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Burdines

Burdines (English: /bɜːrˈdnz/} bur-DYNZE) was an American chain of department stores operating in the state of Florida, headquartered in Miami. The original store opened in Bartow, Florida in 1896[1] as a carriage-trade shop. Over its nearly 110-year history, Burdines grew into a popular chain of department stores, known as 'The Florida Store,' decorated with palm trees in the center of the store, painted in pink and blue, and other subtropical colors and motifs. In 1956, the stores became a part of Federated Department Stores, Inc. (now Macy's, Inc.) On January 30, 2004, it was renamed Burdines-Macy's, and a year later, on March 6, 2005, the name Burdines was dropped altogether. The majority of the stores were rebranded as Macy's while a handful closed.

Burdines
Company typeDepartment store
IndustryRetail
Founded1896; 128 years ago (1896)
Defunct2005; 19 years ago (2005) (renamed to Macy's)
FateConsolidated into Macy's
HeadquartersDowntown, Miami, Florida
ProductsClothing, footwear, bedding, furniture, jewelry, beauty products, and housewares.
ParentFederated Department Stores, Inc.

History edit

 
The historic Burdines Building in Downtown Miami. This was Burdines' flagship store and one of Macy's primary stores until its closure.[2]

Beginning edit

In 1897, Henry Payne and William M. Burdine opened a dry goods store in the central Florida city of Bartow.[1] A year later, Payne left the company, and Burdine brought in his son, John, as a partner, resulting in the company's name change to W.M. Burdine and Son. In 1898, Burdine bought a block on South Miami Avenue, one block south of Flagler Street,[1] in the then-fledgling community of Miami. That year he opened the first W.M. Burdine & Son store at the location, just two years after the first people had arrived in the area from the newly completed Florida East Coast Railway to incorporate the city. His tiny store held only a few shelves of clothing, which were primarily sold to construction workers, soldiers from the Spanish–American War, and the local Miccosukee and Seminole Native Americans. Burdine was amazed with the business that he did in Miami and decided to close his store in Bartow and move his operations base to Miami, changing the business name to Burdines and Sons.[1]

William died in 1911, and his other son, Roddy, took over the chain. By then,[3] Burdines had grown into a full-fledged department store and continued expanding. The land-boom of the 1920s helped the store launch its first branch in Miami Beach. As Florida's population soared, so did the growth of Burdines. Over the next thirty years, four other branches opened across the state of Florida.

In the late 1940s, Burdines opened an international mail order program that served Latin America. This resulted in a rise of popularity for the company, and military personnel stationed in Cuba would send a supply ship to Miami every 6 months with orders for Burdines.

 
Burdine family mausoleum in the Miami City Cemetery

1956–1996 edit

In 1956, Burdines merged with Federated Department Stores, Inc. The financial support given by Federated allowed Burdines to push north and westward in the 1970s and 1980s. Beginning in 1966 they opened stores in

In 1971, the Burdines store in Dadeland Mall became the largest suburban department store south of New York. Burdines also piloted auto centers, beginning in 1960, at their 163rd St location and the Miami warehouse, after testing it in Fort Lauderdale.

In 1991, following the 1988 merger of Federated with the Allied Stores Corporation and subsequent bankruptcy reorganization, Burdines absorbed Allied's Tampa-based Maas Brothers/Jordan Marsh Florida division, converting many of the stores to Burdines and closing the rest. The conversion resulted in there being fifty-eight Burdines stores in the state of Florida, more than twice their initial store count of 27.

During the 1990s, stores opened at Pembroke Lakes Mall in Pembroke Pines in the Miami Metropolitan Area, Brandon Town Center in Brandon in the Tampa Bay Area, and Seminole Towne Center in Sanford in the Orlando Metropolitan Area.

1999–2001 edit

From 1999 to 2001, Burdines experienced major growth, expanding into seven new locations and significantly renovating their existing stores with a lighter color palette and an upgraded decor. The most publicly anticipated stores that opened during this period were those located in expansions of The Florida Mall in Orlando and Aventura Mall in Aventura, while other stores opened with new shopping malls such as Citrus Park Town Center in Citrus Park and The Mall at Wellington Green in Wellington.

During this period, Burdines also tried another new layout at their store in St. Petersburg's Tyrone Square Mall, in an attempt to improve convenience for shoppers. The store upgraded to use a central checkout system and was expected to be more popular among shoppers since they would only need to see a cashier once before leaving. However, the design failed as an employee had to manually apply a coded sticker (identifying who made the sale) to the price tag of each item before customers left the store. Thus, this convenience plan was quickly abandoned by Burdines, and the company resumed using traditional cashier layouts.

The former flagship store in Miami, built in stages from the 1910s through the 1930s, continued to operate as a Macy's until it was closed in March 2018.[4] Ross Stores leased the building in 2019, and are redeveloping it to relocate a nearby store whose building was set to be demolished in favor of a 92-story skyscraper. The redevelopment will permit a second store to be located on the first floor of the building.[5] The new store will open on March 7, 2020.[6]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d (PDF). Polk County Historical Association. June 1996. pp. 1–3. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 27, 2011. Retrieved September 26, 2010.
  2. ^ "Bringing back the Downtown Miami Burdines". September 11, 2012.
  3. ^ "History of Burdines stores chronicled in new book". tribunedigital-sunsentinel. Retrieved December 21, 2015.
  4. ^ Cohen, Travis (January 8, 2018). ""It Was the Store of Stores": The Importance of Miami's Burdines Flagship". Miami New Times. Retrieved February 19, 2020.
  5. ^ "ROSS DRESS FOR LESS SIGNS LEASE TO OPEN AT DOWNTOWN MIAMI'S HISTORIC BURDINES BUILDING, GETS CONSTRUCTION PERMIT". The Next Miami. October 10, 2019. Retrieved February 19, 2020.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ This is according to the Store Locator at the Ross Stores website

External links edit

  • Downtown Miami Burdines history
  • Article on Burdines and other department stores that are defunct and why.
  • Old news on Burdines layoffs during Campeau acquisition of 1987.
Records
Preceded by
N/A
Tallest building in Miami
1912–1917
Succeeded by

burdines, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, january, 2020, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, english. 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 January 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Burdines English b ɜːr ˈ d aɪ n z bur DYNZE was an American chain of department stores operating in the state of Florida headquartered in Miami The original store opened in Bartow Florida in 1896 1 as a carriage trade shop Over its nearly 110 year history Burdines grew into a popular chain of department stores known as The Florida Store decorated with palm trees in the center of the store painted in pink and blue and other subtropical colors and motifs In 1956 the stores became a part of Federated Department Stores Inc now Macy s Inc On January 30 2004 it was renamed Burdines Macy s and a year later on March 6 2005 the name Burdines was dropped altogether The majority of the stores were rebranded as Macy s while a handful closed BurdinesCompany typeDepartment storeIndustryRetailFounded1896 128 years ago 1896 Defunct2005 19 years ago 2005 renamed to Macy s FateConsolidated into Macy sHeadquartersDowntown Miami FloridaProductsClothing footwear bedding furniture jewelry beauty products and housewares ParentFederated Department Stores Inc Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginning 1 2 1956 1996 1 3 1999 2001 2 See also 3 References 4 External linksHistory edit nbsp The historic Burdines Building in Downtown Miami This was Burdines flagship store and one of Macy s primary stores until its closure 2 Beginning edit In 1897 Henry Payne and William M Burdine opened a dry goods store in the central Florida city of Bartow 1 A year later Payne left the company and Burdine brought in his son John as a partner resulting in the company s name change to W M Burdine and Son In 1898 Burdine bought a block on South Miami Avenue one block south of Flagler Street 1 in the then fledgling community of Miami That year he opened the first W M Burdine amp Son store at the location just two years after the first people had arrived in the area from the newly completed Florida East Coast Railway to incorporate the city His tiny store held only a few shelves of clothing which were primarily sold to construction workers soldiers from the Spanish American War and the local Miccosukee and Seminole Native Americans Burdine was amazed with the business that he did in Miami and decided to close his store in Bartow and move his operations base to Miami changing the business name to Burdines and Sons 1 William died in 1911 and his other son Roddy took over the chain By then 3 Burdines had grown into a full fledged department store and continued expanding The land boom of the 1920s helped the store launch its first branch in Miami Beach As Florida s population soared so did the growth of Burdines Over the next thirty years four other branches opened across the state of Florida In the late 1940s Burdines opened an international mail order program that served Latin America This resulted in a rise of popularity for the company and military personnel stationed in Cuba would send a supply ship to Miami every 6 months with orders for Burdines nbsp Burdine family mausoleum in the Miami City Cemetery1956 1996 edit In 1956 Burdines merged with Federated Department Stores Inc The financial support given by Federated allowed Burdines to push north and westward in the 1970s and 1980s Beginning in 1966 they opened stores in Hialeah at Westland Mall Pompano Beach HollywoodOrlando at Orlando Fashion Square Altamonte Springs Clearwater at Clearwater Mall Sarasota at Southgate Mall Fort Lauderdale Clearance Center Plantation at Broward Mall Boca Raton South Dade Clearance Center Fort Myers at Edison Mall West Palm Beach at Palm Beach Shopping Center St Petersburg Cutler Ridge Fort Lauderdale at The Galleria at Fort Lauderdale 1981 Daytona Beach Lakeland at Lakeland Square Mall Doral at Miami International Mall Melbourne at Melbourne Square Mall Tampa at Tampa Bay Center and University Square Coconut Grove at Mayfair Shops 1984 1991 Coral Springs at Coral Square Mall Boynton Beach Palm Beach GardensIn 1971 the Burdines store in Dadeland Mall became the largest suburban department store south of New York Burdines also piloted auto centers beginning in 1960 at their 163rd St location and the Miami warehouse after testing it in Fort Lauderdale In 1991 following the 1988 merger of Federated with the Allied Stores Corporation and subsequent bankruptcy reorganization Burdines absorbed Allied s Tampa based Maas Brothers Jordan Marsh Florida division converting many of the stores to Burdines and closing the rest The conversion resulted in there being fifty eight Burdines stores in the state of Florida more than twice their initial store count of 27 During the 1990s stores opened at Pembroke Lakes Mall in Pembroke Pines in the Miami Metropolitan Area Brandon Town Center in Brandon in the Tampa Bay Area and Seminole Towne Center in Sanford in the Orlando Metropolitan Area 1999 2001 edit From 1999 to 2001 Burdines experienced major growth expanding into seven new locations and significantly renovating their existing stores with a lighter color palette and an upgraded decor The most publicly anticipated stores that opened during this period were those located in expansions of The Florida Mall in Orlando and Aventura Mall in Aventura while other stores opened with new shopping malls such as Citrus Park Town Center in Citrus Park and The Mall at Wellington Green in Wellington During this period Burdines also tried another new layout at their store in St Petersburg s Tyrone Square Mall in an attempt to improve convenience for shoppers The store upgraded to use a central checkout system and was expected to be more popular among shoppers since they would only need to see a cashier once before leaving However the design failed as an employee had to manually apply a coded sticker identifying who made the sale to the price tag of each item before customers left the store Thus this convenience plan was quickly abandoned by Burdines and the company resumed using traditional cashier layouts The former flagship store in Miami built in stages from the 1910s through the 1930s continued to operate as a Macy s until it was closed in March 2018 4 Ross Stores leased the building in 2019 and are redeveloping it to relocate a nearby store whose building was set to be demolished in favor of a 92 story skyscraper The redevelopment will permit a second store to be located on the first floor of the building 5 The new store will open on March 7 2020 6 See also editList of defunct department stores of the United StatesReferences edit a b c d History of Burdines PDF Polk County Historical Association June 1996 pp 1 3 Archived from the original PDF on July 27 2011 Retrieved September 26 2010 Bringing back the Downtown Miami Burdines September 11 2012 History of Burdines stores chronicled in new book tribunedigital sunsentinel Retrieved December 21 2015 Cohen Travis January 8 2018 It Was the Store of Stores The Importance of Miami s Burdines Flagship Miami New Times Retrieved February 19 2020 ROSS DRESS FOR LESS SIGNS LEASE TO OPEN AT DOWNTOWN MIAMI S HISTORIC BURDINES BUILDING GETS CONSTRUCTION PERMIT The Next Miami October 10 2019 Retrieved February 19 2020 permanent dead link This is according to the Store Locator at the Ross Stores websiteExternal links editDowntown Miami Burdines history History of Federated Department Stores including Burdines Article on Burdines and other department stores that are defunct and why Article on the newer style of Burdines stores Old news on Burdines layoffs during Campeau acquisition of 1987 RecordsPreceded byN A Tallest building in Miami1912 1917 Succeeded byRalston Building Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Burdines amp oldid 1190610310, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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