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Wanamaker's

John Wanamaker Department Store was one of the first department stores in the United States. Founded by John Wanamaker in Philadelphia, it was influential in the development of the retail industry including as the first store to use price tags. At its zenith in the early 20th century, Wanamaker's also had a store in New York City at Broadway and Ninth Street. Both employed extremely large staffs. By the end of the 20th century, there were 16 Wanamaker's outlets, but after years of change the chain was bought by Albert Taubman,[3] and added to his previous purchase of Woodward & Lothrop, the Washington, D.C., department store. In 1994, Woodies, as it was known, filed for bankruptcy. The assets of Woodies were purchased by the May Company Department Stores and JCPenney. In 1995, Wanamaker's transitioned to Hecht's, one of the May Company brands.[4] In 2006, Macy's Center City became the occupant of the former Philadelphia Wanamaker's Department Store, which is now a National Historic Landmark.

John Wanamaker Store
The Grand Court
Location1300 Market St, Philadelphia, PA 19107
Coordinates39°57′5.98″N 75°9′43.81″W / 39.9516611°N 75.1621694°W / 39.9516611; -75.1621694Coordinates: 39°57′5.98″N 75°9′43.81″W / 39.9516611°N 75.1621694°W / 39.9516611; -75.1621694
Built1876
ArchitectThompson, Starrett Co.; Daniel Burnham
Architectural styleRenaissance
NRHP reference No.78002459[1]
Significant dates
Added to NRHPJune 2, 1978[2]
Designated NHLJune 2, 1978
Wanamaker's
FormerlyJohn Wanamaker's
TypeDepartment store
Founded1861
FounderJohn Wanamaker
Defunct1996
SuccessorMacy's
Headquarters1300 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA
Area served
Delaware Valley
ProductsClothing, footwear, housewares, furniture, toys, jewelry, linens
The logo, patterned after John Wanamaker's signature

History

Beginnings

 

John Wanamaker was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1838. Due to a persistent cough, he was unable to join the U.S. Army to fight in the American Civil War, so instead started a career in business. In 1861, he and his brother-in-law Nathan Brown founded a men's clothing store in Philadelphia called Oak Hall. Wanamaker carried on the business alone after Brown's death in 1868. Eight years later, Wanamaker purchased the abandoned Pennsylvania Railroad station for use as a new, larger retail location. The concept was to renovate the terminal into a "Grand Depot" similar to London's Royal Exchange or Paris's Les Halles—two central markets, and forerunners of the modern department store, that were well known in Europe at that time.

 
John Wanamaker's in 1876

The Wanamaker's Grand Depot opened in time to service the public visiting Philadelphia for the American Centennial Exposition of 1876, and in fact resembled one of the many pavilions at that world's fair because of its fanciful new Moorish facade. In 1877 the interior of Wanamaker's was refurbished and expanded to include not only men's clothing, but women's clothing and dry goods as well. This was Philadelphia's first modern-day department store, and one of the earliest founded in America. A circular counter was placed at the center of the building, and concentric circles radiated around it with 129 counters of goods. The store also accepted mail orders, though it was not a large business until the early twentieth century.[5][6]

Enlightened retailing

 
The Grand Court in the Wanamaker Store, Philadelphia, showing the beautiful facade of the Organ at the South End, 1917

Wanamaker first thought of how he would run a store on new principles when, as a youth, a merchant refused his request to exchange a purchase. A practicing Christian, he chose not to advertise on Sundays. Before he opened his Grand Depot for retail business, he let evangelist Dwight L. Moody use its facilities as a meeting place, while Wanamaker provided 300 ushers from his store personnel. His retail advertisements—the first to be copyrighted beginning in 1874—were factual, and promises made in them were kept.[citation needed]

 
Flagship store directory

Wanamaker guaranteed the quality of his merchandise in print, allowed his customers to return purchases for a cash refund and offered the first restaurant to be located inside a department store. Wanamaker also invented the price tag.[7]

His employees were to be treated respectfully by management (including not being scolded in public), and John Wanamaker & Company offered its employees access to the John Wanamaker Commercial Institute, as well as free medical care, recreational facilities, profit sharing plans, and pensions—long before these types of benefits were considered standard in corporate employment.

 
Wanamaker's from South Penn Square
 
The second Wanamaker's at 770 Broadway, NYC

Innovation and "firsts" marked Wanamaker's. The store was the first department store with electrical illumination (1878), first store with a telephone (1879), and the first store to install pneumatic tubes to transport cash and documents (1880).

Wanamaker's commissioned a Philadelphia/New Jersey artist, George Washington Nicholson (1832–1912), to paint a large landscape mural, "The Old Homestead", which was finished in March 1892. The 7-by-14-foot (2.1 by 4.3 m) mural was still owned by Wanamaker's in 1950, but has since passed into a private collection.

In 1910, Wanamaker replaced his Grand Depot in stages, and constructed a new, purpose-built structure on the same site in Center City Philadelphia. The new store, built in the Florentine style with granite walls by Chicago architect Daniel H. Burnham, had 12 floors (nine for retail), numerous galleries and two lower levels totaling nearly two million square feet. The palatial emporium featured the Wanamaker Organ, the former St. Louis World's Fair pipe organ, at the time one of the world's largest organs. The organ was installed in the store's marble-clad central atrium known as the Grand Court. Another item from the St. Louis Fair in the Grand Court is the large bronze eagle, which quickly became the symbol of the store and a favorite meeting place for shoppers. All one had to say was "Meet You at The Eagle" and everyone knew where to go. The store was dedicated by President William Howard Taft on December 30, 1911.

Despite its size, the organ was deemed insufficient to fill the Grand Court with its music. Wanamaker's responded by assembling its own staff of organ builders and expanding the organ several times over a period of years. The "Wanamaker Organ" is the largest fully operational pipe organ in the world, with some 28,750 pipes. It is famed for the delicate, orchestra-like beauty of its tone as well as its incredible power. The organ still stands in place in the store today and free recitals are held twice every day except Sunday. Visitors are also invited to tour the organ's console area and meet with staff after recitals.[8] Once a year, usually in June, "Wanamaker Organ Day" is held, which is a free recital which lasts most of the day. The New York store also housed a large organ; it was sold at auction in 1955 for $1,200 after the New York store closed the year prior.[9]

News of the Titanic's sinking was transmitted to Wanamaker's wireless station in New York City, and given to anxious crowds waiting outside—yet another first for an American retail store. Public Christmas Caroling in the store's Grand Court began in 1918.

In 1919, El Mundo, a Spanish newspaper said of its New York store that it was 100 special departments all under one roof, including El Departamento de Latino-Americano de Servicio Personal (The Department of Personal Service for Latin-Americans).[10]

Other innovations included employing buyers to travel overseas to Europe each year for the latest fashions, the first White sale (1878) and other themed sales such as the February "Opportunity Sales" to keep prices as low as possible while keeping volume high. The store also broadcast its organ concerts on the Wanamaker-owned radio station WOO beginning in 1922. Under the leadership of James Bayard Woodford, Wanamaker's opened piano stores in Philadelphia and New York that did a huge business with an innovative fixed-price system of sales. Salons in period decor were used to sell the higher-price items. Wanamaker also tried selling small organs built by the Austin Organ Company for a time.

Slow decline

After John Wanamaker's death in 1922, the business carried on under Wanamaker family ownership. Rodman Wanamaker, John's son, enhanced the reputation of the stores as artistic centers and temples of the beautiful, offering imported luxuries from around the world. After his death in 1928, the stores (managed for the family by a trust) continued to thrive for a time. The men's clothing and accessories department was expanded into its own separate store on the lower floors of the Lincoln-Liberty Building, two doors down on Chestnut Street, in 1932. This building, which also had a private apartment for the Wanamaker family on its top floor, was sold to Philadelphia National Bank in 1952; the initials on the building's crown read "PNB" until November 2014, even though the bank no longer existed.[11] Over time, Wanamaker's lost business to other retail chains, including Bloomingdale's and Macy's, in the Philadelphia market. The Wanamaker Family Trust finally sold John Wanamaker and Company, with its underpatronized stores, to Los Angeles-based Carter Hawley Hale Stores for US$60 million cash in 1978.[12] Carter Hawley Hale poured another $80 million into renovating the stores,[13] but to no avail—customers had gone elsewhere in the intervening decades and did not come back.

Later innovations

 
The famous Eagle in the Grand Court

In late 1986, the now 15-store chain was sold to Woodward & Lothrop, owned by Detroit shopping-mall magnate A. Alfred Taubman, for around $180 million.[14] Taubman reorganized the business with a shortened corporate name (Wanamaker's Inc.), and poured millions more into store renovations and public relations campaigns. This too was no help, as Taubman's retail interests were heavily in debt and the stores' combined sales were a disappointment. Believing that the Wanamaker Building space was more valuable than portions of the historic Wanamaker store, the Philadelphia flagship store was reduced to its first five stories, the Juniper Street side became the lobby of an office building for the upper stories, and the former basement budget "Downstairs Store" became a parking garage. The Crystal Tea Room restaurant was closed and eventually leased to the Marriott Corporation for use as a ballroom. Personal effects of Mr. Wanamaker from his until-then preserved office on the eighth floor, and the store archives, were donated to the Historical Society of Pennsylvania. In October 1987, the Wanamaker Building was sold to developer John Kusmiersky.[15] Beloved huge Easter paintings Christ before Pilate (1881) and Golgotha (1884) by Mihály Munkácsy that had been personal favorites of Mr. Wanamaker and were displayed every year in the Grand Court during Lent were unceremoniously sold at auction in 1988.[15]

Woodward & Lothrop collapsed in bankruptcy, filing for Chapter 11 on January 17, 1994, and with it the Wanamaker stores, which were sold to May Department Stores Company on June 21, 1995. Wanamaker's Inc. was formally dissolved, and operations were consolidated with May's Hecht's division in Arlington, Virginia. After 133 consecutive years, the Wanamaker's name was removed from all stores and replaced with Hecht's. In 1997, May acquired Wanamaker's historic rival Strawbridge & Clothier and re-branded all Philadelphia-area Hecht's locations with the Strawbridge's name. The Center City Hecht's (temporarily named Strawbridge's) was closed for a lengthy renovation and refurbishment that saw the former Wanamaker retail space reduced in size again to three floors, and the former selling floors on the upper floors further subdivided into commercial office space. This was to prepare the way, in 1997, for New York-based Lord & Taylor, another division of May Department Stores, to open in the former Wanamaker's flagship in Center City Philadelphia. In August 2006 the store was converted to Macy's, operated by the Macy's East Division of Federated Department Stores Inc., (now Macy's Inc.), which acquired May in late 2005. The New York Wanamaker's store on Broadway had retail space occupied by Kmart by 1996, and later Wegmans (2023).

The store was not immune to the major change in retailing away from regional chains to national chains. The uniformity of brand offerings and the cost savings available to national chains all worked against the viability of the store as an independent personality, although customers generally had a major say in determining store offerings and the magnificence of its commercial space did tend to cause it to be stocked with better offerings. Other retailers had also learned to offer goods with much smaller staff rosters. The ability of retailers to "go national" in opposition to regional tastes is still an experiment-in-progress with mixed results.

The Wanamaker's flagship store, with its famous organ and eagle from the St. Louis World's Fair, was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1978. In 1992, a nonprofit group, the Friends of the Wanamaker Organ, was founded to promote the preservation, restoration and presentation of the famous pipe organ.[16]

As a retail site, the Philadelphia flagship store has proved profitable for later tenants Lord & Taylor and now Macy's.[citation needed] With a long tradition of parades and fireworks displays, Macy's has taken a prominent civic role in fostering historic Wanamaker traditions, especially the Wanamaker Organ and the Christmas Light Show. In 2008, Macy's celebrated its 150th birthday in the Philadelphia flagship store with a concert featuring the Wanamaker Organ and the Philadelphia Orchestra that attracted a capacity audience.

Christmas Light Show

 
Original Light Show
 
Light Show, 2013

In 1956, the Philadelphia Wanamaker's premiered a Christmas Light Show, a large musical and blinking light display several stories high, viewable from several levels of the building, but with the best viewing on the central ground floor. Its popularity with Philadelphia parents and children, as well as tourists, ensured a continuous run, even after the building was sold to different business interests.

For decades until 1994, the melodic baritone "voice", or narrator, of the show was John Facenda, known to Philadelphians for decades reporting the news on radio and television, as well as nationally known as the voice of NFL Films. NFL Films' Ed Sabol referred to Facenda as "The Voice of God". His wordsmithing and dramatic baritone delivery were highlights of the shows and did much to boost Facenda's stock and mystique. Various announcers narrated the show between 1995 and 2005. Beginning in 2006, under Macy's, Julie Andrews became the show's narrator. Also in 2006, the Santa Express Train at the top of the Grand Court returned.

In 2007, the entire Christmas Light Show was completely modernized and rebuilt by Macy's Parade Studio on new trusses with lighter materials and LED lighting. In 2008, a new and bigger Magic Christmas Tree with LED lights debuted. However, due to safety concerns and logistical issues, the dancing water fountains were retired and will not return.[17]

 
Albert Leo Stevens ascends from Wanamaker's in New York City in 1911

Flagship store setup

  • Ground floor: 2,500-pound "Durana" bronze eagle statue in the Grand Court, made by German sculptor August Gaul for the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exhibition and purchased by John Wanamaker; to this day, Philadelphians frequently agree to "meet me at the eagle" (at Wanamaker's).[18]
  • 3rd floor: Egyptian Hall auditorium behind the executive offices, also a Greek Hall auditorium. The architecture of Egyptian Hall is presently (2008) obscured by the Executive Offices and Dickens Christmas Village.
  • 8th floor: Toy department had a Rocket Express monorail (from 1946 to 1984) for the kids that traveled around the entire department, camera dept, piano and organ dept. The monorail car is a static display at Philadelphia's Please Touch Museum.[19]
  • 9th floor: Crystal Tea Room
  • 10th floor: In-house physician and nurses
  • 12th floor: Wanamaker Organ Shop, where the Wanamaker Organ was enlarged by an in-house expert staff
  • Sub-floors: The Downstairs Store, post office, lost and found, shoe repair, the Dairy Bar restaurant. This area became a parking garage.
  • Radio broadcasting station
  • Model house on the furniture floor
  • Home of the world's largest playable pipe organ

Crystal Tea Room

 
The Crystal Tea Room

Wanamaker's also was home to the Crystal Tea Room restaurant on the 9th floor, which closed to the public in 1995; it was restored as a private banquet hall, accommodating sit-down receptions of up to 1,000 people. A Wanamaker's guidebook from the 1920s states that the Crystal Tea Room was the largest dining room in Philadelphia, and one of the largest in the world. It once could serve 1,400 people at a time. It served breakfast in the morning, luncheon, and afternoon tea. The kitchen's big ovens could roast 75 turkeys at a time and the facility was equipped with lockers and baths for the employees. In acknowledgment of John Wanamaker's promotion of temperance causes, alcohol was not served in the Tea Room until after the family trust sold the store. There was informal modeling in the Tea Room.[20]

There was also a balcony cafe, the Terrace on the Court, on the third floor facing the Grand Court, where shoppers could hear the Wanamaker Organ as they dined. Macy's closed this restaurant in 2008.

Other locations

Wanamaker's opened a store in Wilmington, Delaware in 1950.[21] After the New York store closed in 1954, Wanamaker's expanded to the Philadelphia suburbs, starting with the Wynnewood store in December 1954.[21] The second suburban branch opened in 1958 in Jenkintown, not far from the Strawbridge and Clothier store.[21] The store at Moorestown Mall opened in 1963.[21] Other prominent suburban branch stores included Berkshire Mall (1970), Oxford Valley Mall (1973), Deptford Mall (1975), Lehigh Valley Mall (1976), and Christiana Mall (1991, last Wanamaker's store built).

In popular culture

See also

References

  1. ^ "National Register Information System". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. January 23, 2007.
  2. ^ Listing of John Wanamaker Store at the National Park Service
  3. ^ Kelly, john. "New book details the history of Woodward & Lothrop, a vanished D.C. department store". The Washington Post. Retrieved 15 May 2015.
  4. ^ Jackson, Kimberlly L. (September 4, 1995). "Wanamakers' Faithful Flock To Hecht's Department Store Begins Its Two-month Transition". The Morning Call. Retrieved 15 May 2015.
  5. ^ https://archive.org/stream/goldenbookofwana00wana#page/n13/mode/2up pg. 48
  6. ^ Herbert Ershkowitz, John Wanamaker: Philadelphia Merchant (1999))
  7. ^ "Who Made America? | Innovators | John Wanamaker". www.pbs.org.
  8. ^ Friends of the Wanamaker Organ schedule for recitals Retrieved 2010-12-24
  9. ^ "Events of the Year 1955 in the Organ World in Review" (PDF). The Diapason. 47 (2): 6. January 1, 1956.
  10. ^ "WANAMAKER Cien Secciones Especiales en Una sola Tienda". El Mundo. 21 March 1919. Retrieved 14 June 2020.
  11. ^ Melamed, Samantha. "Skyline changes: PNB letters removed by 'copter from atop 1 S. Broad". philly.com. The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved November 17, 2014.
  12. ^ Shope, Dan (1986-07-18). "HESS'S CONSIDERS BUYING WANAMAKER'S". The Morning Call. from the original on 2022-01-11. Retrieved 2023-01-12.
  13. ^ Funk, Nancy M. (1988-12-11). "WANAMAKER'S AGAIN FACING CLOUDY FUTURE". The Morning Call. Retrieved 2023-01-12.
  14. ^ Groves, Martha (November 5, 1986). "Wanamaker Will Be Sold by Carter Hawley : Analysts Estimate Value of Deal at $180 Million". Los Angeles Times.
  15. ^ a b Solis-Cohen, Lita (February 22, 1988). "Sotheby's to Auction Wanamakers' 19th-Century Art". The Philadelphia Inquirer.
  16. ^ "Friends of Wanamaker Organ".
  17. ^ http://www.wanamakerorgan.com/xmas.php Friends of the Wanamaker Organ website.
  18. ^ "Wanamaker Eagle".
  19. ^ "John Wanamaker Monorail". National Endowment for the Humanities.
  20. ^ Nicole C. Kirk, Wanamaker's Temple: The Business of Religion in an Iconic Department Store (NYU Press, 2018).
  21. ^ a b c d Arrigale, Lawrence M.; Keels, Thomas H. (2012). Philadelphia's Golden Age of Retail. Arcadia Publishing. p. 111.
  22. ^ "Filming Locations for Blow Out (1981)". The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations.
  23. ^ "Why Mannequin Is the Best Movie Ever Made About Philadelphia". December 4, 2013.
  24. ^ Call, The Morning. "MOVIE WILL BE FILMED AT WANAMAKER'S IN PHILA. BRIEFLY". themorningcall.com.
  25. ^ Fenn, Mike (July 19, 2016). "Phillywood: 7 key sites in Philly movie history". Metro Philadelphia.
  26. ^ "The Sopranos" Moe n' Joe (TV Episode 2006) - IMDb, retrieved 2022-09-23

Further reading

  • Arceneaux, Noah. "Wanamaker's Department Store and the Origins of Electronic Media, 1910–1922." Technology and culture' 51.4 (2010): 809-828 online.
  • Arrigale, Lawrence M., and Thomas H. Keels. Philadelphia's Golden Age of Retail (Arcadia Publishing, 2012).
  • Ershkowitz, Herbert. John Wanamaker: Philadelphia Merchant (Signpost Biographies-Da Capo Press, 1999)
  • Kirk, Nicole C. Wanamaker's Temple: The Business of Religion in an Iconic Department Store (NYU Press, 2018).
  • Robert Sobel The Entrepreneurs: Explorations Within the American Business Tradition (Weybright & Talley 1974), chapter 3, John Wanamaker: The Triumph of Content Over Form ISBN 0-679-40064-8
  • Wanamaker's: Meet Me at the Eagle. The History Press. 2010. ISBN 978-1-62619-068-9.

External links

  • Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS) No. PA-1692, "John Wanamaker Store", 2 photos, 2 photo caption pages
  • Friends of the Wanamaker Organ
  • The John Wanamaker Collection, 1827-1987, including an extensive collection of correspondence, accounts, scrapbooks, legal papers, photographs and other materials which detail the history of Wanamaker's store, is available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania.

wanamaker, other, uses, wanamaker, disambiguation, john, wanamaker, department, store, first, department, stores, united, states, founded, john, wanamaker, philadelphia, influential, development, retail, industry, including, first, store, price, tags, zenith, . For other uses see Wanamaker disambiguation John Wanamaker Department Store was one of the first department stores in the United States Founded by John Wanamaker in Philadelphia it was influential in the development of the retail industry including as the first store to use price tags At its zenith in the early 20th century Wanamaker s also had a store in New York City at Broadway and Ninth Street Both employed extremely large staffs By the end of the 20th century there were 16 Wanamaker s outlets but after years of change the chain was bought by Albert Taubman 3 and added to his previous purchase of Woodward amp Lothrop the Washington D C department store In 1994 Woodies as it was known filed for bankruptcy The assets of Woodies were purchased by the May Company Department Stores and JCPenney In 1995 Wanamaker s transitioned to Hecht s one of the May Company brands 4 In 2006 Macy s Center City became the occupant of the former Philadelphia Wanamaker s Department Store which is now a National Historic Landmark John Wanamaker StoreU S National Register of Historic PlacesU S National Historic LandmarkThe Grand CourtShow map of PennsylvaniaShow map of the United StatesLocation1300 Market St Philadelphia PA 19107Coordinates39 57 5 98 N 75 9 43 81 W 39 9516611 N 75 1621694 W 39 9516611 75 1621694 Coordinates 39 57 5 98 N 75 9 43 81 W 39 9516611 N 75 1621694 W 39 9516611 75 1621694Built1876ArchitectThompson Starrett Co Daniel BurnhamArchitectural styleRenaissanceNRHP reference No 78002459 1 Significant datesAdded to NRHPJune 2 1978 2 Designated NHLJune 2 1978Wanamaker sFormerlyJohn Wanamaker sTypeDepartment storeFounded1861FounderJohn WanamakerDefunct1996SuccessorMacy sHeadquarters1300 Market Street Philadelphia PAArea servedDelaware ValleyProductsClothing footwear housewares furniture toys jewelry linens The logo patterned after John Wanamaker s signature Contents 1 History 1 1 Beginnings 1 2 Enlightened retailing 1 3 Slow decline 1 4 Later innovations 1 5 Christmas Light Show 2 Flagship store setup 2 1 Crystal Tea Room 3 Other locations 4 In popular culture 5 See also 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksHistory EditBeginnings Edit John Wanamaker was born in Philadelphia Pennsylvania in 1838 Due to a persistent cough he was unable to join the U S Army to fight in the American Civil War so instead started a career in business In 1861 he and his brother in law Nathan Brown founded a men s clothing store in Philadelphia called Oak Hall Wanamaker carried on the business alone after Brown s death in 1868 Eight years later Wanamaker purchased the abandoned Pennsylvania Railroad station for use as a new larger retail location The concept was to renovate the terminal into a Grand Depot similar to London s Royal Exchange or Paris s Les Halles two central markets and forerunners of the modern department store that were well known in Europe at that time John Wanamaker s in 1876The Wanamaker s Grand Depot opened in time to service the public visiting Philadelphia for the American Centennial Exposition of 1876 and in fact resembled one of the many pavilions at that world s fair because of its fanciful new Moorish facade In 1877 the interior of Wanamaker s was refurbished and expanded to include not only men s clothing but women s clothing and dry goods as well This was Philadelphia s first modern day department store and one of the earliest founded in America A circular counter was placed at the center of the building and concentric circles radiated around it with 129 counters of goods The store also accepted mail orders though it was not a large business until the early twentieth century 5 6 Enlightened retailing Edit The Grand Court in the Wanamaker Store Philadelphia showing the beautiful facade of the Organ at the South End 1917 Wanamaker first thought of how he would run a store on new principles when as a youth a merchant refused his request to exchange a purchase A practicing Christian he chose not to advertise on Sundays Before he opened his Grand Depot for retail business he let evangelist Dwight L Moody use its facilities as a meeting place while Wanamaker provided 300 ushers from his store personnel His retail advertisements the first to be copyrighted beginning in 1874 were factual and promises made in them were kept citation needed Flagship store directory Wanamaker guaranteed the quality of his merchandise in print allowed his customers to return purchases for a cash refund and offered the first restaurant to be located inside a department store Wanamaker also invented the price tag 7 His employees were to be treated respectfully by management including not being scolded in public and John Wanamaker amp Company offered its employees access to the John Wanamaker Commercial Institute as well as free medical care recreational facilities profit sharing plans and pensions long before these types of benefits were considered standard in corporate employment Wanamaker s from South Penn Square The second Wanamaker s at 770 Broadway NYC Innovation and firsts marked Wanamaker s The store was the first department store with electrical illumination 1878 first store with a telephone 1879 and the first store to install pneumatic tubes to transport cash and documents 1880 Wanamaker s commissioned a Philadelphia New Jersey artist George Washington Nicholson 1832 1912 to paint a large landscape mural The Old Homestead which was finished in March 1892 The 7 by 14 foot 2 1 by 4 3 m mural was still owned by Wanamaker s in 1950 but has since passed into a private collection In 1910 Wanamaker replaced his Grand Depot in stages and constructed a new purpose built structure on the same site in Center City Philadelphia The new store built in the Florentine style with granite walls by Chicago architect Daniel H Burnham had 12 floors nine for retail numerous galleries and two lower levels totaling nearly two million square feet The palatial emporium featured the Wanamaker Organ the former St Louis World s Fair pipe organ at the time one of the world s largest organs The organ was installed in the store s marble clad central atrium known as the Grand Court Another item from the St Louis Fair in the Grand Court is the large bronze eagle which quickly became the symbol of the store and a favorite meeting place for shoppers All one had to say was Meet You at The Eagle and everyone knew where to go The store was dedicated by President William Howard Taft on December 30 1911 Despite its size the organ was deemed insufficient to fill the Grand Court with its music Wanamaker s responded by assembling its own staff of organ builders and expanding the organ several times over a period of years The Wanamaker Organ is the largest fully operational pipe organ in the world with some 28 750 pipes It is famed for the delicate orchestra like beauty of its tone as well as its incredible power The organ still stands in place in the store today and free recitals are held twice every day except Sunday Visitors are also invited to tour the organ s console area and meet with staff after recitals 8 Once a year usually in June Wanamaker Organ Day is held which is a free recital which lasts most of the day The New York store also housed a large organ it was sold at auction in 1955 for 1 200 after the New York store closed the year prior 9 News of the Titanic s sinking was transmitted to Wanamaker s wireless station in New York City and given to anxious crowds waiting outside yet another first for an American retail store Public Christmas Caroling in the store s Grand Court began in 1918 In 1919 El Mundo a Spanish newspaper said of its New York store that it was 100 special departments all under one roof including El Departamento de Latino Americano de Servicio Personal The Department of Personal Service for Latin Americans 10 Other innovations included employing buyers to travel overseas to Europe each year for the latest fashions the first White sale 1878 and other themed sales such as the February Opportunity Sales to keep prices as low as possible while keeping volume high The store also broadcast its organ concerts on the Wanamaker owned radio station WOO beginning in 1922 Under the leadership of James Bayard Woodford Wanamaker s opened piano stores in Philadelphia and New York that did a huge business with an innovative fixed price system of sales Salons in period decor were used to sell the higher price items Wanamaker also tried selling small organs built by the Austin Organ Company for a time Slow decline Edit After John Wanamaker s death in 1922 the business carried on under Wanamaker family ownership Rodman Wanamaker John s son enhanced the reputation of the stores as artistic centers and temples of the beautiful offering imported luxuries from around the world After his death in 1928 the stores managed for the family by a trust continued to thrive for a time The men s clothing and accessories department was expanded into its own separate store on the lower floors of the Lincoln Liberty Building two doors down on Chestnut Street in 1932 This building which also had a private apartment for the Wanamaker family on its top floor was sold to Philadelphia National Bank in 1952 the initials on the building s crown read PNB until November 2014 even though the bank no longer existed 11 Over time Wanamaker s lost business to other retail chains including Bloomingdale s and Macy s in the Philadelphia market The Wanamaker Family Trust finally sold John Wanamaker and Company with its underpatronized stores to Los Angeles based Carter Hawley Hale Stores for US 60 million cash in 1978 12 Carter Hawley Hale poured another 80 million into renovating the stores 13 but to no avail customers had gone elsewhere in the intervening decades and did not come back Later innovations Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The famous Eagle in the Grand Court In late 1986 the now 15 store chain was sold to Woodward amp Lothrop owned by Detroit shopping mall magnate A Alfred Taubman for around 180 million 14 Taubman reorganized the business with a shortened corporate name Wanamaker s Inc and poured millions more into store renovations and public relations campaigns This too was no help as Taubman s retail interests were heavily in debt and the stores combined sales were a disappointment Believing that the Wanamaker Building space was more valuable than portions of the historic Wanamaker store the Philadelphia flagship store was reduced to its first five stories the Juniper Street side became the lobby of an office building for the upper stories and the former basement budget Downstairs Store became a parking garage The Crystal Tea Room restaurant was closed and eventually leased to the Marriott Corporation for use as a ballroom Personal effects of Mr Wanamaker from his until then preserved office on the eighth floor and the store archives were donated to the Historical Society of Pennsylvania In October 1987 the Wanamaker Building was sold to developer John Kusmiersky 15 Beloved huge Easter paintings Christ before Pilate 1881 and Golgotha 1884 by Mihaly Munkacsy that had been personal favorites of Mr Wanamaker and were displayed every year in the Grand Court during Lent were unceremoniously sold at auction in 1988 15 Woodward amp Lothrop collapsed in bankruptcy filing for Chapter 11 on January 17 1994 and with it the Wanamaker stores which were sold to May Department Stores Company on June 21 1995 Wanamaker s Inc was formally dissolved and operations were consolidated with May s Hecht s division in Arlington Virginia After 133 consecutive years the Wanamaker s name was removed from all stores and replaced with Hecht s In 1997 May acquired Wanamaker s historic rival Strawbridge amp Clothier and re branded all Philadelphia area Hecht s locations with the Strawbridge s name The Center City Hecht s temporarily named Strawbridge s was closed for a lengthy renovation and refurbishment that saw the former Wanamaker retail space reduced in size again to three floors and the former selling floors on the upper floors further subdivided into commercial office space This was to prepare the way in 1997 for New York based Lord amp Taylor another division of May Department Stores to open in the former Wanamaker s flagship in Center City Philadelphia In August 2006 the store was converted to Macy s operated by the Macy s East Division of Federated Department Stores Inc now Macy s Inc which acquired May in late 2005 The New York Wanamaker s store on Broadway had retail space occupied by Kmart by 1996 and later Wegmans 2023 The store was not immune to the major change in retailing away from regional chains to national chains The uniformity of brand offerings and the cost savings available to national chains all worked against the viability of the store as an independent personality although customers generally had a major say in determining store offerings and the magnificence of its commercial space did tend to cause it to be stocked with better offerings Other retailers had also learned to offer goods with much smaller staff rosters The ability of retailers to go national in opposition to regional tastes is still an experiment in progress with mixed results The Wanamaker s flagship store with its famous organ and eagle from the St Louis World s Fair was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1978 In 1992 a nonprofit group the Friends of the Wanamaker Organ was founded to promote the preservation restoration and presentation of the famous pipe organ 16 As a retail site the Philadelphia flagship store has proved profitable for later tenants Lord amp Taylor and now Macy s citation needed With a long tradition of parades and fireworks displays Macy s has taken a prominent civic role in fostering historic Wanamaker traditions especially the Wanamaker Organ and the Christmas Light Show In 2008 Macy s celebrated its 150th birthday in the Philadelphia flagship store with a concert featuring the Wanamaker Organ and the Philadelphia Orchestra that attracted a capacity audience Christmas Light Show Edit Original Light Show Light Show 2013 In 1956 the Philadelphia Wanamaker s premiered a Christmas Light Show a large musical and blinking light display several stories high viewable from several levels of the building but with the best viewing on the central ground floor Its popularity with Philadelphia parents and children as well as tourists ensured a continuous run even after the building was sold to different business interests For decades until 1994 the melodic baritone voice or narrator of the show was John Facenda known to Philadelphians for decades reporting the news on radio and television as well as nationally known as the voice of NFL Films NFL Films Ed Sabol referred to Facenda as The Voice of God His wordsmithing and dramatic baritone delivery were highlights of the shows and did much to boost Facenda s stock and mystique Various announcers narrated the show between 1995 and 2005 Beginning in 2006 under Macy s Julie Andrews became the show s narrator Also in 2006 the Santa Express Train at the top of the Grand Court returned In 2007 the entire Christmas Light Show was completely modernized and rebuilt by Macy s Parade Studio on new trusses with lighter materials and LED lighting In 2008 a new and bigger Magic Christmas Tree with LED lights debuted However due to safety concerns and logistical issues the dancing water fountains were retired and will not return 17 Albert Leo Stevens ascends from Wanamaker s in New York City in 1911Flagship store setup EditGround floor 2 500 pound Durana bronze eagle statue in the Grand Court made by German sculptor August Gaul for the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exhibition and purchased by John Wanamaker to this day Philadelphians frequently agree to meet me at the eagle at Wanamaker s 18 3rd floor Egyptian Hall auditorium behind the executive offices also a Greek Hall auditorium The architecture of Egyptian Hall is presently 2008 obscured by the Executive Offices and Dickens Christmas Village 8th floor Toy department had a Rocket Express monorail from 1946 to 1984 for the kids that traveled around the entire department camera dept piano and organ dept The monorail car is a static display at Philadelphia s Please Touch Museum 19 9th floor Crystal Tea Room 10th floor In house physician and nurses 12th floor Wanamaker Organ Shop where the Wanamaker Organ was enlarged by an in house expert staff Sub floors The Downstairs Store post office lost and found shoe repair the Dairy Bar restaurant This area became a parking garage Radio broadcasting station Model house on the furniture floor Home of the world s largest playable pipe organCrystal Tea Room Edit The Crystal Tea Room Wanamaker s also was home to the Crystal Tea Room restaurant on the 9th floor which closed to the public in 1995 it was restored as a private banquet hall accommodating sit down receptions of up to 1 000 people A Wanamaker s guidebook from the 1920s states that the Crystal Tea Room was the largest dining room in Philadelphia and one of the largest in the world It once could serve 1 400 people at a time It served breakfast in the morning luncheon and afternoon tea The kitchen s big ovens could roast 75 turkeys at a time and the facility was equipped with lockers and baths for the employees In acknowledgment of John Wanamaker s promotion of temperance causes alcohol was not served in the Tea Room until after the family trust sold the store There was informal modeling in the Tea Room 20 There was also a balcony cafe the Terrace on the Court on the third floor facing the Grand Court where shoppers could hear the Wanamaker Organ as they dined Macy s closed this restaurant in 2008 Other locations EditWanamaker s opened a store in Wilmington Delaware in 1950 21 After the New York store closed in 1954 Wanamaker s expanded to the Philadelphia suburbs starting with the Wynnewood store in December 1954 21 The second suburban branch opened in 1958 in Jenkintown not far from the Strawbridge and Clothier store 21 The store at Moorestown Mall opened in 1963 21 Other prominent suburban branch stores included Berkshire Mall 1970 Oxford Valley Mall 1973 Deptford Mall 1975 Lehigh Valley Mall 1976 and Christiana Mall 1991 last Wanamaker s store built In popular culture EditScenes in the 1981 film Blow Out were filmed outside Wanamaker s 22 Much of the 1987 movie Mannequin was filmed at Wanamaker s 23 24 as was the 1991 sequel Mannequin Two On the Move 25 In the HBO TV series The Sopranos jailed Lupertazzi crime boss John Johnny Sack Sacramoni tells his lawyer that he met his wife Ginny at the tie counter at Wanamaker s 26 See also Edit Philadelphia portalWanamaker Mile Millrose Games Wanamaker Trophy for golf s PGA Champion Please Touch Museum Wanamaker s Rocket Express Monorail List of National Historic Landmarks in Philadelphia National Register of Historic Places listings in Center City PhiladelphiaReferences Edit National Register Information System National Register of Historic Places National Park Service January 23 2007 Listing of John Wanamaker Store at the National Park Service Kelly john New book details the history of Woodward amp Lothrop a vanished D C department store The Washington Post Retrieved 15 May 2015 Jackson Kimberlly L September 4 1995 Wanamakers Faithful Flock To Hecht s Department Store Begins Its Two month Transition The Morning Call Retrieved 15 May 2015 https archive org stream goldenbookofwana00wana page n13 mode 2up pg 48 Herbert Ershkowitz John Wanamaker Philadelphia Merchant 1999 Who Made America Innovators John Wanamaker www pbs org Friends of the Wanamaker Organ schedule for recitals Retrieved 2010 12 24 Events of the Year 1955 in the Organ World in Review PDF The Diapason 47 2 6 January 1 1956 WANAMAKER Cien Secciones Especiales en Una sola Tienda El Mundo 21 March 1919 Retrieved 14 June 2020 Melamed Samantha Skyline changes PNB letters removed by copter from atop 1 S Broad philly com The Philadelphia Inquirer Retrieved November 17 2014 Shope Dan 1986 07 18 HESS S CONSIDERS BUYING WANAMAKER S The Morning Call Archived from the original on 2022 01 11 Retrieved 2023 01 12 Funk Nancy M 1988 12 11 WANAMAKER S AGAIN FACING CLOUDY FUTURE The Morning Call Retrieved 2023 01 12 Groves Martha November 5 1986 Wanamaker Will Be Sold by Carter Hawley Analysts Estimate Value of Deal at 180 Million Los Angeles Times a b Solis Cohen Lita February 22 1988 Sotheby s to Auction Wanamakers 19th Century Art The Philadelphia Inquirer Friends of Wanamaker Organ http www wanamakerorgan com xmas php Friends of the Wanamaker Organ website Wanamaker Eagle John Wanamaker Monorail National Endowment for the Humanities Nicole C Kirk Wanamaker s Temple The Business of Religion in an Iconic Department Store NYU Press 2018 a b c d Arrigale Lawrence M Keels Thomas H 2012 Philadelphia s Golden Age of Retail Arcadia Publishing p 111 Filming Locations for Blow Out 1981 The Worldwide Guide to Movie Locations Why Mannequin Is the Best Movie Ever Made About Philadelphia December 4 2013 Call The Morning MOVIE WILL BE FILMED AT WANAMAKER S IN PHILA BRIEFLY themorningcall com Fenn Mike July 19 2016 Phillywood 7 key sites in Philly movie history Metro Philadelphia The Sopranos Moe n Joe TV Episode 2006 IMDb retrieved 2022 09 23Further reading EditArceneaux Noah Wanamaker s Department Store and the Origins of Electronic Media 1910 1922 Technology and culture 51 4 2010 809 828 online Arrigale Lawrence M and Thomas H Keels Philadelphia s Golden Age of Retail Arcadia Publishing 2012 Ershkowitz Herbert John Wanamaker Philadelphia Merchant Signpost Biographies Da Capo Press 1999 Kirk Nicole C Wanamaker s Temple The Business of Religion in an Iconic Department Store NYU Press 2018 Robert Sobel The Entrepreneurs Explorations Within the American Business Tradition Weybright amp Talley 1974 chapter 3 John Wanamaker The Triumph of Content Over Form ISBN 0 679 40064 8 Wanamaker s Meet Me at the Eagle The History Press 2010 ISBN 978 1 62619 068 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wanamaker s Historic American Buildings Survey HABS No PA 1692 John Wanamaker Store 2 photos 2 photo caption pages Friends of the Wanamaker Organ The John Wanamaker Collection 1827 1987 including an extensive collection of correspondence accounts scrapbooks legal papers photographs and other materials which detail the history of Wanamaker s store is available for research use at the Historical Society of Pennsylvania Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wanamaker 27s amp oldid 1134232521, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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