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Associated Dry Goods

Associated Dry Goods Corporation (ADG) was a chain of department stores that merged with May Department Stores in 1986. It was founded in 1916 as an association of independent stores called American Dry Goods, based in New York City.

Associated Dry Goods Corp
Logo registered in 1964
IndustryRetailing
Defunct1986; 38 years ago (1986)
FateAcquisition
SuccessorThe May Company
Area served
United States

History edit

The chain began when Henry Siegel, who had founded department store Siegel, Cooper & Co. in Chicago, obtained financing from Goldman Sachs for a store in New York City in the early twentieth century. Though Siegel failed in his endeavor, the remnants of the chain were merged with John Claflin's stores H.B. Claflin & Company, along with Lord & Taylor, Stewart & Co., Hengerer's, and J. N. Adam & Co. (with financing from J. P. Morgan & Company), to create Associated Dry Goods. Other stores were spun off to Mercantile Stores Co.

Through the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s ADG continued to expand through acquisitions. In the 1970s, they created a new St. Petersburg, Florida-based department store, Robinson's of Florida. However, ADG was most well known for its upscale New York City based Lord & Taylor division, with over 84 locations across the country. Lord & Taylor was ADG's largest and most profitable division.

Major growth edit

In the early and mid-1980s ADG attempted to rationalize its department stores, focusing on high-growth areas. Several of its non-profitable department store chains were sold or shuttered. They merged Hengerer's of Buffalo, New York into Rochester-based Sibley's in 1981. 1983 saw the merger of Cincinnati-based H.& S. Pogue Co. (5 locations) into Indianapolis-based L. S. Ayres. Also in 1983 The Diamond division (2 locations) of West Virginia was sold to Stone & Thomas. In 1984, Stix Baer & Fuller (12 locations) in St. Louis, Missouri was sold to Dillard Department Stores. Also, in 1984, the Baltimore-based Stewart & Company division was merged into its Caldor discount division. The Powers Dry Goods Company (9 locations) in Minneapolis, Minnesota were sold to Allied Stores' The Donaldson Co. in 1985. In early 1986, they merged the Louisville-based Stewart Dry Goods division into its Indianapolis-based L. S. Ayres & Co. operations.

Founding stores, acquisitions, chain divestitures, closures, and division mergers edit

Founding stores edit

Later acquisitions edit

Chain divestitures, closures and division mergers edit

Several department store divisions were divested or closed prior to the 1986 merger with May Department Stores

Acquisition by May Department Stores edit

ADG was acquired by the May Department Stores Company in October 1986 as part of a US$2.2 billion merger. At the time, it was considered to have been the most expensive purchase/merger in retail history. After 1986, May converted or merged most of the former ADG department stores into its own divisions with the exception of the upscale Lord & Taylor, which was a long-time fashion leader and considered the “crown jewel” of Associated. When the May Company acquired ADG in 1986, it was assumed that May bought ADG just for the upscale Lord & Taylor division.

During the final year of retail operation, ADG operated over 155 department stores, in addition to Caldor (a northeast upscale discount chain), and Loehmann's, (a specialty off price retailer).

Timeline of May Company Conversions & Divestitures of former ADG Divisions edit

After the ADG merger, the May Company either divested or merged each of the former ADG divisions into its own regional nameplates:

Lord & Taylor, the last remaining nameplate, in 2021 converted to an online-only.

History by nameplate edit

The Denver Dry Goods Company, Denver, Colorado, was acquired by ADG in 1966. The division consisted of 12 stores in Colorado. After the 1986 May/ADG merger, it was largely shutdown and sold-off and the remaining units were absorbed by May D&F (May Daniels & Fischer) in 1987. May D&F ended up absorbing 3 stores from The Denver Dry Goods Co.. In 1989, May D&F also absorbed ADG's former Goldwater's location in Albuquerque. In 1993, May D&F was merged into May's Foley's division of Houston. After May was bought by Federated, it was announced that most Foley's stores (including the former Denver Dry Goods/May D&F locations) would either be converted to Macy's or sold.

The Diamond, Charleston, West Virginia, was a small 2 store division located in West Virginia. ADG sold this division in 1983 to Stone & Thomas due to limited growth potential.

Goldwaters, Phoenix, Arizona, was founded in Gila City, Arizona in 1860. It moved to Phoenix in 1872 and was acquired by Associated in 1963. It consisted of 9 locations in Arizona, New Mexico, and Nevada. The chain became a division of May as part of the May/ADG merger in 1986. May dissolved the division in 1989 and split the stores into three other May divisions. Eventually May D&F, May Company California and J. W. Robinson's absorbed various stores with the Tucson-area stores being sold to Dillard's Department Stores.

The H.& S. Pogue Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, was acquired by Associated Dry Goods Corp. in 1962. In 1984, it was merged into L. S. Ayres & Co. of Indianapolis. After the May/ADG merger, its former branch locations were swiftly shuttered or sold to Hess's and JCPenney in 1987 and 1988 and the downtown flagship demolished.

Hahne & Co., Newark, New Jersey, was part of the 1916 conglomeration of American Dry Goods (later renamed Associated). After relocating its corporate offices from downtown Newark to a strip mall nearby to its Woodbridge, N.J. store; there had been consideration to moving to the new "flagship store" in the mid-1980s to the former Gimbels at Westfield Garden State Plaza but Sunday operating law in Bergen County prevented this—its 9 stores were shut down by May in 1989. Most of them (six) were absorbed by Lord & Taylor, while the large Westfield Garden State Plaza store was bought by Nordstrom.

Hengerer's (The William Hengerer Co.), Buffalo, New York, was founded in 1874 as Barnes, Bancroft & Co.. It adopted the Hengerer name in 1895 and was purchased in 1905 by J. N. Adam & Co. It was a division of Associated Dry Goods Corp. from its inception in 1916. In 1981, ADG merged Hengerer's into Sibley, Lindsay & Curr Co. of Rochester. After the May/ADG merger, Sibley's was merged into May's Kaufmann's division in 1992. After May was bought by Federated, it was announced that most Kaufmann's stores would either be converted to Macy's or sold. All the former Hengerer's locations became Macy's in September 2006.

Joseph Horne Co., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. This was historically the carriage-trade department store of Pittsburgh. For several decades was in direct competition with cross-town rival Kaufmann's (a division of May). It was acquired by Associated Dry Goods in 1972 – and eventually acquired by May in October 1986 as part of the May/ADG merger. Due to anti-trust concerns and legal action by the City of Pittsburgh, it was promptly sold in December 1986 to an investor group. After several years of private ownership, it was announced the Dillard's would be buying the chain to combine it with the Dillard/DeBartolo co-owned Higbee's stores based in Cleveland. However, the deal collapsed and was not completed. Eventually the Joseph Horne Co. was sold off in parts, with Dillard's acquiring its three Ohio stores in 1992 and Federated Department Stores Lazarus division acquiring its remaining ten Pennsylvania stores in 1995. Federated eventually merged all of its divisions (including the former Joseph Horne/Lazarus locations) into Macy's.

J. N. Adam & Co., Buffalo, New York, was founded in 1881. It purchased Hengerer's in 1905 and, later that same year, both were sold to H.B. Claflin & Co., They later became United Dry Goods Companies. It was a division of Associated Dry Goods Corp. from its inception in 1916. The chain closed in 1960.

L. S. Ayres & Co, Indianapolis, Indiana, was acquired by Associated Dry Goods Corp in 1972. L. S. Ayres & Co. absorbed Pogue's of Cincinnati in 1984 and Stewart's of Louisville in 1985. Upon completion of these mergers, L. S. Ayres & Co. consisted of 25 stores in Indiana, Ohio, and Kentucky, After the 1986 May/ADG merger, the under-performing locations of both former chains were swiftly divested by May in 1987 and 1988. L. S. Ayres & Co. was shortened to L. S. Ayres and was operationally consolidated with Famous-Barr in 1991 (but continuing to operate under the L. S. Ayres moniker), when its downtown Indianapolis flagship and three other under-performing stores were closed. After May was bought by Federated, it was announced that most Famous-Barr – L. S. Ayres stores would either be converted to Macy's or sold.

Lord & Taylor, New York, New York, was founded in 1826. The chain was a founding member of the Associated Dry Goods Corp. organization (then American Dry Goods) in 1916. It became part of May in the 1986 May/ADG merger. While a part of Associated and under the leadership of CEO Joseph E. Brooks, during the 1970s, the chain aggressively expanded into Texas, Illinois, and Michigan. In the early 1980s, South Florida saw 11 stores opened in quick succession. They partially withdrew from the oil-shocked Texas and southern Florida markets in 1989–1990 after the 1986 May/ADG merger. After May assumed ownership, ADG's Hahne's division (several New Jersey locations) and several former John Wanamaker (Philadelphia) locations were combined under the Lord & Taylor name-plate. From 1997 to 2006, Lord & Taylor occupied the former Wanamaker's landmark store in downtown Philadelphia. During the 1990s and early 2000s, May took the chain national. Under the leadership of CEO Marshall Hilsberg, Lord & Taylor entered expansion mode opening stores as far west as Las Vegas, Nevada. At its then peak, Lord & Taylor operated as many as 86 stores across the country.

May was purchased by Federated Department Stores in June 2005. Terry Lundgren, Federated's chairman, president and chief executive officer, announced on January 12, 2006 that Federated Department Stores would be selling the Lord & Taylor chain by the end of the year. On June 22, 2006, it was announced that NRDC Equity Partners, LLC would purchase Lord & Taylor for $1.2 billion (~$1.75 billion in 2023). The sale that was completed four months later in October 2006. After its 2008 purchase of the Canadian department store retailer Hudson's Bay Company, NRDC has stated that it plans to open stores internationally. In 2019, clothing rental firm Le Tote purchased the Lord & Taylor chain.[1] On August 27, 2020, it was announced that Lord & Taylor will be going out of business after a bankruptcy filing on August 2,[2] six years shy of its 200th anniversary.

The Powers Dry Goods Co, Minneapolis, Minnesota, consisted of 7 locations. In 1985, it was acquired by The Donaldson Company (of Minneapolis, a unit of Allied Stores Corp.), which gave Donaldson's some breathing room against dominant rival Dayton's. In 1987, after Campeau Corp.'s buy-out of Allied Stores Corp., Donaldson's was purchased by Carson Pirie Scott & Co. of Chicago which renamed its stores with its own imprimatur. Carson's in turn was acquired by P.A. Bergner & Co. of Milwaukee (and formerly of Peoria, Illinois) in 1989. They filed for bankruptcy in 1991. In 1995 Carson's sold the Minneapolis locations (formerly Powers/Donaldsons) to Dayton's parent Dayton Hudson Corp. Many of which re-opened under its moderate Mervyn's chain. This was mostly in a move to prevent serious competition in its Twin Cities stronghold. In 2004 when Dayton's successor Marshall Field's was acquired by May, it also agreed to buy the former Donaldson/Powers locations, which Mervyn's promptly shuttered, and left May responsible for disposing of the real-estate.

J. W. Robinson'sLos Angeles, California, was a division of Associated Dry Goods since 1957, and consisted of 21 locations in California. J. W. Robinson's was acquired by May in the October 1986 May/ADG merger. It was historically a carriage-trade department store and operated in tandem with May's own middle-tier May Company California division for several years. In 1989 it took over operation of the Goldwaters stores in Phoenix, Arizona. In 1992, as part of divisional consolidations by the May Company, the J.W. Robinson Co. division was merged with the May Company California division to form a single Los Angeles based division to be called Robinsons-May. After May was bought by Federated, it was announced that most Robinsons-May stores would either be converted to Macy's or sold.

Robinson's of FloridaSt. Petersburg, Florida, was a division of Associated Dry Goods when acquired by May in 1986. It had been founded in the 1970s as an attempt by ADG to emulate the success of its upscale J.W. Robinson's stores (of Los Angeles) on the fast-growing Florida Gulf Coast. Rather than invest in the then stagnant Florida market, May sold the division in 1987 (seven stores) to Maison Blanche/Gouchaux Co. of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, to be operated as Maison Blanche stores. The bulk of the former Robinsons of Florida locations were subsequently sold by Maison Blanche to Dillard Department Stores in 1991.

The Sibley, Lindsay & Curr Co.Rochester, New York, and Syracuse, New York, founded in 1868, was since 1961 a division of Associated Dry Goods Corporation and was acquired by May in the 1986 May/ADG merger. It consisted of 14 locations in NY. It had previously absorbed the William Hengerer Co. in Buffalo in 1981. In 1992, Sibley's, as it was informally known, was merged into Kaufmann's. After May was bought by Federated, it was announced that most Kaufmann's stores (including the former Sibley's locations) would either be converted to Macy's or sold.

The Stewart Dry Goods Co.Louisville, Kentucky, consisted of seven stores in Kentucky and Indiana. In 1985, it was merged into L. S. Ayres & Co. of Indianapolis and after the May/ADG merger in 1986, its former locations were shuttered or sold to Hess's in 1987.

Stewart & CompanyBaltimore, Maryland. ADG closed this Baltimore based division in 1982. All stores were converted into Caldor stores over an 18-month period.

Stix Baer & FullerSt. Louis and Kansas City, Missouri. In 1984, this division was sold after several years of continued losses. Dillard Department Stores acquired ADG's Stix, Baer & Fuller's 12 stores for approximately $93 million. The downtown St. Louis flagship building was operated as a Dillard's for several years, then converted into a Dillard's clearance center, and finally shuttered.

Discount and off-price chains owned by ADG edit

Loehmann's – the Bronx, New York. Loehmann's was acquired by ADG in 1983, and consisted of 81 locations in 28 states. This acquisition gave ADG a major entry in the rapidly growing off-price retailing market. After the 1986 May/ADG merger, May quickly sold the division.

CaldorNorwalk, Connecticut. Caldor, an upscale discounter, consisted of 109 stores in New England and Mid Atlantic States. After the 1986 May/ADG merger, May promptly sold the division. The chain entered bankruptcy and was liquidated in 1999.

Additional information about ADG and May Department Stores edit

See also the May Department Stores listing for very comprehensive information about May and all of May's current and former divisions. See also Federated Department Stores, Lord & Taylor, and Dillard's Department Stores

References edit

  1. ^ Milnes, Hilary (November 9, 2019). "Inside Le Tote's $100 million bet to rebuild Lord & Taylor". Vogue Business.
  2. ^ Valinsky, Jordan (August 27, 2020). "Lord & Taylor is closing all of its stores after 194 years in business". CNN Business.
  • Rizzo, Michael F., Nine Nine Eight: The Glory Days of Buffalo Shopping, 2007, (Lulu Enterprises, Inc.: Morrisville, N.C.)

External links edit

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This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message Associated Dry Goods Corporation ADG was a chain of department stores that merged with May Department Stores in 1986 It was founded in 1916 as an association of independent stores called American Dry Goods based in New York City Associated Dry Goods CorpLogo registered in 1964IndustryRetailingDefunct1986 38 years ago 1986 FateAcquisitionSuccessorThe May CompanyArea servedUnited States Contents 1 History 1 1 Major growth 2 Founding stores acquisitions chain divestitures closures and division mergers 2 1 Founding stores 2 2 Later acquisitions 2 3 Chain divestitures closures and division mergers 3 Acquisition by May Department Stores 3 1 Timeline of May Company Conversions amp Divestitures of former ADG Divisions 4 History by nameplate 4 1 Discount and off price chains owned by ADG 5 Additional information about ADG and May Department Stores 6 References 7 External linksHistory editThe chain began when Henry Siegel who had founded department store Siegel Cooper amp Co in Chicago obtained financing from Goldman Sachs for a store in New York City in the early twentieth century Though Siegel failed in his endeavor the remnants of the chain were merged with John Claflin s stores H B Claflin amp Company along with Lord amp Taylor Stewart amp Co Hengerer s and J N Adam amp Co with financing from J P Morgan amp Company to create Associated Dry Goods Other stores were spun off to Mercantile Stores Co Through the 1950s 1960s and 1970s ADG continued to expand through acquisitions In the 1970s they created a new St Petersburg Florida based department store Robinson s of Florida However ADG was most well known for its upscale New York City based Lord amp Taylor division with over 84 locations across the country Lord amp Taylor was ADG s largest and most profitable division Major growth edit In the early and mid 1980s ADG attempted to rationalize its department stores focusing on high growth areas Several of its non profitable department store chains were sold or shuttered They merged Hengerer s of Buffalo New York into Rochester based Sibley s in 1981 1983 saw the merger of Cincinnati based H amp S Pogue Co 5 locations into Indianapolis based L S Ayres Also in 1983 The Diamond division 2 locations of West Virginia was sold to Stone amp Thomas In 1984 Stix Baer amp Fuller 12 locations in St Louis Missouri was sold to Dillard Department Stores Also in 1984 the Baltimore based Stewart amp Company division was merged into its Caldor discount division The Powers Dry Goods Company 9 locations in Minneapolis Minnesota were sold to Allied Stores The Donaldson Co in 1985 In early 1986 they merged the Louisville based Stewart Dry Goods division into its Indianapolis based L S Ayres amp Co operations Founding stores acquisitions chain divestitures closures and division mergers editFounding stores edit Hahne amp Co Newark New Jersey The William Hengerer Co Buffalo New York founded 1874 J N Adam amp Co Buffalo New York founded 1881 Lord amp Taylor New York New York precursor founded in 1826 Stewart amp Co 1 Later acquisitions edit 1956 The Diamond Department Store Charleston West Virginia 1957 J W Robinson Co Los Angeles California 1957 The Sibley Lindsay amp Curr Co Rochester New York and branch stores founded in 1868 1959 The Erie Dry Goods Co Boston Store Erie Pennsylvania 1962 The H amp S Pogue Co Cincinnati Ohio 1963 Goldwater s Phoenix Arizona 1966 Stix Baer amp Fuller St Louis 1966 The Denver Dry Goods Co Denver Colorado 1970s Robinson s of Florida St Petersburg Florida 1972 L S Ayres amp Co Indianapolis Indiana 1972 Sycamore Specialty Stores a division of L S Ayres amp Co 1972 Ayr Way a division of L S Ayres amp Co 1972 Joseph Horne Co Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 1972 Stewart Dry Goods Co Louisville Kentucky 1981 Caldor Chain divestitures closures and division mergers edit Several department store divisions were divested or closed prior to the 1986 merger with May Department Stores 1981 Hengerer s of Buffalo New York was merged into the Rochester based Sibley s 1983 H amp S Pogue Co of Cincinnati was merged into the Indianapolis based L S Ayres 1983 The Diamond Charleston West Virginia was sold to Stone amp Thomas 1984 Stewart amp Company of Baltimore was merged into its Caldor discount division 1984 Stix Baer amp Fuller St Louis Missouri was sold to Dillard Department Stores 1985 The Powers Dry Goods Co Minneapolis Minnesota was sold to Allied Stores The Donaldson Co 1986 Stewart Dry Goods of Louisville was merged into the Indianapolis based L S Ayres amp Co Acquisition by May Department Stores editADG was acquired by the May Department Stores Company in October 1986 as part of a US 2 2 billion merger At the time it was considered to have been the most expensive purchase merger in retail history After 1986 May converted or merged most of the former ADG department stores into its own divisions with the exception of the upscale Lord amp Taylor which was a long time fashion leader and considered the crown jewel of Associated When the May Company acquired ADG in 1986 it was assumed that May bought ADG just for the upscale Lord amp Taylor division During the final year of retail operation ADG operated over 155 department stores in addition to Caldor a northeast upscale discount chain and Loehmann s a specialty off price retailer Timeline of May Company Conversions amp Divestitures of former ADG Divisions edit After the ADG merger the May Company either divested or merged each of the former ADG divisions into its own regional nameplates 1986 Joseph Horne Co sold to Pittsburgh investor group due to a possible anti trust suit by City of Pittsburgh 1987 Denver Dry Goods Co converted to May D amp F 1987 Robinson s of Florida sold to Maison Blanche Goudchaux Co of Baton Rouge Louisiana to be operated as Maison Blanche stores 1988 Loehmann s sold to an investor group led by Spanish concern Sefinco Ltd and the Sprout Group a division of Donaldson Lufkin amp Jenrette 1989 Goldwater s merged into J W Robinson s May Company California and May D amp F 1989 Hahne amp Co converted into Lord amp Taylor 1990 Caldor sold in leveraged buy out 1991 L S Ayres Indianapolis Indiana merged into Famous Barr but continued operating under the L S Ayres nameplate 1986 H amp S Pogue Cincinnati Ohio formerly converted in 1983 by ADG to L S Ayres sold to Hess s amp JC Penney 1987 Stewart Dry Goods Co Louisville Kentucky formerly converted in 1984 by ADG to L S Ayres sold to Hess s 1992 Sibley s converted into Kaufmann s 1992 J W Robinson s merged with May Company California to form Robinsons May Lord amp Taylor the last remaining nameplate in 2021 converted to an online only History by nameplate editThe Denver Dry Goods Company Denver Colorado was acquired by ADG in 1966 The division consisted of 12 stores in Colorado After the 1986 May ADG merger it was largely shutdown and sold off and the remaining units were absorbed by May D amp F May Daniels amp Fischer in 1987 May D amp F ended up absorbing 3 stores from The Denver Dry Goods Co In 1989 May D amp F also absorbed ADG s former Goldwater s location in Albuquerque In 1993 May D amp F was merged into May s Foley s division of Houston After May was bought by Federated it was announced that most Foley s stores including the former Denver Dry Goods May D amp F locations would either be converted to Macy s or sold The Diamond Charleston West Virginia was a small 2 store division located in West Virginia ADG sold this division in 1983 to Stone amp Thomas due to limited growth potential Goldwaters Phoenix Arizona was founded in Gila City Arizona in 1860 It moved to Phoenix in 1872 and was acquired by Associated in 1963 It consisted of 9 locations in Arizona New Mexico and Nevada The chain became a division of May as part of the May ADG merger in 1986 May dissolved the division in 1989 and split the stores into three other May divisions Eventually May D amp F May Company California and J W Robinson s absorbed various stores with the Tucson area stores being sold to Dillard s Department Stores The H amp S Pogue Co Cincinnati Ohio was acquired by Associated Dry Goods Corp in 1962 In 1984 it was merged into L S Ayres amp Co of Indianapolis After the May ADG merger its former branch locations were swiftly shuttered or sold to Hess s and JCPenney in 1987 and 1988 and the downtown flagship demolished Hahne amp Co Newark New Jersey was part of the 1916 conglomeration of American Dry Goods later renamed Associated After relocating its corporate offices from downtown Newark to a strip mall nearby to its Woodbridge N J store there had been consideration to moving to the new flagship store in the mid 1980s to the former Gimbels at Westfield Garden State Plaza but Sunday operating law in Bergen County prevented this its 9 stores were shut down by May in 1989 Most of them six were absorbed by Lord amp Taylor while the large Westfield Garden State Plaza store was bought by Nordstrom Hengerer s The William Hengerer Co Buffalo New York was founded in 1874 as Barnes Bancroft amp Co It adopted the Hengerer name in 1895 and was purchased in 1905 by J N Adam amp Co It was a division of Associated Dry Goods Corp from its inception in 1916 In 1981 ADG merged Hengerer s into Sibley Lindsay amp Curr Co of Rochester After the May ADG merger Sibley s was merged into May s Kaufmann s division in 1992 After May was bought by Federated it was announced that most Kaufmann s stores would either be converted to Macy s or sold All the former Hengerer s locations became Macy s in September 2006 Joseph Horne Co Pittsburgh Pennsylvania This was historically the carriage trade department store of Pittsburgh For several decades was in direct competition with cross town rival Kaufmann s a division of May It was acquired by Associated Dry Goods in 1972 and eventually acquired by May in October 1986 as part of the May ADG merger Due to anti trust concerns and legal action by the City of Pittsburgh it was promptly sold in December 1986 to an investor group After several years of private ownership it was announced the Dillard s would be buying the chain to combine it with the Dillard DeBartolo co owned Higbee s stores based in Cleveland However the deal collapsed and was not completed Eventually the Joseph Horne Co was sold off in parts with Dillard s acquiring its three Ohio stores in 1992 and Federated Department Stores Lazarus division acquiring its remaining ten Pennsylvania stores in 1995 Federated eventually merged all of its divisions including the former Joseph Horne Lazarus locations into Macy s J N Adam amp Co Buffalo New York was founded in 1881 It purchased Hengerer s in 1905 and later that same year both were sold to H B Claflin amp Co They later became United Dry Goods Companies It was a division of Associated Dry Goods Corp from its inception in 1916 The chain closed in 1960 L S Ayres amp Co Indianapolis Indiana was acquired by Associated Dry Goods Corp in 1972 L S Ayres amp Co absorbed Pogue s of Cincinnati in 1984 and Stewart s of Louisville in 1985 Upon completion of these mergers L S Ayres amp Co consisted of 25 stores in Indiana Ohio and Kentucky After the 1986 May ADG merger the under performing locations of both former chains were swiftly divested by May in 1987 and 1988 L S Ayres amp Co was shortened to L S Ayres and was operationally consolidated with Famous Barr in 1991 but continuing to operate under the L S Ayres moniker when its downtown Indianapolis flagship and three other under performing stores were closed After May was bought by Federated it was announced that most Famous Barr L S Ayres stores would either be converted to Macy s or sold Lord amp Taylor New York New York was founded in 1826 The chain was a founding member of the Associated Dry Goods Corp organization then American Dry Goods in 1916 It became part of May in the 1986 May ADG merger While a part of Associated and under the leadership of CEO Joseph E Brooks during the 1970s the chain aggressively expanded into Texas Illinois and Michigan In the early 1980s South Florida saw 11 stores opened in quick succession They partially withdrew from the oil shocked Texas and southern Florida markets in 1989 1990 after the 1986 May ADG merger After May assumed ownership ADG s Hahne s division several New Jersey locations and several former John Wanamaker Philadelphia locations were combined under the Lord amp Taylor name plate From 1997 to 2006 Lord amp Taylor occupied the former Wanamaker s landmark store in downtown Philadelphia During the 1990s and early 2000s May took the chain national Under the leadership of CEO Marshall Hilsberg Lord amp Taylor entered expansion mode opening stores as far west as Las Vegas Nevada At its then peak Lord amp Taylor operated as many as 86 stores across the country May was purchased by Federated Department Stores in June 2005 Terry Lundgren Federated s chairman president and chief executive officer announced on January 12 2006 that Federated Department Stores would be selling the Lord amp Taylor chain by the end of the year On June 22 2006 it was announced that NRDC Equity Partners LLC would purchase Lord amp Taylor for 1 2 billion 1 75 billion in 2023 The sale that was completed four months later in October 2006 After its 2008 purchase of the Canadian department store retailer Hudson s Bay Company NRDC has stated that it plans to open stores internationally In 2019 clothing rental firm Le Tote purchased the Lord amp Taylor chain 1 On August 27 2020 it was announced that Lord amp Taylor will be going out of business after a bankruptcy filing on August 2 2 six years shy of its 200th anniversary The Powers Dry Goods Co Minneapolis Minnesota consisted of 7 locations In 1985 it was acquired by The Donaldson Company of Minneapolis a unit of Allied Stores Corp which gave Donaldson s some breathing room against dominant rival Dayton s In 1987 after Campeau Corp s buy out of Allied Stores Corp Donaldson s was purchased by Carson Pirie Scott amp Co of Chicago which renamed its stores with its own imprimatur Carson s in turn was acquired by P A Bergner amp Co of Milwaukee and formerly of Peoria Illinois in 1989 They filed for bankruptcy in 1991 In 1995 Carson s sold the Minneapolis locations formerly Powers Donaldsons to Dayton s parent Dayton Hudson Corp Many of which re opened under its moderate Mervyn s chain This was mostly in a move to prevent serious competition in its Twin Cities stronghold In 2004 when Dayton s successor Marshall Field s was acquired by May it also agreed to buy the former Donaldson Powers locations which Mervyn s promptly shuttered and left May responsible for disposing of the real estate J W Robinson s Los Angeles California was a division of Associated Dry Goods since 1957 and consisted of 21 locations in California J W Robinson s was acquired by May in the October 1986 May ADG merger It was historically a carriage trade department store and operated in tandem with May s own middle tier May Company California division for several years In 1989 it took over operation of the Goldwaters stores in Phoenix Arizona In 1992 as part of divisional consolidations by the May Company the J W Robinson Co division was merged with the May Company California division to form a single Los Angeles based division to be called Robinsons May After May was bought by Federated it was announced that most Robinsons May stores would either be converted to Macy s or sold Robinson s of Florida St Petersburg Florida was a division of Associated Dry Goods when acquired by May in 1986 It had been founded in the 1970s as an attempt by ADG to emulate the success of its upscale J W Robinson s stores of Los Angeles on the fast growing Florida Gulf Coast Rather than invest in the then stagnant Florida market May sold the division in 1987 seven stores to Maison Blanche Gouchaux Co of Baton Rouge Louisiana to be operated as Maison Blanche stores The bulk of the former Robinsons of Florida locations were subsequently sold by Maison Blanche to Dillard Department Stores in 1991 The Sibley Lindsay amp Curr Co Rochester New York and Syracuse New York founded in 1868 was since 1961 a division of Associated Dry Goods Corporation and was acquired by May in the 1986 May ADG merger It consisted of 14 locations in NY It had previously absorbed the William Hengerer Co in Buffalo in 1981 In 1992 Sibley s as it was informally known was merged into Kaufmann s After May was bought by Federated it was announced that most Kaufmann s stores including the former Sibley s locations would either be converted to Macy s or sold The Stewart Dry Goods Co Louisville Kentucky consisted of seven stores in Kentucky and Indiana In 1985 it was merged into L S Ayres amp Co of Indianapolis and after the May ADG merger in 1986 its former locations were shuttered or sold to Hess s in 1987 Stewart amp Company Baltimore Maryland ADG closed this Baltimore based division in 1982 All stores were converted into Caldor stores over an 18 month period Stix Baer amp Fuller St Louis and Kansas City Missouri In 1984 this division was sold after several years of continued losses Dillard Department Stores acquired ADG s Stix Baer amp Fuller s 12 stores for approximately 93 million The downtown St Louis flagship building was operated as a Dillard s for several years then converted into a Dillard s clearance center and finally shuttered Discount and off price chains owned by ADG edit Loehmann s the Bronx New York Loehmann s was acquired by ADG in 1983 and consisted of 81 locations in 28 states This acquisition gave ADG a major entry in the rapidly growing off price retailing market After the 1986 May ADG merger May quickly sold the division Caldor Norwalk Connecticut Caldor an upscale discounter consisted of 109 stores in New England and Mid Atlantic States After the 1986 May ADG merger May promptly sold the division The chain entered bankruptcy and was liquidated in 1999 Additional information about ADG and May Department Stores editSee also the May Department Stores listing for very comprehensive information about May and all of May s current and former divisions See also Federated Department Stores Lord amp Taylor and Dillard s Department StoresReferences edit Milnes Hilary November 9 2019 Inside Le Tote s 100 million bet to rebuild Lord amp Taylor Vogue Business Valinsky Jordan August 27 2020 Lord amp Taylor is closing all of its stores after 194 years in business CNN Business Rizzo Michael F Nine Nine Eight The Glory Days of Buffalo Shopping 2007 Lulu Enterprises Inc Morrisville N C External links editMERCANTILE S HISTORY Buying up small chains was key Tuesday May 19 1998 BY LISA BIANK FASIG The Cincinnati Enquirer dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Associated Dry Goods amp oldid 1194958667, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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