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Department store

A department store is a retail establishment offering a wide range of consumer goods in different areas of the store, each area ("department") specializing in a product category. In modern major cities, the department store made a dramatic appearance in the middle of the 19th century, and permanently reshaped shopping habits, and the definition of service and luxury. Similar developments were under way in London (with Whiteleys), in Paris (Le Bon Marché) and in New York (Stewart's).[1]

Interior of Le Bon Marché in Paris

Today, departments often include the following: clothing, cosmetics, do it yourself, furniture, gardening, hardware, home appliances, houseware, paint, sporting goods, toiletries, and toys. Additionally, other lines of products such as food, books, jewellery, electronics, stationery, photographic equipment, baby products, and products for pets are sometimes included. Customers generally check out near the front of the store in discount department stores, while high-end traditional department stores include sales counters within each department. Some stores are one of many within a larger retail chain, while others are independent retailers.

Since the 1980s, they have come under heavy pressure from discounters, and have come under even heavier pressure from e-commerce sites since the 2000s.

Types

 
Sokos department store building in Multimäki, Kuopio, Finland

Department stores can be classified in several ways:

Some sources may refer to the following types of stores as department stores, even they are not generally considered as such:

History

Origins in England, 1700s

One of the first department stores may have been Bennett's in Derby, first established as an ironmonger (hardware shop) in 1734.[7] It still stands to this day, trading in the same building. However, the first reliably dated department store to be established, was Harding, Howell & Co., which opened in 1796 on Pall Mall, London.[8] (The oldest department store chain may be Debenhams, which was established in 1778 and closed in 2021. It is the longest trading defunct British retailer.) An observer writing in Ackermann's Repository, a British periodical on contemporary taste and fashion, described the enterprise in 1809 as follows:

The house is one hundred and fifty feet in length from front to back, and of proportionate width. It is fitted up with great taste, and is divided by glazed partitions into four departments, for the various branches of the extensive business, which is there carried on. Immediately at the entrance is the first department, which is exclusively appropriated to the sale of furs and fans. The second contains articles of haberdashery of every description, silks, muslins, lace, gloves, &etc. In the third shop, on the right, you meet with a rich assortment of jewelry, ornamental articles in ormolu, French clocks, &etc.; and on the left, with all the different kinds of perfumery necessary for the toilette. The fourth is set apart for millinery and dresses; so that there is no article of female attire or decoration, but what may be here procured in the first style of elegance and fashion. This concern has been conducted for the last twelve years by the present proprietors who have spared neither trouble nor expense to ensure the establishment of a superiority over every other in Europe, and to render it perfectly unique in its kind.[9]

This venture is described as having all of the basic characteristics of the department store; it was a public retail establishment offering a wide range of consumer goods in different departments. Jonathan Glancey for the BBC writes:

Harding, Howell & Co was focused on the needs and desires of fashionable women. Here, at last women were free to browse and shop, safely and decorously, away from home and from the company of men. These, for the main part, were newly affluent middle class women, their good fortune – and the department store itself – nurtured and shaped by the Industrial Revolution. This was transforming life in London and the length and breadth of Britain at a dizzying pace on the back of energetic free trade, fecund invention, steam and sail, and a seemingly inexhaustible supply of expendable cheap labour.[10]

This pioneering shop was closed down in 1820 when the business partnership was dissolved. All the major high streets in British cities had flourishing department stores by the mid-or late nineteenth century. Increasingly, women became the main customers.[11] Kendals (formerly Kendal Milne & Faulkner) in Manchester lays claim to being one of the first department stores and is still known to many of its customers as Kendal's, despite its 2005 name change to House of Fraser. The Manchester institution dates back to 1836 but had been trading as Watts Bazaar since 1796.[12] At its zenith the store had buildings on both sides of Deansgate linked by a subterranean passage "Kendals Arcade" and an art nouveau tiled food hall. The store was especially known for its emphasis on quality and style over low prices giving it the nickname "the Harrods of the North", although this was due in part to Harrods acquiring the store in 1919. Harrods of London can be traced back to 1834, though the current store was built between 1894 and 1905. Liberty & Co. gained popularity in the 1870s for selling Oriental goods.[13] In 1889 Oscar Wilde wrote "Liberty's is the chosen resort of the artistic shopper".[14]

Origins in Parisian magasins de nouveautés

 
Au Bon Marché

The Paris department stores have roots in the magasin de nouveautés, or novelty store; the first, the Tapis Rouge, was created in 1784.[15] They flourished in the early 19th century. Balzac described their functioning in his novel César Birotteau. In the 1840s, with the arrival of the railroads in Paris and the increased number of shoppers they brought, they grew in size, and began to have large plate glass display windows, fixed prices and price tags, and advertising in newspapers.[16]

A novelty shop called Au Bon Marché had been founded in Paris in 1838 to sell items like lace, ribbons, sheets, mattresses, buttons, and umbrellas. It grew from 300 m2 (3,200 sq ft) and 12 employees in 1838 to 50,000 m2 (540,000 sq ft) and 1,788 employees in 1879. Boucicaut was famous for his marketing innovations; a reading room for husbands while their wives shopped; extensive newspaper advertising; entertainment for children; and six million catalogs sent out to customers. By 1880 half the employees were women; unmarried women employees lived in dormitories on the upper floors.[17]

Au Bon Marché soon had half a dozen or more competitors including Printemps, founded in 1865; La Samaritaine (1869), Bazaar de Hotel de Ville (BHV); and Galeries Lafayette (1895).[16][18] The French gloried in the national prestige brought by the great Parisian stores.[19] The great writer Émile Zola (1840–1902) set his novel Au Bonheur des Dames (1882–83) in the typical department store, making it a symbol of the new technology that was both improving society and devouring it.[20]

First Australian department stores

Australia is notable for having the longest continuously operating department store, David Jones.[21][22] The first David Jones department store was opened on 24 May 1838, by Welsh born immigrant David Jones in a “large and commodious premises” on the corner of George and Barrack Streets in Sydney, NSW, only 50 years after the foundation of the colony. Expanding to a number of stores in the various states of Australia, David Jones is the oldest continuously operating department franchise in the world.[21] Other department stores in Australia include Grace Brothers founded in 1885, now merged with Myer which was founded in 1900.[23]

First American department stores (1825–1858)

Arnold Constable was the first American department store. It was founded in 1825 as a small dry goods store on Pine Street in New York City. In 1857 the store moved into a five-story white marble dry goods palace known as the Marble House. During the Civil War, Arnold Constable was one of the first stores to issue charge bills of credit to its customers each month instead of on a bi-annual basis. The store soon outgrew the Marble House and erected a cast-iron building on Broadway and Nineteenth Street in 1869; this "Palace of Trade" expanded over the years until it was necessary to move into a larger space in 1914. Financial problems led to bankruptcy in 1975.[24]

In New York City in 1846, Alexander Turney Stewart established the "Marble Palace" on Broadway, between Chambers and Reade streets. He offered European retail merchandise at fixed prices on a variety of dry goods, and advertised a policy of providing "free entrance" to all potential customers. Though it was clad in white marble to look like a Renaissance palazzo, the building's cast iron construction permitted large plate glass windows that permitted major seasonal displays, especially in the Christmas shopping season. In 1862, Stewart built a new store on a full city block uptown between 9th and 10th streets, with eight floors. His innovations included buying from manufacturers for cash and in large quantities, keeping his markup small and prices low, truthful presentation of merchandise, the one-price policy (so there was no haggling), simple merchandise returns and cash refund policy, selling for cash and not credit, buyers who searched worldwide for quality merchandise, departmentalization, vertical and horizontal integration, volume sales, and free services for customers such as waiting rooms and free delivery of purchases.[25] In 1858, Rowland Hussey Macy founded Macy's as a dry goods store.

Innovations 1850–1917

 
Marshall Field's State Street store "great hall" interior around 1910

Marshall Field & Company originated in 1852. It was the premier department store on the busiest shopping street in the Midwest at the time, State Street in Chicago.[26] Marshall Field's served as a model for other department stores in that it had exceptional customer service.[citation needed] Marshall Field's also had the firsts; among many innovations by Marshall Field's were the first European buying office, which was located in Manchester, England, and the first bridal registry. The company was the first to introduce the concept of the personal shopper, and that service was provided without charge in every Field's store, until the chain's last days under the Marshall Field's name. It was the first store to offer revolving credit and the first department store to use escalators.[citation needed] Marshall Field's book department in the State Street store was legendary;[citation needed] it pioneered the concept of the "book signing". Moreover, every year at Christmas, Marshall Field's downtown store windows were filled with animated displays as part of the downtown shopping district display; the "theme" window displays became famous for their ingenuity and beauty, and visiting the Marshall Field's windows at Christmas became a tradition for Chicagoans and visitors alike, as popular a local practice as visiting the Walnut Room with its equally famous Christmas tree or meeting "under the clock" on State Street.[27]

In 1877, John Wanamaker opened what some claim was the United States' first "modern" department store in Philadelphia: the first to offer fixed prices marked on every article and also introduced electrical illumination (1878), the telephone (1879), and the use of pneumatic tubes to transport cash and documents (1880) to the department store business.[28]

 
Aerial view of Anthony Hordern & Sons in Sydney, Australia (1936), once the largest department store in the world.

Another store to revolutionize the concept of the department store was Selfridges in London, established in 1909 by American-born Harry Gordon Selfridge on Oxford Street. The company's innovative marketing promoted the radical notion of shopping for pleasure rather than necessity and its techniques were adopted by modern department stores the world over. The store was extensively promoted through paid advertising. The shop floors were structured so that goods could be made more accessible to customers. There were elegant restaurants with modest prices, a library, reading and writing rooms, special reception rooms for French, German, American and "Colonial" customers, a First Aid Room, and a Silence Room, with soft lights, deep chairs, and double-glazing, all intended to keep customers in the store as long as possible. Staff members were taught to be on hand to assist customers, but not too aggressively, and to sell the merchandise.[29] Selfridge attracted shoppers with educational and scientific exhibits; in 1909, Louis Blériot's monoplane was exhibited at Selfridges (Blériot was the first to fly over the English Channel), and the first public demonstration of television by John Logie Baird took place in the department store in 1925.

 
Utagawa Hiroshige designed an ukiyo-e print with Mount Fuji and Echigoya as landmarks. Echigoya is the former name of Mitsukoshi named after the former province of Echigo. The Mitsukoshi headquarters are located on the left side of the street.

In Japan, the first "modern-style" department store was Mitsukoshi, founded in 1904, which has its root as a kimono store called Echigoya from 1673. When the roots are considered, however, Matsuzakaya has an even longer history, dated from 1611. The kimono store changed to a department store in 1910. In 1924, Matsuzakaya store in Ginza allowed street shoes to be worn indoors, something innovative at the time.[30] These former kimono shop department stores dominated the market in its earlier history. They sold, or instead displayed, luxurious products, which contributed to their sophisticated atmospheres. Another origin of the Japanese department store is from railway companies. There have been many private railway operators in the nation and, from the 1920s, they started to build department stores directly linked to their lines' termini. Seibu and Hankyu are typical examples of this type.

Innovation (1917–1945)

In the middle of the 1920s, American management theories such as the scientific management of F.W. Taylor started spreading in Europe. The International Management Institute (I.M.I.) was established in Geneva in 1927 to facilitate the diffusion of such ideas. A number of department stores teamed up together to create the International Association of Department Stores in Paris in 1928 to have a discussion space dedicated to this retail format.

Expansion to malls

The U.S. Baby boom led to the development of suburban neighborhoods and suburban commercial developments, including shopping malls. Department stores joined these ventures following the growing market of baby boomer spending.

Expansion worldwide

Current situation

Around the world

See also

References

  1. ^ Gunther Barth, "The Department Store," in City People: The Rise of Modern City Culture in Nineteenth-Century America. (Oxford University Press, 1980) pp 110–47,
  2. ^ "Off Price Is The New Black For Retailers". Investor's Business Daily. 8 September 2015.
  3. ^ McKeever, James Ross (1977). Shopping Center Development Handbook. University of Michigan. p. 81. ISBN 9780874205763. Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  4. ^ Moriarty, John Jr. (12 July 1981). "Change in Philosophy, Direction Is Behind McCain's Move to Mall". The Post-Crescent (Appleton, Wisconsin). Retrieved 2 July 2020.
  5. ^ "Off Price Is The New Black For Retailers". finance.yahoo.com. Retrieved 29 August 2021.
  6. ^ "Hypermarket", Investopedia
  7. ^ Natalie Loughenbury (6 January 2010). "Bennetts Irongate, Derby Celebrates Its 275th Anniversary". Derbyshire Life. Bennets. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  8. ^ "Regency England shopping arcades exchanges and bazaars". hibiscus-sinensis.com.
  9. ^ Ackermann, Rudolph (3 August 1809). "The Repository of arts, literature, commerce, manufactures, fashions and politics". London : Published by R. Ackermann ... Sherwood & Co. and Walker & Co. ... and Simpkin & Marshall ... – via Internet Archive.
  10. ^ "A history of the department store". BBC Culture. Retrieved 15 September 2019.
  11. ^ Alison Adburgham, Shops and Shopping, 1880–1914: Where and in What Matter the Well-Dressed Englishwoman Bought Her Clothes (2nd ed. 1981)
  12. ^ Parkinson-Bailey, John (2000). Manchester an architectural history. Manchester: Manchester University Press. pp. 80–81. ISBN 0-7190-5606-3.
  13. ^ Iarocci, L., Visual Merchandising: The Image of Selling, Ashgate Publishing, 2013, p. 128
  14. ^ Wilde, Oscar (1889). The Woman's World ..., Volume 2. Cassell and Company. p. 6.
  15. ^ "Discovery, Invention and Innovation", Informational Society, Springer US, 1993, pp. 1–31, doi:10.1007/978-0-585-32028-1_1, ISBN 9780792393030
  16. ^ a b Fierro, Alfred (1996). Histoire et Dictionnaire de Paris. pp. 911–912.
  17. ^ Jan Whitaker (2011). The World of Department Stores. New York: Vendome Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-86565-264-4.
  18. ^ Miller, Michael B. (1981). The Bon Marché: Bourgeois Culture and the Department Store, 1869–1920. London: Allen & Unwin. ISBN 0-04-330316-1.
  19. ^ Homburg, Heidrun (1992). "Warenhausunternehmen und ihre Gründer in Frankreich und Deutschland Oder: Eine Diskrete Elite und Mancherlei Mythen" [Department store firms and their founders in France and Germany, or: a discreet elite and various myths]. Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte. 33 (1): 183–219. doi:10.1524/jbwg.1992.33.1.185. S2CID 201653161.
  20. ^ Amelinckx, Frans C. (1995). "The Creation of Consumer Society in Zola's Ladies' Paradise". Proceedings of the Western Society for French History. 22: 17–21.
  21. ^ a b Ravelli, Louise (April 2022). "Ode to a lost icon, David Jones". Discourse & Communication. 16 (2): 269–282. doi:10.1177/17504813211073195. ISSN 1750-4813. S2CID 246463089.
  22. ^ Walsh, G. P., "Jones, David (1793–1873)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 19 December 2022
  23. ^ Loy-Wilson, Sophie (January 2016). "The Gospel of Enthusiasm: Salesmanship, Religion and Colonialism in Australian Department Stores in the 1920s and 1930s". Journal of Contemporary History. 51 (1): 91–123. doi:10.1177/0022009414561826. ISSN 0022-0094. S2CID 145570190.
  24. ^ "The Arnold Constable & Company Buildings" May 16, 2013 13 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ Resseguie, Harry E. (1965). "Alexander Turney Stewart and the Development of the Department Store, 1823–1876". The Business History Review. 39 (3): 301–322. doi:10.2307/3112143. JSTOR 3112143. S2CID 154704872.
  26. ^ Lloyd Wendt and Herman Kogan, Give the Lady What She Wants: The Story of Marshall Field & Company (1952)
  27. ^ Wendt and Kogan, Give the Lady What She Wants: The Story of Marshall Field & Company (1952)
  28. ^ Robert Sobel, The Entrepreneurs: Explorations Within the American Business Tradition (1974), chapter 3, "John Wanamaker: The Triumph of Content Over Form"
  29. ^ J.A. Gere and John Sparrow (ed.), Geoffrey Madan's Notebooks, Oxford University Press, 1981
  30. ^ Matsuzakaya corporate history

Further reading

  • Abelson, Elaine S. When Ladies Go A-Thieving: Middle Class Shoplifters in the Victorian Department Store. New York: Oxford University Press, 1989.
  • Adams, Samuel Hopkins (January 1897). "The Department Store". Scribner's Magazine. XXI (1): 4–28. Retrieved 23 August 2009.
  • Barth, Gunther. "The Department Store," in City People: The Rise of Modern City Culture in Nineteenth-Century America. (Oxford University Press, 1980) pp 110–47, compares major countries in the 19th century.
  • Benson, Susan Porter. Counter Culture: Saleswomen, Managers and Customers in American Department Stores, 1890–1940. (University of Illinois Press, 1988) ISBN 0-252-06013-X.
  • Elias, Stephen N. Alexander T. Stewart: The Forgotten Merchant Prince (1992) online
  • Ershkowicz, Herbert. John Wanamaker, Philadelphia Merchant. New York: DaCapo Press, 1999.
  • Gibbons, Herbert Adams. John Wanamaker. New York: Harper & Row, 1926.
  • Hendrickson, Robert. The Grand Emporiums: The Illustrated History of America's Great Department Stores. (Stein and Day, 1979).
  • Leach, William. Land of Desire: Merchants, Power, and the Rise of a New American Culture. (Pantheon, 1993. ISBN 0-679-75411-3).
  • Parker, K. (2003). "Sign Consumption in the 19th-Century Department Store: An Examination of Visual Merchandising in the Grand Emporiums (1846–1900)." Journal of Sociology 39 (4): 353–371.
  • Parker, Traci. Department Stores and the Black Freedom Movement: Workers, Consumers, and Civil Rights from the 1930s to the 1980s. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2019.
  • Schlereth, Thomas J. Victorian America: Transformations in Everyday Life, 1876–1915. (HarperCollins, 1991).
  • Sobel, Robert. "John Wanamaker: The Triumph of Content Over Form," in The Entrepreneurs: Explorations Within the American Business Tradition (Weybright & Talley, 1974. ISBN 0-679-40064-8).
  • Spang, Rebecca L. The Invention of the Restaurant: Paris and Modern Gastronomic Culture. (Harvard UP, 2000). 325 p.
  • Tiersten, Lisa. Marianne in the Market: Envisioning Consumer Society in Fin-de-Siècle France (2001) online
  • Whitaker, Jan Service and Style: How the American Department Store Fashioned the Middle Class. (St. Martin's Press, 2006. ISBN 0-312-32635-1.)
  • Whitaker, Jan. The World of Department Stores (The Vedome Press, 2011).
  • Young, William H. "Department Store" in Encyclopedia of American Studies, ed. Simon J. Bronner (Johns Hopkins UP, 2015), online

External links

  • The rise of the department store in Britain
  • Tamilia, Robert D. (2011). (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 19 October 2013. Retrieved 1 March 2014. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help) (292 KiB)
  • International Association of Department Stores
  • New York Journal. Under One Roof The death and life of the New York department store. by Adam Gopnik

department, store, other, uses, disambiguation, department, store, retail, establishment, offering, wide, range, consumer, goods, different, areas, store, each, area, department, specializing, product, category, modern, major, cities, department, store, made, . For other uses see Department store disambiguation A department store is a retail establishment offering a wide range of consumer goods in different areas of the store each area department specializing in a product category In modern major cities the department store made a dramatic appearance in the middle of the 19th century and permanently reshaped shopping habits and the definition of service and luxury Similar developments were under way in London with Whiteleys in Paris Le Bon Marche and in New York Stewart s 1 Interior of Le Bon Marche in Paris Today departments often include the following clothing cosmetics do it yourself furniture gardening hardware home appliances houseware paint sporting goods toiletries and toys Additionally other lines of products such as food books jewellery electronics stationery photographic equipment baby products and products for pets are sometimes included Customers generally check out near the front of the store in discount department stores while high end traditional department stores include sales counters within each department Some stores are one of many within a larger retail chain while others are independent retailers Since the 1980s they have come under heavy pressure from discounters and have come under even heavier pressure from e commerce sites since the 2000s Contents 1 Types 2 History 2 1 Origins in England 1700s 2 2 Origins in Parisian magasins de nouveautes 2 3 First Australian department stores 2 4 First American department stores 1825 1858 2 5 Innovations 1850 1917 2 6 Innovation 1917 1945 2 7 Expansion to malls 2 8 Expansion worldwide 2 9 Current situation 3 Around the world 4 See also 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksTypes Edit Sokos department store building in Multimaki Kuopio Finland Department stores can be classified in several ways Mainline department store or simply the traditional department store offering mid to high end goods most or at least some of the time at the full retail price Examples are Macy s Bloomingdale s J C Penney Montgomery Ward Sears and Belk 2 Junior department store a term used principally in the second part of the 20th century for a smaller version of a mainline department store These were usually either independent stores or chains that specialized in cosmetics and wearing apparel and accessories with few home goods 3 4 such as Boston Store and Harris amp Frank Discount department store a large discount store selling apparel and home furnishings at a discount either selling overstock from mainline department stores or merchandise especially made for the discount department store market Examples are Nordstrom Rack Saks Off 5th Marshalls Ross Dress for Less and Kohl s 5 Some sources may refer to the following types of stores as department stores even they are not generally considered as such Hypermarkets discount superstores with full grocery offerings such as Target Walmart and Carrefour 6 Variety stores also known in the U S as five and dimesHistory EditOrigins in England 1700s Edit One of the first department stores may have been Bennett s in Derby first established as an ironmonger hardware shop in 1734 7 It still stands to this day trading in the same building However the first reliably dated department store to be established was Harding Howell amp Co which opened in 1796 on Pall Mall London 8 The oldest department store chain may be Debenhams which was established in 1778 and closed in 2021 It is the longest trading defunct British retailer An observer writing in Ackermann s Repository a British periodical on contemporary taste and fashion described the enterprise in 1809 as follows The house is one hundred and fifty feet in length from front to back and of proportionate width It is fitted up with great taste and is divided by glazed partitions into four departments for the various branches of the extensive business which is there carried on Immediately at the entrance is the first department which is exclusively appropriated to the sale of furs and fans The second contains articles of haberdashery of every description silks muslins lace gloves amp etc In the third shop on the right you meet with a rich assortment of jewelry ornamental articles in ormolu French clocks amp etc and on the left with all the different kinds of perfumery necessary for the toilette The fourth is set apart for millinery and dresses so that there is no article of female attire or decoration but what may be here procured in the first style of elegance and fashion This concern has been conducted for the last twelve years by the present proprietors who have spared neither trouble nor expense to ensure the establishment of a superiority over every other in Europe and to render it perfectly unique in its kind 9 This venture is described as having all of the basic characteristics of the department store it was a public retail establishment offering a wide range of consumer goods in different departments Jonathan Glancey for the BBC writes Harding Howell amp Co was focused on the needs and desires of fashionable women Here at last women were free to browse and shop safely and decorously away from home and from the company of men These for the main part were newly affluent middle class women their good fortune and the department store itself nurtured and shaped by the Industrial Revolution This was transforming life in London and the length and breadth of Britain at a dizzying pace on the back of energetic free trade fecund invention steam and sail and a seemingly inexhaustible supply of expendable cheap labour 10 This pioneering shop was closed down in 1820 when the business partnership was dissolved All the major high streets in British cities had flourishing department stores by the mid or late nineteenth century Increasingly women became the main customers 11 Kendals formerly Kendal Milne amp Faulkner in Manchester lays claim to being one of the first department stores and is still known to many of its customers as Kendal s despite its 2005 name change to House of Fraser The Manchester institution dates back to 1836 but had been trading as Watts Bazaar since 1796 12 At its zenith the store had buildings on both sides of Deansgate linked by a subterranean passage Kendals Arcade and an art nouveau tiled food hall The store was especially known for its emphasis on quality and style over low prices giving it the nickname the Harrods of the North although this was due in part to Harrods acquiring the store in 1919 Harrods of London can be traced back to 1834 though the current store was built between 1894 and 1905 Liberty amp Co gained popularity in the 1870s for selling Oriental goods 13 In 1889 Oscar Wilde wrote Liberty s is the chosen resort of the artistic shopper 14 Origins in Parisian magasins de nouveautes Edit Au Bon Marche The Paris department stores have roots in the magasin de nouveautes or novelty store the first the Tapis Rouge was created in 1784 15 They flourished in the early 19th century Balzac described their functioning in his novel Cesar Birotteau In the 1840s with the arrival of the railroads in Paris and the increased number of shoppers they brought they grew in size and began to have large plate glass display windows fixed prices and price tags and advertising in newspapers 16 A novelty shop called Au Bon Marche had been founded in Paris in 1838 to sell items like lace ribbons sheets mattresses buttons and umbrellas It grew from 300 m2 3 200 sq ft and 12 employees in 1838 to 50 000 m2 540 000 sq ft and 1 788 employees in 1879 Boucicaut was famous for his marketing innovations a reading room for husbands while their wives shopped extensive newspaper advertising entertainment for children and six million catalogs sent out to customers By 1880 half the employees were women unmarried women employees lived in dormitories on the upper floors 17 Au Bon Marche soon had half a dozen or more competitors including Printemps founded in 1865 La Samaritaine 1869 Bazaar de Hotel de Ville BHV and Galeries Lafayette 1895 16 18 The French gloried in the national prestige brought by the great Parisian stores 19 The great writer Emile Zola 1840 1902 set his novel Au Bonheur des Dames 1882 83 in the typical department store making it a symbol of the new technology that was both improving society and devouring it 20 First Australian department stores Edit Australia is notable for having the longest continuously operating department store David Jones 21 22 The first David Jones department store was opened on 24 May 1838 by Welsh born immigrant David Jones in a large and commodious premises on the corner of George and Barrack Streets in Sydney NSW only 50 years after the foundation of the colony Expanding to a number of stores in the various states of Australia David Jones is the oldest continuously operating department franchise in the world 21 Other department stores in Australia include Grace Brothers founded in 1885 now merged with Myer which was founded in 1900 23 First American department stores 1825 1858 Edit Arnold Constable was the first American department store It was founded in 1825 as a small dry goods store on Pine Street in New York City In 1857 the store moved into a five story white marble dry goods palace known as the Marble House During the Civil War Arnold Constable was one of the first stores to issue charge bills of credit to its customers each month instead of on a bi annual basis The store soon outgrew the Marble House and erected a cast iron building on Broadway and Nineteenth Street in 1869 this Palace of Trade expanded over the years until it was necessary to move into a larger space in 1914 Financial problems led to bankruptcy in 1975 24 In New York City in 1846 Alexander Turney Stewart established the Marble Palace on Broadway between Chambers and Reade streets He offered European retail merchandise at fixed prices on a variety of dry goods and advertised a policy of providing free entrance to all potential customers Though it was clad in white marble to look like a Renaissance palazzo the building s cast iron construction permitted large plate glass windows that permitted major seasonal displays especially in the Christmas shopping season In 1862 Stewart built a new store on a full city block uptown between 9th and 10th streets with eight floors His innovations included buying from manufacturers for cash and in large quantities keeping his markup small and prices low truthful presentation of merchandise the one price policy so there was no haggling simple merchandise returns and cash refund policy selling for cash and not credit buyers who searched worldwide for quality merchandise departmentalization vertical and horizontal integration volume sales and free services for customers such as waiting rooms and free delivery of purchases 25 In 1858 Rowland Hussey Macy founded Macy s as a dry goods store Innovations 1850 1917 Edit Marshall Field s State Street store great hall interior around 1910 Marshall Field amp Company originated in 1852 It was the premier department store on the busiest shopping street in the Midwest at the time State Street in Chicago 26 Marshall Field s served as a model for other department stores in that it had exceptional customer service citation needed Marshall Field s also had the firsts among many innovations by Marshall Field s were the first European buying office which was located in Manchester England and the first bridal registry The company was the first to introduce the concept of the personal shopper and that service was provided without charge in every Field s store until the chain s last days under the Marshall Field s name It was the first store to offer revolving credit and the first department store to use escalators citation needed Marshall Field s book department in the State Street store was legendary citation needed it pioneered the concept of the book signing Moreover every year at Christmas Marshall Field s downtown store windows were filled with animated displays as part of the downtown shopping district display the theme window displays became famous for their ingenuity and beauty and visiting the Marshall Field s windows at Christmas became a tradition for Chicagoans and visitors alike as popular a local practice as visiting the Walnut Room with its equally famous Christmas tree or meeting under the clock on State Street 27 In 1877 John Wanamaker opened what some claim was the United States first modern department store in Philadelphia the first to offer fixed prices marked on every article and also introduced electrical illumination 1878 the telephone 1879 and the use of pneumatic tubes to transport cash and documents 1880 to the department store business 28 Aerial view of Anthony Hordern amp Sons in Sydney Australia 1936 once the largest department store in the world Selfridges Oxford Street in London 1944 Another store to revolutionize the concept of the department store was Selfridges in London established in 1909 by American born Harry Gordon Selfridge on Oxford Street The company s innovative marketing promoted the radical notion of shopping for pleasure rather than necessity and its techniques were adopted by modern department stores the world over The store was extensively promoted through paid advertising The shop floors were structured so that goods could be made more accessible to customers There were elegant restaurants with modest prices a library reading and writing rooms special reception rooms for French German American and Colonial customers a First Aid Room and a Silence Room with soft lights deep chairs and double glazing all intended to keep customers in the store as long as possible Staff members were taught to be on hand to assist customers but not too aggressively and to sell the merchandise 29 Selfridge attracted shoppers with educational and scientific exhibits in 1909 Louis Bleriot s monoplane was exhibited at Selfridges Bleriot was the first to fly over the English Channel and the first public demonstration of television by John Logie Baird took place in the department store in 1925 Utagawa Hiroshige designed an ukiyo e print with Mount Fuji and Echigoya as landmarks Echigoya is the former name of Mitsukoshi named after the former province of Echigo The Mitsukoshi headquarters are located on the left side of the street In Japan the first modern style department store was Mitsukoshi founded in 1904 which has its root as a kimono store called Echigoya from 1673 When the roots are considered however Matsuzakaya has an even longer history dated from 1611 The kimono store changed to a department store in 1910 In 1924 Matsuzakaya store in Ginza allowed street shoes to be worn indoors something innovative at the time 30 These former kimono shop department stores dominated the market in its earlier history They sold or instead displayed luxurious products which contributed to their sophisticated atmospheres Another origin of the Japanese department store is from railway companies There have been many private railway operators in the nation and from the 1920s they started to build department stores directly linked to their lines termini Seibu and Hankyu are typical examples of this type Innovation 1917 1945 EditIn the middle of the 1920s American management theories such as the scientific management of F W Taylor started spreading in Europe The International Management Institute I M I was established in Geneva in 1927 to facilitate the diffusion of such ideas A number of department stores teamed up together to create the International Association of Department Stores in Paris in 1928 to have a discussion space dedicated to this retail format This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2020 Expansion to malls EditThe U S Baby boom led to the development of suburban neighborhoods and suburban commercial developments including shopping malls Department stores joined these ventures following the growing market of baby boomer spending This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2020 Expansion worldwide Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2020 Current situation Edit This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2020 See also Retail apocalypseAround the world EditFurther information Department stores around the worldSee also EditDepartment stores around the world List of department stores by country Distribution Retail Marketing History of retailing in the modern era Types of retail outlets International Association of Department StoresReferences Edit Gunther Barth The Department Store in City People The Rise of Modern City Culture in Nineteenth Century America Oxford University Press 1980 pp 110 47 Off Price Is The New Black For Retailers Investor s Business Daily 8 September 2015 McKeever James Ross 1977 Shopping Center Development Handbook University of Michigan p 81 ISBN 9780874205763 Retrieved 2 July 2020 Moriarty John Jr 12 July 1981 Change in Philosophy Direction Is Behind McCain s Move to Mall The Post Crescent Appleton Wisconsin Retrieved 2 July 2020 Off Price Is The New Black For Retailers finance yahoo com Retrieved 29 August 2021 Hypermarket Investopedia Natalie Loughenbury 6 January 2010 Bennetts Irongate Derby Celebrates Its 275th Anniversary Derbyshire Life Bennets Retrieved 6 September 2021 Regency England shopping arcades exchanges and bazaars hibiscus sinensis com Ackermann Rudolph 3 August 1809 The Repository of arts literature commerce manufactures fashions and politics London Published by R Ackermann Sherwood amp Co and Walker amp Co and Simpkin amp Marshall via Internet Archive A history of the department store BBC Culture Retrieved 15 September 2019 Alison Adburgham Shops and Shopping 1880 1914 Where and in What Matter the Well Dressed Englishwoman Bought Her Clothes 2nd ed 1981 Parkinson Bailey John 2000 Manchester an architectural history Manchester Manchester University Press pp 80 81 ISBN 0 7190 5606 3 Iarocci L Visual Merchandising The Image of Selling Ashgate Publishing 2013 p 128 Wilde Oscar 1889 The Woman s World Volume 2 Cassell and Company p 6 Discovery Invention and Innovation Informational Society Springer US 1993 pp 1 31 doi 10 1007 978 0 585 32028 1 1 ISBN 9780792393030 a b Fierro Alfred 1996 Histoire et Dictionnaire de Paris pp 911 912 Jan Whitaker 2011 The World of Department Stores New York Vendome Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 86565 264 4 Miller Michael B 1981 The Bon Marche Bourgeois Culture and the Department Store 1869 1920 London Allen amp Unwin ISBN 0 04 330316 1 Homburg Heidrun 1992 Warenhausunternehmen und ihre Grunder in Frankreich und Deutschland Oder Eine Diskrete Elite und Mancherlei Mythen Department store firms and their founders in France and Germany or a discreet elite and various myths Jahrbuch fur Wirtschaftsgeschichte 33 1 183 219 doi 10 1524 jbwg 1992 33 1 185 S2CID 201653161 Amelinckx Frans C 1995 The Creation of Consumer Society in Zola s Ladies Paradise Proceedings of the Western Society for French History 22 17 21 a b Ravelli Louise April 2022 Ode to a lost icon David Jones Discourse amp Communication 16 2 269 282 doi 10 1177 17504813211073195 ISSN 1750 4813 S2CID 246463089 Walsh G P Jones David 1793 1873 Australian Dictionary of Biography Canberra National Centre of Biography Australian National University retrieved 19 December 2022 Loy Wilson Sophie January 2016 The Gospel of Enthusiasm Salesmanship Religion and Colonialism in Australian Department Stores in the 1920s and 1930s Journal of Contemporary History 51 1 91 123 doi 10 1177 0022009414561826 ISSN 0022 0094 S2CID 145570190 The Arnold Constable amp Company Buildings May 16 2013 Archived 13 May 2016 at the Wayback Machine Resseguie Harry E 1965 Alexander Turney Stewart and the Development of the Department Store 1823 1876 The Business History Review 39 3 301 322 doi 10 2307 3112143 JSTOR 3112143 S2CID 154704872 Lloyd Wendt and Herman Kogan Give the Lady What She Wants The Story of Marshall Field amp Company 1952 Wendt and Kogan Give the Lady What She Wants The Story of Marshall Field amp Company 1952 Robert Sobel The Entrepreneurs Explorations Within the American Business Tradition 1974 chapter 3 John Wanamaker The Triumph of Content Over Form J A Gere and John Sparrow ed Geoffrey Madan s Notebooks Oxford University Press 1981 Matsuzakaya corporate historyFurther reading EditAbelson Elaine S When Ladies Go A Thieving Middle Class Shoplifters in the Victorian Department Store New York Oxford University Press 1989 Adams Samuel Hopkins January 1897 The Department Store Scribner s Magazine XXI 1 4 28 Retrieved 23 August 2009 Barth Gunther The Department Store in City People The Rise of Modern City Culture in Nineteenth Century America Oxford University Press 1980 pp 110 47 compares major countries in the 19th century Benson Susan Porter Counter Culture Saleswomen Managers and Customers in American Department Stores 1890 1940 University of Illinois Press 1988 ISBN 0 252 06013 X Elias Stephen N Alexander T Stewart The Forgotten Merchant Prince 1992 online Ershkowicz Herbert John Wanamaker Philadelphia Merchant New York DaCapo Press 1999 Gibbons Herbert Adams John Wanamaker New York Harper amp Row 1926 Hendrickson Robert The Grand Emporiums The Illustrated History of America s Great Department Stores Stein and Day 1979 Leach William Land of Desire Merchants Power and the Rise of a New American Culture Pantheon 1993 ISBN 0 679 75411 3 Parker K 2003 Sign Consumption in the 19th Century Department Store An Examination of Visual Merchandising in the Grand Emporiums 1846 1900 Journal of Sociology 39 4 353 371 Parker Traci Department Stores and the Black Freedom Movement Workers Consumers and Civil Rights from the 1930s to the 1980s Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2019 Schlereth Thomas J Victorian America Transformations in Everyday Life 1876 1915 HarperCollins 1991 Sobel Robert John Wanamaker The Triumph of Content Over Form in The Entrepreneurs Explorations Within the American Business Tradition Weybright amp Talley 1974 ISBN 0 679 40064 8 Spang Rebecca L The Invention of the Restaurant Paris and Modern Gastronomic Culture Harvard UP 2000 325 p Tiersten Lisa Marianne in the Market Envisioning Consumer Society in Fin de Siecle France 2001 online Whitaker Jan Service and Style How the American Department Store Fashioned the Middle Class St Martin s Press 2006 ISBN 0 312 32635 1 Whitaker Jan The World of Department Stores The Vedome Press 2011 Young William H Department Store in Encyclopedia of American Studies ed Simon J Bronner Johns Hopkins UP 2015 onlineExternal links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Department stores The rise of the department store in Britain A T Stewart s Tamilia Robert D 2011 The Wonderful World of the Department Store in Historical Perspective A Comprehensive International Bibliography Partially Annotated PDF Archived from the original PDF on 19 October 2013 Retrieved 1 March 2014 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help 292 KiB International Association of Department Stores New York Journal Under One Roof The death and life of the New York department store by Adam Gopnik Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Department store amp oldid 1144692996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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