building was the anchor of what would become the massive 40-acre (16 ha) Sears, Roebuck and Company Complex of offices, laboratories, and mail-order operations at Homan Avenue and Arthington Street. The complex served as corporate headquarters until 1973 when the Sears Tower was completed and served as the base of the mail-order catalog business until 1995. By 1907, under Rosenwald's leadership as vice president and treasurer, annual sales of the company climbed to roughly $50 million ($1.6 billion today). Sears resigned from the presidency in 1908 due to declining health, with Rosenwald named president and chairman of the board and taking on full control. In 1910, Sears acquired the David Bradley Plow company. This acquisition would lead to the manufacturing of riding mowers, chainsaws, tillers, etc., in the Bradley Illinois factory. The company was badly hurt during 1919–21 as a severe depression hit the nation's farms after farmers had over-expanded their holdings. To bail out the company, Rosenwald ple.... Discover the Sears Roebuck And Co popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Sears Roebuck And Co books.

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  • Sears Roebuck and Co. v. Dallas Central Appraisal District synopsis, comments

    Sears Roebuck and Co. v. Dallas Central Appraisal District

    Texas Court of Appeals

    Appellant, Sears Roebuck and Company ("Sears"), sued appellee, the Dallas Central Appraisal District ("DCAD"), contesting DCADs ad valorem tax appraisal of Searss inventory. After ...

  • Historic Sears, Roebuck and Co. Catalog Plant synopsis, comments

    Historic Sears, Roebuck and Co. Catalog Plant

    John Oharenko & Homan Arthington Foundation

    Located on the site of the original Sears Tower, the historic Sears, Roebuck and Company catalog plant is one of the nation’s most unique landmarks. Representing American ingenuity...

  • Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Brien synopsis, comments

    Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Brien

    Eighth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals

    Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa. Submitted: April 21, 1999 Sears, Roebuck and Co., (Sears) appeals from two decisions of the distric...

  • Suhr v. Sears Roebuck Co. synopsis, comments

    Suhr v. Sears Roebuck Co.

    Supreme Court of Montana

    The respondent, F.E. Suhr, brought this action for damages which resulted from an injury sustained when he stepped on a nail protruding from a board located in a storeroom on the p...

  • Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Moten synopsis, comments

    Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Moten

    Arizona Court of Appeals

    Pursuant to a plea agreement, appellant pled no contest to a charge of robbery while armed with a gun, and was sentenced to a term of not less than eight nor more than ten years in...

  • Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Teamsters Local Union synopsis, comments

    Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Teamsters Local Union

    United States Court Of Appeals For The Sixth Circuit

    Local 243 is the collective bargaining representative for warehouse and service employees at five Sears stores in the Detroit, Michigan area. Twelve percent of this bargaining unit...

  • Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Charles W. Sears Real Estate Inc. synopsis, comments

    Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Charles W. Sears Real Estate Inc.

    United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit

    This is an appeal from an order of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York, Munson, C.J., dated June 23, 1988. 686 F. Supp. 385. Appellant pro se Cha...

  • In re Sears, Roebuck and Co. synopsis, comments

    In re Sears, Roebuck and Co.

    In the Fourteenth Court of Appeals of the State of Texas

    Twice in the last ten years the Supreme Court of Texas has granted the extraordinary writ of mandamus in circumstances just like those here. Both times, the Court intervened in asb...

  • Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. National Labor Relations Board synopsis, comments

    Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. National Labor Relations Board

    United States Court Of Appeals For The Sixth Circuit

    This case arises out of a collateral issue to an unfair labor practice proceeding presently in progress before the National Labor Relations Board. Sears filed certain de...

  • Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Baca synopsis, comments

    Sears, Roebuck and Co. v. Baca

    Colorado Court of Appeals

    Sears, Roebuck and Co. (Sears), the petitioner, seeks review of an order of the Industrial Commission affirming the Division of Labors order which denied, as untimely, Sears reques...