Wanamaker's

Wanamaker's

Infobox_nrhp | name =John Wanamaker Store
nrhp_type = nhl



caption = The Grand Court
location= Juniper and Market Sts.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
lat_degrees = 39
lat_minutes = 57
lat_seconds = 5.98
lat_direction = N
long_degrees = 75
long_minutes = 9
long_seconds = 43.81
long_direction = W
locmapin = Pennsylvania
area =
built =1902
architect= Thompson, Starrett Co.; Daniel Burnham
architecture= Renaissance
added = June 02, 1978 [ [http://tps.cr.nps.gov/nhl/detail.cfm?ResourceId=1786&ResourceType=Building Listing of John Wanamaker Store] at the National Park Service]
governing_body = Private
refnum=78002459cite web|url=http://www.nr.nps.gov/|title=National Register Information System|date=2007-01-23|work=National Register of Historic Places|publisher=National Park Service]

Wanamaker's department store was the first department store in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and one of the first department stores in the United States. It was renowned for its honest reputation and for innovating many retailing firsts in America. At its zenith in the early 20th century, there were two major Wanamaker department stores, one in Philadelphia and one in New York, both with extremely large staffs. By the end of the 20th century in the shopping-mall era, there were 16 Wanamaker's outlets, but the chain was absorbed into Hecht's (now Macy's) in 1995 after years of change. The current occupant of the former Wanamaker's Department Store is Macy's Center City.

Beginnings

John Wanamaker, the founder of the store that bears his name, was unable to join the U.S. Army during the American Civil War because of a persistent cough. Having been rejected from war duty, he instead ventured into business with his brother-in-law, Nathan Brown. In 1861, they founded a men's clothing store in Philadelphia called Oak Hall. Wanamaker carried on the business alone after Brown's death in 1868. In 1876, 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' Les Halles—two central markets, and forerunners of the modern department store, that were well-known in Europe at that time.

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—and perhaps America's—first modern-day department store. A circular counter was placed at the center of the building, and concentric circles radiated around it with 129 counters of goods.

Enlightened retailing

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. His faith also informed other business decisions, many of which were innovative and before their time. 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. Word of this increased Wanamaker's business and John Wanamaker never lost the public's trust while he pioneered truth in American advertising.

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's also innovated the price tag, because John Wanamaker believed if everyone was equal before God, then everyone should be equal before price. All of these concepts were seen as innovations in American retailing at the time.

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.

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 7x14-foot mural was still owned by Wanamaker's in 1950, but its location is currently unknown.

In 1910, Wanamaker replaced his famous Grand Depot in stages, and constructed a brand-new, purpose-built structure on the same site in Center City Philadelphia. The new store, lavishly built in the Florentine style with granite walls by Chicago architect Daniel H. Burnham, had 12 floors (9 for retail), numerous galleries and two lower levels totaling nearly two-million square feet. The palatial emporium featured 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. 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 organ still stands in place in the store today, and is the largest operational pipe organ in the world, with some 28,000 pipes. It is famed for the delicate, orchestra-like beauty of its tone as well as its incredible power. 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.

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-AM beginning in 1922.

The famous advertising axiom "Half the money I spend on advertising is wasted; the trouble is, I don't know which half" is credited to John Wanamaker.

Although disputed in some circles, John Wanamaker is credited as the first to coin the "Retailer's Rule"…"The customer is always right."

The 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. He died shortly before the Great Depression, and 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 now read "PNB" even though the bank no longer exists (it is now part of Wachovia Corporation through a series of mergers and acquisitions). 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, California-based Carter Hawley Hale Stores in 1978. Carter Hawley Hale poured $80 million (USD) into renovating the stores, but to no avail—customers had gone elsewhere in the intervening decades and did not come back.

Finally, in 1986, the now 15-store chain was sold to Woodward & Lothrop, owned by Detroit shopping-mall magnate A. Alfred Taubman. 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 Store (always referred to as the 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. Beloved huge Easter paintings of the trial and Passion of the Christ 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. Woodward & Lothrop collapsed in bankruptcy in the early 1990s, 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 a century and a third 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.

While Wanamaker's ceased to be a luxury store in the Hecht's era, it was always considered a "better" department store. However, 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. Retailers continue to reap significant monetary returns from the elegance of this unparalleled retail space. 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. [ [http://www.wanamakerorgan.com Friends of the Wanamaker Organ] ]

As a retail site, the Philadelphia flagship store has proved quite profitable for later tenants Lord & Taylor and now Macy's. Macy's, with a long tradition of parades and fireworks displays, has taken a prominent civic role in fostering historic Wanamaker traditions, especially the Wanamaker Organ and the Holiday Pageant of Lights Christmas Show.

Former locations

Delaware

*Philadelphia MSA/Newark - Christiana Mall "(converted to Hecht's 1995, Lord & Taylor 1997, closed 2006, now vacant)"
*Philadelphia MSA/Wilmington - Freestanding "(closed 1991, replaced by Christiana Mall store, now Accenture offices)"

New Jersey

*Philadelphia MSA/Deptford - Deptford Mall "(converted to Hecht's 1995, Strawbridge's 1997, closed 2006, now Boscov's)"
*Philadelphia MSA/Moorestown - Moorestown Mall "(converted to Hecht's 1995, building rebuilt and reopened as Strawbridge's 1999, converted to Macy's 2006)"

New York

*New York City - Freestanding building at 770 Broadway between 8th and 9th Streets, with over 1,100,000 square feet, it was the largest department store in the world when it opened, superseded by Macy's in the late 1920's. This building was designed by Daniel Burnham and the model for the more lavish Philadelphia store. On July 15. 1956 the old Wanamakers cast-iron building (originally the famous A.T. Stewart Store) across the street, between 9th and 10th, burnt down as it was being demolished; both locations were closing. The Burnham-designed 770 Broadway building now is a K-mart and offices.
*Yonkers - Cross County Shopping Center "(closed 1995, now Sears)"

Pennsylvania

*Allentown MSA/Whitehall - Lehigh Valley Mall "(converted to Hecht's 1995, Strawbridge's 1997, closed 2006, now Boscov's)"
*Harrisburg - Harrisburg East Mall (now Harrisburg Mall) "(converted to Lord & Taylor 1997, closed 2003, now Bass Pro Shops)"
*Philadelphia - Center City (Flagship) "(converted to Hecht's 1995, Lord & Taylor 1997, closed 2006, now Macy's)"
*Philadelphia - Roosevelt Mall "(former S. Klein, converted to Hecht's 1995, Strawbridge's 1997, Macy's 2006)"
*Philadelphia MSA/Jenkintown - Freestanding - 168,000 sq ft "(converted to Hecht's 1995, closed 1997, now Noble Town Center)"
*Philadelphia MSA/King of Prussia - The Plaza at King of Prussia "(converted to Hecht's 1995, Strawbridge's 1997, Macy's 2006, closed 2007, currently empty)"
*Philadelphia MSA/Langhorne - Oxford Valley Mall "(converted to Hecht's 1995, Strawbridge's 1997, closed 2006, now Boscov's)"
*Philadelphia MSA/North Wales - Montgomery Mall "(converted to Hecht's 1995, Strawbridge's 1997, closed 2006, now Boscov's)"
*Philadelphia MSA/Springfield - Springfield Mall "(converted to Hecht's 1995, Strawbridge's 1997, closed 2006, site sold to Target)"
*Philadelphia MSA/Wynnewood - Wynnewood Shopping Center "(converted to Hecht's 1995, closed 1997, now Bed Bath & Beyond with a Genuardi's supermarket on the first floor.)"
*Reading - Berkshire Mall "(converted to Hecht's 1995, Strawbridge's 1997, closed 2002, now Boscov's)"

Christmas Light Show

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.

The Christmas Light Show is continued annually by Macy's, from the day after Thanksgiving until New Year's Eve. The 15-minute show runs every hour on the hour from 10am-8pm. Current information is available by calling 215-241-9000.

For decades, the "voice", or narrator, of the show was John Facenda, known to Philadelphians for decades reporting the news on radio and television. To American football fans he was the original voice of NFL Films. His voice made "Christmas in the Grand Tradition" come to life. Beginning in 2006, Julie Andrews became the show narrator.

Also in 2006, the Santa Express Train at the top of the Grand Court returned. In 2007, the entire Light Show was completely modernized and rebuilt on new lighter materials with LED lighting. In 2008, a new Magic Christmas Tree with LED lights will debut. However, due to safety concerns and logistical issues, the dancing water fountains have been retired and will not return.

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 has been restored and is currently operated 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 1400 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 for John Wanamaker's promotion of temperance causes, alcohol was not served in the Tea Room until after the family trust sold the store.

There is also a more recently opened balcony cafe on the third floor facing the Grand Court, where shoppers can hear the Wanamaker Organ as they dine.

Unique features

* Ground floor: Huge eagle statue in the Grand Court; for many decades, Philadelphians would agree to "meet me at the eagle at Wanamaker's".Fact|date=May 2008
* 3rd floor: Egyptian Hall auditorium behind the executive offices, also a Greek Hall auditorium
* 8th floor: toy department had a monorail for the kids that traveled around the entire department, camera dept, piano and organ dept
* 9th floor: Crystal Tea Room
* 10th floor: in-house physician and nurses
* Sub-floors: post office, lost and found, shoe repair
* Radio broadcasting station
* Model house on the furniture floor
* Home of the world's largest playable pipe organ

ee also

* Wanamaker Grand Organ
* Wanamaker Mile
* Millrose Games

Wanamaker's in the Movies and Theatre

* In Brian DePalma's 1981 film "Blow Out", John Travolta's character Jack Terry, crashes a Jeep into a display window of Wanamaker's after driving through City Hall center courtyard in a chase scene.

* In 1987, the Philadelphia Wanamaker's flagship store was featured—under the name Prince & Co.—in the film comedy "Mannequin" and its sequel "Mannequin 2: On The Move".

* Wanamaker's was also featured in the 1995 film "Twelve Monkeys", though its appearance is anachronistic, as the film is set in 1996, a year after the chain had been folded into Hecht's. Wanamaker's had still been trading under that name when the movie was filmed in 1994-1995.

*Philip Barry's 1938 play, The Philadelphia Story includes the following dialogue: Liz:Use the word 'Wanamaker' in a sentence. Mike: OK, I'll bite. Liz: I met a girl this morning. I hate her but I --. Mike: All right, I get you. But you're wrong.

Further reading

*Herbert Ershkowitz "John Wanamaker: Philadelphia Merchant" (Signpost Biographies-Da Capo Press (May 21, 1999))
*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

References

External links and sources

* [http://www.maykuth.com/Archives/wana95.htm John Wanamaker: A retailing innovator]
* [http://www.wanamakerorgan.com/facts.html Wanamaker Store "Firsts"]
* [http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/theymadeamerica/whomade/wanamaker_hi.html Who Made America? (John Wanamaker, Innovator)]
* [http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2004/101/11.0.html John Wanamaker's role in providing the Grand Depot for Christian evangelist D. L. Moody's revival meetings]
* [http://www1.mayco.com/common/investorHistory.jsp About May - Company History]
* [http://www.weddings-delval.com/crystaltearoom/ Crystal Tea Room today]
* [http://cbs3.com/video/?id=16351@kyw.dayport.com Video Clip 1991]
* [http://cbs3.com/video/?id=18748@kyw.dayport.com Video Clip 1995]
* [http://www2.delawareonline.com/newsjournal/capano/bottomline.html Capano ownership of old Wanamaker bldg]


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