My mom worked at a Sears catalog store location in Downers Grove in the 70's. When the catalog department got shut down she got a job in the young girls department at the Oak Brook location where she worked until she retired in the early 2000's. Most of my clothes growing up came from Sears. Our family cars were all serviced at Sears. All my dad's tools were Craftsman and all our appliances were Kenmore.
@nancydemoss2945 Жыл бұрын
We grew up with Sears (my parents first credit card) with one exception. My father worked at GE so our appliances were GE until my sister went to work for Sears after graduation. Then we had Kenmore products. She worked in the catalog department and made announcements on the loud speaker. Sales and what the special was in the cafeteria. She had a wonderful voice!
In the 1960s, Sears would give mothers of twins an additional set of a purchased layette for free. My twin and I wore Sears exclusively throughout elementary school. Kids didn’t care - all of our friends wore “Toughskins” everything! 😂
@DJN881 Жыл бұрын
I have a 20-year-old Kenmore dryer that still works well.
@michelehood8837 Жыл бұрын
I even remember how the Sears catalog smelled - the ink and paper had a distinctive scent ❤ As a kid, it smelled like Christmas hopes and dreams!
@cocoaorange111 ай бұрын
So do I.
@meedwards510 ай бұрын
❤
@lynnfisher303710 ай бұрын
Beautifully penned. Thank you
@jalivengood37406 ай бұрын
Deep Deep level memory unlocked. omG!
@whyarepeoplecrazy6 ай бұрын
I remember it too!!!
@avissmith678211 ай бұрын
I was a Sears catalog phone operator. I remember taking phone calls from customers and using an old style computer with a fill in the blank template, taking orders. It was so much fun. There were 10 of us!
@PatrickBaptist7 ай бұрын
RESPECT! Ma'am I've been working call centers for the last 10 years now, I really feel for y'all, headsets, desks, and chairs must have been beyond terrible then. But really I'd take those old simple computers compared to all the apps and crap I have to deal with to do a simple jobby of finding people tow trucks when they are broke down on the side of the road cussing their insurance (me) because they have been waiting so long... My position is supervisor, I don't sup agents, just irate customers..... I'm on night shift, working right now, there isn't 10 of us here, well one 1 HERE, I'm at home THANK GOD. I can't stand working on site lol.
@AlvaSudden7 ай бұрын
You're amazing. What a wonderful job, I'm so jealous.
@amyschmidt11135 ай бұрын
I did that same job! Yes it was fun! Some people bought a LOT too!
@LetArtsLive3 ай бұрын
That's an interesting story
@KirkandRA Жыл бұрын
I love this series. The Sears catalog used to be our Christmas list. We would circle what we wanted ❤
@smartmarketing173 Жыл бұрын
I’m one of 4 children, my mom had us circle what we wanted in the Sears and JCPenney catalogs- it was the perfect way to track all of our wish lists😊
@igorschmidlapp6987 Жыл бұрын
And, us boys used to look at the ladies underwear models... "Puberty Porn"... ;-P
@ninademci1500 Жыл бұрын
@KirklandRA, I’m glad my daughter had the opportunity, but am sad my grandsons won’t have the same experience. A long distance friend gave me an idea to tell my daughter.
@SapiophileGoddess Жыл бұрын
Yes. The Toy section was in the back. My brother and I went straight to it, circling our favorites.
@KMF3 Жыл бұрын
Yes me too
@bryn494 Жыл бұрын
What's sad is that Sears 'invented' distance shopping and totally failed to embrace online shopping early enough to remain competitive :(
@Ponchoed Жыл бұрын
"Kodaking"
@yuckyool Жыл бұрын
They also owned a credit-card/banking company (Discover) An early internet / bulletin-board (Prodigy) An insurance company (AllState) but never found the synergies to help them add value for an integrated customer.
@igorschmidlapp6987 Жыл бұрын
Yeah, the smaller towns only had "Sears Catalog Stores" where you could pick up your orders. I recall that you could actually order a house from the Sears catalog at one time...
@GlenFair Жыл бұрын
Exactly, they had all that knowledge and infrastructure ready to go and could easily have become the Amazon of today.
@baylorsailor11 ай бұрын
@@igorschmidlapp6987 my parents live in a 1915 Sears kit home. The quality and craftsmanship is something you just don't find in today's products. The wood used in 1915 alone will last longer than the average stick home today.
@Tina0601911 ай бұрын
I continue sewing on my 38 year old Kenmore sewing machine. (We did get a major repair/servicing done on it 10 years ago.)
@chanceDdog20099 ай бұрын
My grandma had one. It was the kind you step on the bottom for power. I miss her so much
@leahcim388 ай бұрын
I have a 1912 singer that paid $150 to fix. The gentleman who repaired it said the repair should last another 100 years.
@penny8579Ай бұрын
I got one too.
@baylorsailor11 ай бұрын
My parents live in a 1915 Sears kit home. The quality and craftsmanship are hard to find in todays world.
@angelamaryquitecontrary460911 ай бұрын
That sounds absolutely brilliant! I'm going to find a picture of one - I've always been partial to the German Hufhaus buildings, too. I wonder if the look is similar.
@daltondea421411 ай бұрын
I live in one in Iowa model 115 it was 725 dollars for the kit
@angelamaryquitecontrary460911 ай бұрын
@@daltondea4214 Ooh, how lovely! I hope it keeps going for many more years.
@wicket0428 ай бұрын
Amazing
@cattycorner84 ай бұрын
So true, @baylorsailor! I was recently thinking about how many of the homes from the Sears catalog are still being lived in today! It really puts Amazon's Chinese junk to shame.
@TheHoppesl Жыл бұрын
I miss the JC Penny catalog! As a young newly married woman, I would go through the catalog and put bookmarks where there was something I hoped to buy during the year. I marked curtains, bedspreads, sheets, household items and clothes! I would buy them throughout the year as I could afford them. It was my goal to have everything marked in the fall catalog bought before the spring catalog came out. It was fun to a have a plan. Everything in my house was from the JC Penny catalog!
@calendarpage Жыл бұрын
When my son was in school, we'd go through the Penney's catalog for school clothes, which he loved to pick out. Over the years, I bought almost all my curtains from them - including some I have now, which came from their online catalog. They also have some great fashion jewelry sales.
@baylorsailor11 ай бұрын
Penney's and Dillard's was considered peak sophistication in my childhood 😁
@retroredo985011 ай бұрын
I ordered my bridesmade dresses in 1983 from Penny's catalog!
@thraciangrapes11 ай бұрын
We used to pick out clothes we liked and marked the pages too. Many times we ended up making outfits on our sewing machine instead of buying.
@thraciangrapes11 ай бұрын
@@retroredo9850 Yes, all the stores had a bridal salon back in the day! What a wonderful era!
@JerryFisher11 ай бұрын
I am old enough to remember watching cartoons where the coyote would order something from Acme. He’d stand impatiently at the mailbox and seconds later his latest tool to destroy the roadrunner would arrive. As a kid I thought it would be fantastic to get things that fast. Little did I know I only had to wait 30 years for this to almost come to pass.
@MarkTurner-u8v11 ай бұрын
Invisible paint, rocket powered roller skates, giant horseshoe magnets, miles of railroad track with rocket powered sled, giant springs, the list goes on forever.
@turtleanton653911 ай бұрын
Yee😊
@shaaronie11 ай бұрын
@@MarkTurner-u8v Wow! This took me back to a nice place and a hearty chuckle! Thanks!
@edryba48678 ай бұрын
Chuck Jones, who created and Directed the REAL Road Runner cartoons (as opposed to former animator Rudy Larriva’s crummy ones, made when Warner Bros. re-opened their animation department in the later 1960’s) always loved the idea that there was this company called “Acme” that made all this stuff for coyotes to order for catching road runners, and that these items NEVER worked!
@marycanary5 ай бұрын
I remember that 😆
@mattkaustickomments Жыл бұрын
We had a local pizza restaurant that used a genius idea for entertaining customers who were waiting for tables… they put old Sears, Ward, and Penney’s catalogues from the 60’s and 70’s in the lobby. It was a real hoot to look up things you had in your house in the past or toys you had wanted for Xmas. 😊
@soniatriana9091 Жыл бұрын
Matt - that is definitely a great idea!! I’m sure everyone was laughing & having a good time before they even sat down to enjoy their pizza!!
@mattkaustickomments Жыл бұрын
@@soniatriana9091 Yes, and it was a good pop culture history lesson for kids, too.
@pamelaadam9207 Жыл бұрын
Makes me regret mum letting us cut up the clubby books, as we called them, to paste into scrapbooks
@mattkaustickomments Жыл бұрын
@@pamelaadam9207 Why “Clubby Books”? What does that mean?
@pamelaadam9207 Жыл бұрын
@mattkaustickomments it's a Scottish term for the catalogues we has here. You had your agents who got a commission from sales and people could join a wee circle or club to pay in instalments hence the clubby books
@davidk8457 Жыл бұрын
I loved Sears ... my mom worked at a Sears catalog dept outlet in our only mall in the 1960's. She absolutely loved it and loved going to work when most gals didn't have a job ... she stayed with Sears thru the 70's when they built a huge store at the new huge shopping mall in the burbs. Thank you Sears and all her wonderful friends ... you have no idea how much my mom loved you and never forgot you !
@zyxw200011 ай бұрын
Sears' downfall was in not getting into online shopping.
@Suzanne-f4x8 ай бұрын
@@zyxw2000 Maybe they didn't want to go Chinese.
@zyxw20008 ай бұрын
@@Suzanne-f4x They were already selling Chinese merchandise.
@delana2842 Жыл бұрын
Outstanding documentary! Yes, Amazon, Zappo, Walmart, etc. would be nothing without Sears, Wards, Woolworths and Kresge, giants of Anerican retail history and sorely missed.
@Mrbfgray Жыл бұрын
More forgotten than missed but we always had that old reproduction Sears catalog from, wanna say--1880's, to look at for fun.
@igorschmidlapp6987 Жыл бұрын
Anybody else remember going to the "Five and Dime" store? The ancestor of the dollar stores, where things were priced for five and ten cents...
@Mrbfgray Жыл бұрын
@@igorschmidlapp6987 Sure do, just barely, didn't quite live up to the name by then tho. Thanks for reminder, I'd nearly forgotten.
@baylorsailor11 ай бұрын
Don't forget the Golden Rule Store, aka J.C. Penney.
@baylorsailor11 ай бұрын
@@Mrbfgray many old catalogs are online for viewing. It is a lot of fun to look through the old catalogs. My favorite products are the kit homes.
@pathader483911 ай бұрын
I miss Sears, stove and refrigerator, washer and dryer, hot water tank, furnaces, automotive, and they lasted 25 yr.😢😢😢😢 So horrible that they are gone. Quality merchandise that lasted for years not like today, toss out like a Kleenex.
@leahcim388 ай бұрын
You can still find those old products and RESTORE them!
@pianomanhere8 ай бұрын
Kenmore refrigerators used to be reasonably reliable for years. Now, if you want a refrigerator that will enable you to get to know your repairmen, then buy a Kenmore (or any other brand that is actually manufactured by LG or Samsung...the parties primarily responsible for so many crap fridges in the past decade).
@annalouisaross8 ай бұрын
Kenmore, made to last! If they went out, they were fixable. Today, appliances are as much to fix as it is to buy a new one. Everything today is made to be disposable. Sad.
@andreaberryhill66547 ай бұрын
Kenmore made the best washers! A perfect & truly Delicate cycle.
@dem76155 ай бұрын
My Kenmore stuff lasted forever.. . Miss that store
@jimsquirrel8944 Жыл бұрын
I am so glad I fell into this series! Always looking for new historical documentaries since History channel isn’t the same anymore!
@richardszablewski1420 Жыл бұрын
Very well said
@diane9247 Жыл бұрын
Isn't that the truth! Who even watches it, now?
@zyxw200011 ай бұрын
History Channel is on KZbin, and all it has is sleazy videos about interplanetary aliens. I keep reporting it to YT, but it has a huge viewership.
@RijackiTorment11 ай бұрын
History Hit is UK based but it's that real history the "History Channel" has been missing for so long.
@edryba48678 ай бұрын
Yes, sadly. The History Channel as we knew it, is history.
@thomsinefrye6134 Жыл бұрын
JC Penney was also a Christmas catalog in our house.
@alanaadams744010 ай бұрын
I bought my boys clothes at Penny's bc they were durable and kept their color and shape. My mother worked for Penneys for 25 years and got a pension you don't see that anymore
@johnbecker215111 ай бұрын
I am a proud owner of a Sears cement block house. It is 110 years old and going strong.
@OneDullMan11 ай бұрын
Eatons and Sears were the major catalogue players here in Canada. Remember spending lots of my free time in December drooling over the Sears Wish Book. Ahhh the memories.
@LM-sc8lu Жыл бұрын
When I interviewed as a salesman at Sears in the late 1980s, the Sales Manager asked, "Why do you want to work for Sears?" I replied, "Because the sign on the front of the store says Sears. People already trust the place; you give me the customers, I'll give you the sales." I got the job. Sears (at least my store) was so concerned with customer service that an old er gentleman dropped a window air conditioner from his second-story window and brought it back for a replacement before his wife found out. I tried to explain our guarantee didn't cover preventable accidents (negligence), but he insisted on talking to my manager, who gave the man a new A/C!! Sears should have kept up with the times and might still be in business. I tried to explain.
@ramblerdave133910 ай бұрын
My niece owns a Sears house, built in 1928. They found the blueprints in the attic, and framed them, and hung them in the hallway.
@Roger-vz7ol6 ай бұрын
I still see Sears houses in a lot of places and they are still better quality than the new overpriced ticky-tacky houses of today.
@marysonderegger24265 ай бұрын
that is freaking amazing !!!!!!
@kimthomas87175 ай бұрын
I love that ! How cool
@thraciangrapes11 ай бұрын
My father ran Spencer's Gifts mail order house for 30 years. We kids grew up working parttime in mail order during our school years. My mom loved shopping at the Sears department stores. Thank you for this wonderful documentary!
@pinrod111 ай бұрын
My grandmother owned/operated a wards catalog store as a franchise. Remember Service Merchandise stores and their catalogs?
@rjlaxvespa174211 ай бұрын
I bought all my Oneida silverware from Service Merchandise, they had a store near Playa del Rey, kind of across the way from the Hughes aircraft plant... my father worked for Hughes he was recruited out of college to come to California, my mom ever the planner towed -the Airstream trailer out here to live in in Culver City...😍 they finally bought a house in West Chester, very near the airport, that was removed by eminent domain LAX..LAXVESPA-LOSANGELES
@JessicaHawks-gc7fv Жыл бұрын
I grew up in one of those homes my great grandparents built…it was giant and beautiful and still standing
@stevengill173611 ай бұрын
Part of it was that they used full dimension lumber, not the trimmed down stuff we use these days....(it is kiln dried and a lot easier to work with these days though, for sure!)
@velaphitshabalala2912 Жыл бұрын
Nothing lasts forever, no matter what it is. Shine when it is your chance to shine and do it well.
@dcasper851411 ай бұрын
Good advice. 😊
@lynnfisher303710 ай бұрын
So so true. Thanks for the shot of reality
@luisreyes19638 ай бұрын
And to think Walmart & Target outlived Sears & Montgomery Ward. 🏢
@edryba486710 ай бұрын
If you were a guitar player as a kid, you waited for the Sears Catalog to arrive, and went directly to the guitar section. Did you know that the Silvertone electric guitars were built by the GUY (yes, one man) who built every Danelectro guitar? And at Ward’s, those Airline electric guitars looked suspiciously like the Silvertone electrics in the Sears catalog! At the Danelectro factory, the railroad would drop off a boxcar. At the end of the month, they would pick up that boxcar, which had been filled with guitars (and EVERY one of them had been built by the Danelectro guy!). After Sears had done this for a while, Montgomery Ward made a similar deal with Danelectro. So ONE GUY built ALL the electric guitars sold by BOTH major mail-order catalog companies in Chicago.
@cattycorner84 ай бұрын
That is a fantastic story! I wonder how many he made and how long he produced them?
@milosterwheeler2520 Жыл бұрын
Really interesting. The Sears Christmas catalog toy section was a yearly wonderland to me as a child in the 1950's.
@mickieswendsen13028 ай бұрын
Us, too, on into the early 60's.
@texaswunderkind11 ай бұрын
I miss American-made quality products. Had I known, I would have bought every Craftsman tool set I could have afforded before they switched to cheap overseas manufacture. Viewing this documentary, it was clear that these 19th Century entrepreneurs took immense pride in the United States, not just money. Big corporations are the exact opposite today.
@robertschemonia561711 ай бұрын
I am a 3rd generation mechanic. I can say with confidence that early Craftsman tools were and are FAR better than they were even in the 90s and early 2000s. On that note, I found that Craftsman tools wear out entirely too fast in a commercial setting where you depend on them 10 hours a day, 5 and 6 days a week. When I started as a mechanic, thats all I had, was Craftsman tools. But the local Sears refused to warranty them when I went in wearing a uniform shirt from a shop I worked at. They said they were not warranted for commercial use, and refused to exchange them for me permanently. So I started buying Cornwell tools. And that is now 95% of the tools I own. Having a good tool truck driver is half the battle of buying any tools from a tool truck. I still have S-K socket sets that were my grandfather's when he ran a shop in my old town. I still use them, 60 years old or not. He'd be mad if I didn't. He'd tell me they are tools, not decorations! What's the point in having them if you aren't going to use them!?! And something that makes my eyes roll os teachers that say they have to spend their money to do their jobs. "Welcome to the club." Is my my response.
@yellowtomato10 ай бұрын
Craftsman hand tools before the 1990's were excellent
@shortchanged.10 ай бұрын
Then china didn't have the factories like america did .
@Here4TheHeckOfIt10 ай бұрын
@@robertschemonia5617 I think teachers get a tax credit for out-of-pocket school expenses, but it's capped at $300. Probably as a small business, you get a bigger write-off for your expenses.
@robertschemonia561710 ай бұрын
@@Here4TheHeckOfIt nope. Not even close. I'd have to spend $15k out of pocket per year to be able to have a tax deduction. I do not own my own business, so that kind of stuff is just itemized if I spend enough, not a tax deduction expense.
@thefibergoddess6771 Жыл бұрын
As a pre-teen, Sears was the only store where I could get clothes that fit my tall, lanky frame. Decades later, going to Sears with my savings from babysitting and buying my own clothes is a cherished memory.
@tcuplvr11 ай бұрын
Yup!! The Lemon Frog Shop!!!
@krmccarrell11 ай бұрын
Me too! To think we could possibly have enough to buy things! My first purchase - my parents took me to Sears and I bought a sewing machine!! Then I could make my own clothing! I remember like it was yesterday!
@alanaadams744010 ай бұрын
Yes I would babysit and make my own clothes since 7th grade. I made curtains bedspreads sew for my grandmother eventually sewed for a bridal shop
@SusanCox-pl9qp Жыл бұрын
Amazon, while their products are delivered quickly, NOTHING can match the Sears catalog!
@bks60002 ай бұрын
But there's so much more variety!
@Naynay1969 Жыл бұрын
I grew up in the 70's and 80's. I remember shopping in every store mentioned here. If people and industry don't don't learn from the past, they'll meet the same demise.
@cocoaorange111 ай бұрын
Same age here. I miss the stores.
@shelleyhewett329311 ай бұрын
One of my happiest memories was when my Grandma would call and say “The Christmas Wish book came in the mail today!”….
@meedwards510 ай бұрын
❤
@Jody-kt9ev11 ай бұрын
Very good video. When I was growing up there was a 4 story(including the basement) Sears store in Shawnee, Oklahoma where we went shopping. As expected the building is now empty and at one time it could have been purchased for $1.00. Sears moved to a mall in the north of Shawnee, but that is closed now also. Where we live now there was a great Sears store in the local mall-it is now gone and the space empty. We bought Craftsman tools and Sears appliances for years with no problems. Sad to see them fall. Recently, I went to Lowe's to buy a pair of pliers. There were two identical looking pliers for sale. One was the Craftsman brand, made in China. The other brand was made in Vietnam. The price was the same. As Vietnam is now a US ally, I bought the pliers made there.
@tomhutt291311 ай бұрын
L
@goldgeologist5320 Жыл бұрын
I miss the Seats of my childhood! Great Christmas memories. But Marshal Fields was the real deal. Those Christmas windows!
@chinookwynds320611 ай бұрын
@ 52:42 in 2005 Kmart bought out Sears... and shortly thereafter the BIG drop in quality began. The clothing was always above average until that time, and a somewhat worthy hardware section became nada. Was something to deal with in this household, I spent a lot there and had to find replacement brands and stores.
@mickieswendsen13028 ай бұрын
I know, I miss these stores!!
@adamtrombino1067 ай бұрын
The thing was K Mart stores were always a mess, with very low quality items. My mother used to call them 'throw away clothes'. SO when they bought out Sears, that reputation hurt Sears. When they got rid of the Sears Hardware stores which was a treat to spend the better part of day in with my dad, he and I knew the writing was on the wall. Suddenly you couldn't get certain tools exchanged anymore, because Sears no longer supplied them. That in turn made people leery of buying appliances from them, because if 1 got an extended warranty and Sears went out of business, who would service the units under warranty? That actually happened to me in 2013 when I bought a fridge from a store that was closing. They wouldn't sell an extended service contract to me, but the price was so low, I decided to gamble. It is still running ok, but I've been told that if the electronic board ever does go out, it's n/a...
@shawandabonner96814 ай бұрын
I was told by Kmart employees that Sears took over Kmart and some Kmarts were renamed Sears Essentials, including the Kmart at which I shopped. The Martha Stewart line in Kmart went away and Sears items like washers, dryers, and stoves showed up in the store. Sears was trying to compete with Walmart and Target with Sears Essentials, but the Kmart prices went up and they got rid of the layaway plan, which is one reason I shopped at Kmart during Christmas time. Eventually, they changed it back to Kmart, but it was too late.
@cattycorner84 ай бұрын
I remember when that happened.
@kingforaday872511 ай бұрын
My dad worked at Sears my mom worked at Penneys. Each Christmas they would each bring me and my four siblings a Christmas catalog. We would each go through our catalogs and mark what we wanted. Naturally we didnt get everything but usually one big item and several small ones. After Christmas I would go through my catalog and fanaticize about the ones I didnt get!
@mickieswendsen13028 ай бұрын
My family (4 kids) too, 50's, early 60's.
@DavidParker-i8o11 ай бұрын
Born and raised about a mile away from the NE Philadelphia Sears store. We always shopped there. So many great memories. The clock tower was a landmark on the Roosevelt Blvd. It was so sad to watch the building demolished with explosives in late 1994. Gone was a historic icon forever😞
@Kimberly-dt4ko11 ай бұрын
We used to shop at that Sears for my sister's shoes. She had a wide foot as a kid and they were the only Sears that carried the wide shoes. I could get my sneakers at the Montgomeryville store.
@velaphitshabalala2912 Жыл бұрын
If this was a book it would be called unputdownable but because it's visual I call it unblinkable. Awesome.
@rockchildofthe60s6911 ай бұрын
We use to make Christmas decorations with both Sears and Monkey Wards big catalogs. Just fold the page diagonally and use a little bit of glue so the page would stay folded then let it dry for a few days. When the glue was dried you bind 2 catalogs together and spray paint them green or red or both colors and was Christmas tree. Decorative for table tops.
@mickieswendsen13028 ай бұрын
My older sister did that, folding each page until you could stand it up sorta' like a silo/barn.
@ruththompson9369 Жыл бұрын
My daughter work for Sears for years … I have some old wish books, of the 1950’s I love looking at them.
@cocoaorange111 ай бұрын
I still get mail order catalogs. I am from Chicago, but I still miss the catalogs from Wards and Sears. JC Penney as well. Memories man.
@mickieswendsen13028 ай бұрын
Anyone remember Spiegal's
@charq52 Жыл бұрын
My very first sewing machine more than 60 years ago was a Sears. I paid $100, a lot of money as a new bride. I used that machine for more than 40 years….I wish I still had it.
@PlatinumIrishrose Жыл бұрын
Better than you could buy today!
@Tina0601911 ай бұрын
My Kenmore sewing machine is 38 years old; still using it.
@angelamaryquitecontrary460911 ай бұрын
I remember my mum's old machine; it was controlled by a sort of knee operated handle, to which we referred as the 'knee-er'. I also remember it conking out after years of almost industrial use. My mother regarded her new machine as you would a device landing from hundreds of years in the future...
@Norm100ful9 ай бұрын
Montgomery Ward was supposed to be the premier catalog department store. However, when we lived in Germany, I could not place an order for Christmas gifts to be delivered to friends in the United States, because they only used a 1-800 number. until I lived there, I didn’t realize that I could not place a call through a 1-800 number from Germany. That was the only way you could order from them because I did not have their catalog to mail in an order form. These companies were very complacent. They did not understand their business model. Sears was well over 100 years as a mail order powerhouse, but couldn’t get it together right when online ordering was just taking off. That’s what happens when you have entrenched management without the current skills necessary to compete.
@diane9247 Жыл бұрын
I have a wonderful curly maple dresser ordered by my great-grandmother from Montgomery Ward. This was in the 1930s on a ranch in South Dakota. She saved up for many months from her own little income selling cream and butter. 😊 Much later, she saved enough to buy my mother her prom dress from the Wards catalog. (Sadly, the prom was cancelled due to gas rationing. This was in about 1942.)
@vedales867011 ай бұрын
Worked at, shopped at virtually everyone of those retailers. Started early and still going strong. Great Story!
@benjamintaylor440211 ай бұрын
This documentary brought back sweet memories of my entry into the workforce after college in the 70s. I got my first corporate job as a systems analyst at Allstate's corporate headquarters in Northbrook, Il. The required dress code for male employees was a suit and tie. Three- piece suits were popular back then. Allstate automatically issued all corporate employees a Sears (Checklist Charge) credit card. I built up my wardrobe from suits that I purchased on credit from sears. They were manufactured from polyester material, but they were awesome at the time. Those were great times!!!
@NondescriptMammalАй бұрын
I am not from Chicago, but I am old enough to remember when Sears was the biggest retailer by far, and Wards was also very well established in our Midwestern city. Interesting documentary about how they started and grew... Always glad to find a channel worth subscribing to, with good old simple straightforward interesting content available! 🦋
@gandydancer823 Жыл бұрын
This is an excellent episode. I have watched it numerous times. I will watch many more. Way to go WTTW.
@WLBarton446611 ай бұрын
S&H Green Stamps was how my mother was able to get her 8 kids birthday presents. The grocer made money off a family of 10 and she got Green Stamps to take to the Green Stamp store and trade for a transitor radio, walkue talkie, etc.
@llamalady87006 ай бұрын
I remember those! My mother used to collect Green Stamps, too!
@mlstroh74 ай бұрын
That is I got Christmas gifts ... I still have some of my grandmothers s&s green stamps !
@PM31213 ай бұрын
Going to the store was an event!
@curtislowe4577 Жыл бұрын
Julius Rosenwald's observation on wealthy men at 40:14 is priceless. In short, he asserted that intelligence and money are not linked only luck and money.
@fokkerd3red61811 ай бұрын
He was spot on with that statement.
@DavidUrban-y3c Жыл бұрын
OMG do i remember the Sears catalogs and the way they ilistrated the toys. And i worked for Montgomery Wards for a time. Thanks for posting this. Have a blessed Christmas everyone
@PlatinumIrishrose Жыл бұрын
Happy NEW YEAR!!🎉
@Beepinsqueekin Жыл бұрын
My kids waited anxiously for the Sears toy catalog. They looked carefully through each page. We luckily had 2 Sears department stores in our city, we shopped there often!
@Danger-Dave11 ай бұрын
The End of these onetime giants of American made commerce came as US manufacturing was sold out to cheap labor in Tiwan & Japan and then China. I know because I lived it when I worked for Emmerson Electric Co. in Paris Tn. who made all of the Sears Craftsman line of tools which bit by bit, division by division, lost their contracts and jobs to Taiwanese MFG by the mid 80's. There really was something to be said back then when you bought products that had that "Made in the USA" printed on it because all of the quality parts were also made in the states as well as assembled here!
@cattycorner84 ай бұрын
@Danger-Dave I grew up in West Tennessee. I did not know that Craftsman tools were made there! I remember very well when they sold all the good jobs out to Japan and Taiwan and Mexico. We lost so many factories.
@iowndvc9 ай бұрын
I still use my Montgomery Ward stove, and portable microwave. And my Great-Grandparents had a mail order house from Sears on their farm. It is still standing and in use today.
@paulakpacente Жыл бұрын
I LOVE this. I bought MANY items by mail order, and I miss these companies. Thanks for this presentation!
@Jody-kt9ev11 ай бұрын
Have you made any videos about the Chicago Electronics companies? Zenith was a large manufacturer of quality TVs and Radios for decades. Motorola, whom I used to work, for was also a large Chicago area electronics company. They still exist, but are a shell of their former self. They invented the cellphone, but all of the Motorola branded phones now are from China. Admiral is another electronics company that had operations in Chicago. They are still operating.
@martinemjt11 ай бұрын
these geniuses provided us , even those born in the nineteen sixties many joyful evenings going through the christmas catalogues!!!
@UKBornin1971 Жыл бұрын
Watched this when it aired on TV, brought back aloooooooot of memories. Definitely could relate when they talked about kids grabbing the catalog and circling items they wanted.
@RijackiTorment11 ай бұрын
In the mid-70s, we lived in a small town in California. The Sears catalog was our primary shopping experience for most things since the shops in town were expensive and the bigger city was a 30 min drive away. There was a very small Sears store in town that was mostly a pickup counter to save on the shipping chargers for home delivery. The x-mas catalog was eagerly awaited each year, too. It was fun looking at all the stuff and dreaming about the possibility of getting any.
@mikepalucci1381 Жыл бұрын
Anyone remember the Spiegel catalog?
@angelagoodwin575811 ай бұрын
Our family ordered from Spiegel's frequently.
@Kimberly-dt4ko11 ай бұрын
I remember it. I don't remember ordering from it. I did spend time looking through it.
@mickieswendsen13028 ай бұрын
ME! As a 50's/60's kid!!
@hebneh6 ай бұрын
I don’t think I ever saw an actual Speigel catalogue but I remember it often being mentioned as supplying prizes on TV game shows.
@vmaultsby6 ай бұрын
Omg Yes
@PlatinumIrishrose Жыл бұрын
Later on in years, like in the 1980's, we used to get the "Christmas In July" catalogs!! Does anyone remember these!! It was wonderful to start singing "Jingle Bells," Silent Night" and "Frosty the Snowman" throughout June and July and driving my mom crazy!😂😂❤❤
@mickieswendsen13028 ай бұрын
I remember
@Red_Queens_Jubilee_Club11 ай бұрын
Very well done documentary. I lived about 20 miles from the big Montgomery Ward catalog store in Baltimore. I loved being able to call in an order and have it ready by the time I had driven to the store. When other stores came along offering the same service I thought… big deal. I’ve shopped this way for years. I loved the convenience of that catalog store.
@herrunsinn77411 ай бұрын
And for automotive fans, there was J.C. Whitney (also a Chicago company, I think). Many a young car-crazy young guy would wait eagerly for each new catalogue to come out.
@kelvintorrence59948 ай бұрын
I got alot of car parts from them while I was in thre us navy,miss that catalog
@ginaroberts2964 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic documentary! I learned many things I did not know. Makes me even prouder to be from Chicago. The Sears Catalog and Montgomery Ward "Wish Book" were a part of my life, and so many lives. Those were the days.
@jayalexander33569 ай бұрын
I'm not from Chicago, but this channel has great documentaries. I've watched 3 so far and they've all been excellent!
@lorettawatkins502411 ай бұрын
Thanks for this presentation. I have enjoyed learning about the stores i grew up knowing. Im 78. This was so much fun to see.
@fleetfoot27 Жыл бұрын
Sears, Roebuck Co, in 1917 offered the frist Diesel engine, for farm and home use. Sears brand called them THERMOIL "T" engines.
@getoffmydarnlawn Жыл бұрын
I grew up with, "Please allow 4 to 6 weeks for delivery." Now I get what I want in 1 or 2 days, occasionally same day. I'm officially an old.
@johnedgren8502 Жыл бұрын
Me too
@Ponchoed Жыл бұрын
That was like the wait for the toy out of the cereal box, send 3 UPC codes and a self addressed stamped envelope the wait 4-6 weeks.
@pupawupagus Жыл бұрын
if i can’t get it same day i essentially throw a temper tantrum. i’m 54 so i know the 4-6 week concept; i got super spoiled, super fast
@aspensulphate Жыл бұрын
An old what? THAT is the question.
@jenniferlpga Жыл бұрын
So do I. In the 50 and 60s three to four weeks would have astounded us. It was usually 6 weeks. We looked forward to the wish books each year.
@awalker8371 Жыл бұрын
Ugh I miss these type of stores. We need these old school department stores back. Ugh miss them immensely
@debrabaral487311 ай бұрын
The best and longest lasting washing machine was purchased from Montgomery Ward and lasted well beyond my children’s growing up years. When I sold my house, I left it behind. It still looked great and was in good working order.
@tomcharter4127 Жыл бұрын
Learning the story is amazing but also very sad as these companies no longer exist. Things change times change maybe that’s how it supposed to be. What a great American story, the only place in the world where you can do this day labor to tycoon.
@jonawesolowski-thecommunit9968 Жыл бұрын
I so enjoy this series. My brother and sister and I always waited with rapted attention foe the wish book delivery in the 70s. Pages earmarked and items circled. It was so much fun to see the offerings. I remember some years nack when wuick ordering was big i would think, "No i like the experience of going to the store to shop." Lol. Now, if i can find what i want online, I am thrilled not to leave home to get it. Myyyy, how the times change
@cruisepaige11 ай бұрын
Rapt
@Dovietail Жыл бұрын
I never knew there was a civil rights aspect to mail order catalogues. How fascinating, wonderful, and AMERICAN!
@gravityboy7910 ай бұрын
Surely that was added later to make this story Hollywood ish. At that time the government was given land & $ to new white settlers while stealing ideas and pattens from so called emancipated black slaves. All of this time period is still full of lies. For example where are the slave ships & why make the Musium African Americans into the shape of a slave ship? At that time they were sending native black Americans to Africa Liberia! Why?! Bcuz they were building lies for their false history. We natives showed all of them YT’s folk how to survive here in America. Don’t believe the HYPE!
@tomdonovan48428 ай бұрын
Excellent well done historical review. Thank you.
@DJN881 Жыл бұрын
I was confined to my bed during the weeks prior to Christmas in 1968 and did all of my shopping from the Sears catalog.
@ralphlozano9177 Жыл бұрын
Growing up in Chicago in the 60's & 70's, I remember these great department stores but there were others, like Wieboldts, Goldblatts, and Zayres to name a few.
@LatitudeSky11 ай бұрын
The Zayre name is gone but the company legacy lives on as TJ Maxx, Home Goods and other chains. They also founded and spun off the BJs Wholesale Club.
@cruisepaige11 ай бұрын
@@LatitudeSkyI was visiting my cousin last week and she had yarn from ZAYRE!
@cocoaorange111 ай бұрын
I do, 70's child here.
@Diesel33568 ай бұрын
Marshall Field’s at Christmas! They had an entire floor for toys!
@tonyrichards254 Жыл бұрын
We had Sears and Montgomery Ward EVERYTHING when I was a kid. It was quality stuff and the prices were fair. I hate that cheap crap from Walmart and simple bad decisions caused both of these to disappear.
@juelzm1499 ай бұрын
What a fantastic documentary! I grew up ordering from and shopping at both of these companies but learned so many things about them here. I thoroughly enjoyed this trip back in time!
@yourseatatthetable Жыл бұрын
When I was a kid in the 70s we were always excited to see a new Sears catalog come in the mail.
@LetArtsLive3 ай бұрын
And the Sports Illustrated swimsuit
@irenethomas40738 ай бұрын
My dad designed all of the displays and windows for the Sears stores from the late 40s to around 1970 from his Chicago office. My brother occasionally was in the Catalog. As renters we bought a roomful of furniture for around $300 in the 60s.
@orientopportunities11 ай бұрын
This documentary was amazing and very insightful thank you 🙏🏿
@theatreorganman10 ай бұрын
Outstanding! One of the finest documentaries on American consumerism!
@JohnAdorjan Жыл бұрын
I’ve heard about mail order brides but a mail order giant would be great to have for yard work and home security.
@lukespector555011 ай бұрын
Steven Wright once dated a mail-order bridesmaid.........
@MichaelLasotaMusic11 ай бұрын
I loved my Buffalo, NY "Brand Names" catalog. I got a few devices from there. It was like Christmas any time of the year I could save up. They'd go in the warehouse and grab my item in ~20-30 minutes and I just waited around and looked at the products on display. You could also mail-order from them.
@talpark8796 Жыл бұрын
here in🇨🇦, it was much more so the *Eaton's* and *Hudson's Bay* catalogues, with *Sear's* being a postwar player
@OvertheGarage-wv1wn11 ай бұрын
My mom and her best friend worked at Sears right after graduating high school for a while. Somewhere along the line, I think it was in the 70s, we noticed at least with boys cloths, they didn't last very long. I started getting Levis and Sears didn't sell those so we started going to Macys and never looked back.
@chadsimmons63479 ай бұрын
In KCMO we still have the huge Old Montgomery Ward at St John & Belmont built in 1902 & a sears retail off Front St with Mo River Levy behind it
@jimp654211 ай бұрын
I remember my early childhood when my brothers and I would wait for the Sears Christmas catalog. When it finally came we immediately turned to the huge toy section. Sadly, my kids, grandkids and great grandkids will never know that joyful anticipation. Although Sears is gone, Montgomery Wards still has a pretty strong internet presence.
@RobertStricklandinKorea11 ай бұрын
Miss Sears & Roebuck catalog, it was my way out of the rural South with my imagination and dreams.
@williamprice39298 ай бұрын
When Sears was around in the 90's and 2000's I three times was told to go to a hiring interview. All 3 times the person hiring never showed up. This was at 2 different Sears stores. I don't know how anyone ever got a job there.
@h.mandelene327911 ай бұрын
Maybe they were not big enough but there were some other catalog businesses. Speigle was like Sears and Ward, they even sold motorboats along with tools. There was also another catalog company on the south side of Chicago but I don't remember the name of it.
@HumansMakeAIArt11 ай бұрын
I was born in 1988 so i was too young for Sears to really be a big player anymore, but I have equally fond memories of circling in the Lands End and LL Bean catalogs! Glad it's a fond memory so many former kids share
@LetArtsLive3 ай бұрын
I'm sure they still have L.L.Bean
@MojoMama710 ай бұрын
I must say, I'm really impressed with how innovative these men were for their time. I've been around awhile and remember Sears fondly. I never knew the history of these giants. I wish the "giants" of today had the character and some care, like these men seemed to have, especially when it comes to their employees. And the houses that are still standing blew my mind.
@russellmakar57911 ай бұрын
I worked at sears in the sixties in the tire department on North and Harlem in Chicago, my sister worked at S.S. Kresge at the soda fountain. Good memories.
@Imissyoulou11 ай бұрын
They tore that building down. They are building a part of Rush Hospital on that site.
@ramblerdave133910 ай бұрын
And from S.S. Kresge, came K mart, who built a giant new World Headquarters in the early seventies, in Troy, MI. My sister worked there in the payroll department, and my high school buddies worked in collections, for their new at the time, Credit Card department, even before the new headquarters was built. That building was closed about 30 years after being built, and was vacant for about a decade, before the space was leased out.
@mattiemathis9549 Жыл бұрын
I definitely left my brain in bed today. It took a minute and a half into the video for me to realize this wasn’t about ordering giants through the mail. 😂😂😂😂😂
@kayfitzgerald309 Жыл бұрын
Now THAT'S Fun-🦵!!! After your comment, I had to go back & read the into!! Thnx for the 😂
@tomwesley788411 ай бұрын
LOL
@NaveDelAmor11 ай бұрын
I remember drooling over a Sears catalog which we received from the US while we lived in Brasil. That's how i got my fashion design sense-- from looking at the fashion sections.
@twalatka10 ай бұрын
My Mom had a set of Kenworth washer and dryer. She bought them in 1974. She used them until yr 2000 when she gave them to my sister.
@catholiccrusader5328 Жыл бұрын
When I was a kid I worked at Sears. Not one for retail I grew bored and decided to get into an action job; inner city school teaching where there's never a dull moment as the saying goes.
@christinamarie3598 Жыл бұрын
Omg .. I remember the Christmas catalog and it was the time of collecting green stamps .. so fond memories of this as a child! I do miss the sears service center .. miss the professionalism and all the services!
@KMF3 Жыл бұрын
When I was growing up we did our Christmas wish list each year with the Sears catalogue.
@kevinc8387 Жыл бұрын
Lived for years on a usafb in Germany. The wish was fought over by three brothers . Took a month or more to get your order but was very happy memories.
@susanholbrook418511 ай бұрын
I miss those years of these many stores. Those were big catalogs.