SEARS USA - Remembering America's Favorite Store
Ойын-сауық
A Fond Look Back at the Golden Age of SEARS...
Dive into the captivating story of Sears, Roebuck, and Co., an American institution that defined the retail landscape for over a century. From its humble beginnings as a mail-order watch company in 1893 to becoming the largest retailer in the world, Sears was synonymous with the American Dream, shaping consumer culture and revolutionizing the way we shop.
Discover how the Sears catalog, once known as "the Consumer's Bible," brought a world of products to the doorsteps of American families, democratizing shopping and transforming Sears into a household name.
Witness the golden era of Sears in the mid-20th century, when it dominated the retail market with its innovative business strategies, quality products, and a customer-first approach. From the legendary Craftsman tools and Kenmore appliances to the iconic Sears Tower, the company's impact on American life was unparalleled.
Join us as we pay tribute to Sears, Roebuck, and Co.-a company that once captured the hearts of American shoppers and left an indelible mark on the retail world. Whether you're a history enthusiast, a retail aficionado, or someone fascinated by the stories of American enterprise, this video is a must-watch exploration of the legacy of Sears and what the future may hold for retail in America.
Thanks for joining me in The History Lounge,
- Kevin
#sears #lifeinamerica #nostalgia
Пікірлер: 879
Sears had Craftsman (not today’s cheap craftsman knockoffs) excellent Kenmore appliances, high quality clothing, everything you could ask for. Walmart will never hold a candle up to what Sears was.
@LurdesRamos-vq7lx
Ай бұрын
China made now day's the USA are t👀 Lazy too make anything here in the "*USA*" any more they are to busy being "*WOKE*" 👈. 🤨
@anthonytripp2251
Ай бұрын
Those Craftsman tool are like gold
@okd521
Ай бұрын
Craftsman was guaranteed for life!
@EmilyTienne
Ай бұрын
@@okd521 Absolutely, it was. If you snapped a wrench doing something stupid, they’d replace it.
@okd521
Ай бұрын
@@EmilyTienne I had a Craftsman reversible screwdriver for 15 years that showed no sign of wear other than the Craftsman insignia had worn off the handle. One time a buddy was using it as a chisel to hammer on, I couldn't rip it away from his hands fast enough!
The Wish Book. Every Christmas was made magical by that enormous Sears catalog, and all of the toys and gifts inside of it. Every year.
@gobbletegook
Ай бұрын
And to think that they were free! Millions of them were on semi's to drop them off at the stores (not to mention their regular catalogs and specialty ones). You could not afford the cost to print stuff like that today
@creatinotionchannel2680
Ай бұрын
I loved these growing up in the 70s
@JackFlemingFan1
Ай бұрын
As a child the Sears Wish Book was highly sought and fought over by my sisters and myself to see who get a hold of it and keep it the longest.
@Gogogordy1
29 күн бұрын
Proof positive that “the bigger they are, the harder they fall” is more than an old cliche’. I often say this today about businesses such as today’s McDonalds, and even Amazon…
@SunnyIlha
25 күн бұрын
The hard cotton corduroy long pants with the one steel button. The Wish Book had them. The pants would last through 4-5 older siblings hand-me-downs, those were so well constructed.
I remember looking through the catalogs when I was a little boy trying to see what toy I wanted for Christmas. No other child will ever have that happy memory nowadays.
@rich1891
Ай бұрын
Me too
@JeffKopis
Ай бұрын
I remember when I was 12, looking at women's underwear in the catalogs 🤣
@gobbletegook
Ай бұрын
@@JeffKopis How do you think we learned back then? LOL! 🐖
@eyeshalfwayopeneyeshalfway2603
Ай бұрын
Yes - the catalog viewing was as much fun as getting anything from it or the store itself. Spent a lot of time looking at things.
@wesbittick4567
Ай бұрын
Those were the best day as a kid .
Imagine that. Shutting down your catalog department just as you were capable of being in a position that Amazon is today.
@1954shadow
Ай бұрын
Good point!
@CoconutDreams123
Ай бұрын
@shanesmith6941 I thought the exact, same thing, Shane. What a shame.
@1954shadow
Ай бұрын
@@CoconutDreams123 I worked at the Western Auto HQ for 21 years. Sears bought WA and it was a really bumpy ride all the way u til 1998, when Sears sold WA to Advance Auto and that was the end of my time with, WA.. The management of Sears, could not run a hot dog stand.
@MrSloika
Ай бұрын
It wasn't just Sears. Many longtime business owners outright refused to have anything to do with the internet. I had been out a college a few years when the internet became available to the public. I was interested in getting involved in online retailing, but didn't want to start from scratch. I knew a woman who ran a success outdoor/camping retail store. I offered to set up her business with a online site for very little money and was surprised by her reaction. She didn't want anything to do with the internet and treated me like I was a grifter. After I made the offer she badmouthed me to people behind my back. A few years later she began complaining that people walked into her store, checked out the merchandise, left without buying and ordered the same items online. Eventually she began confronting people who left her store without making a purchase. Her business declined to the point where she could not even sell it and she ended up 'retiring'. The building where she ran her business was vacant for a number of years until it was taken over by an online retailer.
@UmmYeahOk
Ай бұрын
@@MrSloikawhile your case involved someone who seemed to be afraid of the scary internet, because yes, what person would give over their banking info to some stranger online? (Seriously something my mom said, though is all about Amazon and online banking now) Some companies simply could NOT invest in an online store. Due to vulture capitalism, companies like Sears, K-Mart, Service Merchandise, and even Toys R Us did not have the funds to invest in an online store at the time. And by the time they had a decent site, it was too late, and more of a “this is what we carry” type of site. I remember once getting in trouble at a Toys R Us back in 2003 because I was taking pictures of various merchandise. They considered it to be a security threat, like I was casing the joint. I politely explained what century this was, and how this is what the future will be like. People taking photos of products, so that they could show others what they want for their birthday or Christmas. But if it’s an unwritten store policy, then there was nothing else I could do. I walked out, and didn’t set foot in it for 7 years. That store closed 13 years later with the ability to purchase products online for pick up only, subleasing sections of the store to Lego, Claire’s, and FAO Swartz.
Their Kenmore brand was outstanding.
@21millionreasons10
Ай бұрын
I still have a kenmore washing machine. My kenmore fridge finally gave up a few years back.
@googleusergp
Ай бұрын
@@21millionreasons10 Unless the compressor or sealed system went, it would have been worth fixing. Not much to go wrong with a fridge, and what does go wrong is usually easily repaired. I've repaired several in my lifetime for myself, other family and friends.
@user-wm4mb8vu5r
Ай бұрын
I still have a Kenmore dryer. I miss Sears
@googleusergp
Ай бұрын
@@user-wm4mb8vu5r My grandparents had a Kenmore (made by Whirlpool) washer and dryer they bought in 1975. I went with them to buy it as a kid and my uncle's neighbor was the manager of the local Sears store. Those machines only needed one repair each, and I did both myself for less than $70 in parts. I was well into my 30s when I repaired those machines. When it came time to sell the house after their passing, I sold the dryer for what they paid for it in 1975. It still worked like new. The washer was done because the tenants we had in the house for a time ruined it, so we threw them out, three kids and all. I then parted the machine out and sold the good parts it had left. Even the "end of cycle" buzzer on the dryer still worked. The buyer heard it run for 10 seconds and said, "I'll take it for your asking price". They were great machines and a breeze to fix.
@michaelbarry8373
Ай бұрын
@@user-wm4mb8vu5r I still have a Kenmore dehumidifier from 1991, still working, I did have to replace the humidistat though. And a 1985 microwave oven that lasted until 2014
I miss Sears so much. Sears was part of my childhood and early adult life. Loved the Craftsman tool line.
@ytujackclough
20 күн бұрын
Same here!
@waynemerlo7448
20 күн бұрын
@@ytujackclough I wish I had a time machine to go back to the 70's and 80's.
@eazyduzzit6626
13 күн бұрын
I loved walking through the tool dept. No matter how stressed I felt. Walking through those Craftsman tools would calm me down and make me feel good.
@waynemerlo7448
13 күн бұрын
@@eazyduzzit6626 Me too👍
@bryansteele832
12 күн бұрын
You miss what they were selling not the store itself. Make no mistake.
Sears had a great tool department.
@andyvonyeast332
Ай бұрын
The best! Craftsman Tools have fed my family for the last 30 years. Now I buy them (USA made only) on eBay. I wish I could take my son through the tool department the way that my Dad took me. Dad and I spent hours and thousands of dollars there together. Great times.
@TheHawaiiantiger
Ай бұрын
Agree!
@Kpd213
Ай бұрын
My dad was a carpenter and only bought Craftsman tools. He told me if a screwdriver handle breaks in five years, he could still return it no questions for a new one. Loved Sears.
@ScottDLR
Ай бұрын
I always enjoyed walking around the tool department and dreaming.
@JeffKopis
Ай бұрын
Back when Craftsman tools were well made, in America. I still have all my dad's from the 60's, 70s, and 80s.
My wife and I both worked at Sears. I got my first rifle from Sears. I have never understood how the first "catalog mail order giant" could have missed out on today's online business model. My cousin's wife also worked in the candy counter. Sears should be the monster retail giant of today!!
@gobbletegook
Ай бұрын
The idiots could not think that far ahead. They had everything in place with their catalog empire. Boggles the mind every time I think about it.
@JeffKopis
Ай бұрын
Because OLD businessmen don't understand NEW technology. Blockbuster Video COULD have bought Netflix in 2007 for 50 million. Oops.
@UmmYeahOk
Ай бұрын
Don’t forget, Sears survived the Great Depression. But they couldn’t survive the recession? It was finances. Vulture capitalism! They couldn’t afford investing in an Amazon style website because they were too busy paying back the creditors that borrowed money from themselves to buy companies like Sears.
@joelstein4657
Ай бұрын
yep. Good old 20/20 hindsight.
@jeremypearson6852
Ай бұрын
Agree, they could have become what Amazon is today. It was really a lack of foresight by the company leaders. It took decades for them to build up the business and a fraction of time to lose it.
"Where America Shops".........I miss it.
16 сағат бұрын
Now "Where America doesn't shop. Where America can't even find one."
I can't imagine growing up without Sears in the 1960's and 1970's. That's where Santa was every Christmas. Who could forget salivating over the Sears Christmas catalogue with nearly half of the book dedicated to toys! We would rip the pages out and show Santa what we wanted him to bring. So many good memories. They had great soft-serve ice cream too.
@frakte
Ай бұрын
I have great memories of going to Sears as a child and smelling the aroma of warm cashews from the candy counter just inside - and often going home with a bag of Swedish fish. Good times.
My husband and I bought our first Christmas ornaments at Sears in 1973! I still have them
@MichaelSellers5691
Ай бұрын
Cool
@waderigsbee6923
Ай бұрын
I still have my manger i bought about that time,and the manger that i made.
@ericasklar4584
Ай бұрын
I love that you bought your xmas ornaments there. It gave me chills to read that. I remember my husband and I buying our sons crib there in the early 2000s. The first of our children. The store closed down soon after.
Put on your Sunday best kids, we're going to Sears!
@robinlanier6886
Ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@user-zv4ee1vi7t
Ай бұрын
Where's your shoes? We is going to Sears 😊
@akaLaBrujaRoja
Ай бұрын
🎶”Sunshine daaayyy!”🎶
@patriciahayes2664
Ай бұрын
Is that what your parents told you?
@PUNKMYVIDEO
Ай бұрын
@@patriciahayes2664 A quote from The Brady Bunch movie. My father worked for Allstate a Sears company. Ten percent off. It was his favorite store.
I still remember being 10 and getting a new pair of Sears Winner II tennis shoes! They were made by Converse and very closely resembled today's Chuck Taylors. The whole process was nothing like that of today. You went in the Sears shoe department, and the clerk had you stand on a metal contraption that measured your foot (remember those?). Then he went in the back and came out with your size and actually laced it on your foot! Then he asked if you wanted to wear your new shoes or your old ones and your parents paid for them. It was like being on another planet.
This brought tears, worked for Sears...miss those days dearly.
@czechmate6916
Ай бұрын
Same here. I worked there for eighteen years. I put a comment on here about my life with Sears.
@ScottGrammer
Ай бұрын
I worked in one of their regional service centers from 1998 - 2002. They were terribly managed.
@ScottDLR
Ай бұрын
I never worked there but the memories came flooding back - along with a knot in my throat.
@SimirJohnson
Ай бұрын
Worked there through high school and college. The absolute nicest people to work with who taught me quite a few of life’s lessons along the way. They were always flexible with the schedule so i could work around my classes and exams. I saw in the obituary a few months ago that my old boss had died.
@czechmate6916
Ай бұрын
@@ScottGrammer I also worked in the service center from February 1976 through May of 2002. We had a great service manager and after he retired we got an A hole and he came in around 1999 and things went to hell. He knew nothing about the service end he was a genuine pos pencil pusher and didn’t get along with anybody. After he finally drove it in the ground they closed the service center and subed out the service to A&E. I agree the whole company was being mismanaged every where.
My dad gave me a Craftsman hacksaw that he got in the 40's. I used it for a long time until a pin broke that held the blade on. In the catalog, they often had several to choose from which they categorized as "Good", "Better" and "Best." This hacksaw would have been a "Good." Anyway, in 1985 I took it to the local Sears and with no hassle at all they replaced it with a Craftsman "Best" one which I still have, still use, and is still guaranteed for life. I never hesitated to buy Sears Craftsman tools.
@g5flyr169
Ай бұрын
I still have some of my Dad’s Craftsman tools. They must be over 70 years old by now. I remember them being in his toolbox when I was a kid. I’m 68 now.
@randys6220
Ай бұрын
Sears had a long time "no questions asked" exchange warranty on their craftsman hand tools. That was why customers were willing to pay much more because they were known as high quality /durable hand tools with a no-hassle exchange policy with no receipt required. However, during their decline Sears reps started refusing some hand tool exchanges if based on their examination the rep determined the tool looked like it was abused such as marring on the surface or see any speck of rust on it or anything else they could come up with. I had a tool exchange refused on a ratchet because the Sears rep. simply claimed their ratchets do not break under normal usage, so I must have abused it somehow and it was handed back to me with the rep turning his back and walking away. After that I started going elsewhere for tools.
Some of my fondest memories are walking though the doors of Sears as a kid and being hit in the face with the smell of fresh popcorn and roasted peanuts then seeing all the bins of loose candy they'd scoop, weigh then put it in the paper bags. That was the good ole days. They tore down our local Sears store several years ago, very sad day. They ruined themselves though doing stupid stuff. The last time I went to Sears was to buy a washing machine with cash money and they wouldn't sell me one because I told them I didn't have a cell phone number so I bought it at Lowes.
@gobbletegook
Ай бұрын
The candy and popcorn was right next to the auto and tire center. It was one of the older stores ...not in the malls. It hid the smell of the oil, gas, and wet rubber when you first walked in
@SylviaSanchez-cl2eo
Ай бұрын
Next time just make up a number.
@jeremypearson6852
Ай бұрын
The next generation won’t even know the word Sears, just like land lines!
@stevespatola763
Ай бұрын
I live in Stockton, CA, where our store is still in business. It opened Dec 64 to anchor Weberstoen Mall. As a copyboy for another icon, the Stockton Record, now almost extinct, I delivered many tearsheets and ad copy to them. I bought furniture and appliances for my home. Most of my home shop is outfitted with Craftsman hand and power tools. My sabresaw just died after 40 years. I hope to find another there, but it is likely made in China. To see the once flush aisles of products, I see things spread out to take up floor space. The story is correct to blame Sears management for failing to convert the catalog to internet sales, and worse yet, the shady merging with K-Mart. K-Mart leveraged the employee pension plan to buy Sears. Soon, K-Mart went bankrupt, employees lost pensions, and the stores lost financial reserves and began a rapid decline. K-Mart, IMO, was a sleazy, cheapskate run chain of stores. I feel no loss for their demise. For Sears and Montgomery Wards, another story that parallels Sears, we have all lost some of America. Sears' first store in Stockton was next to the railroad tracks just outside of the downtown area. Great for stocking the store. I got my clothes and first bike from that store. My mother made custom draperies on contract with Sears. She could get an employee discount, which was great for us kids. The huge merger craze of the 90's led many a CEO to join the frenzy of bank consolidations and other mergers thinking they were a smart businessman. No, they screwed the employees mainly, made huge dividends and bonuses for themselves, and they anonymously faded into history. Only the facades on the malls remind us of their evil and greedy interests. Who is next, we can only speculate.
@jodihepler6202
Ай бұрын
I still have the washer I bought from Sears shortly before it closed.
As a kid growing up in the 1960s and 1970s I couldn't wait for their annual Christmas wishbook.
Sears was the Holy Grail of department stores 😊
@vercopolis
Ай бұрын
Best was up there too.
My parents always took us to sears before school started .To get our new school cloths . So many memories !!
@andrewlisenby9693
11 күн бұрын
Mama ordered ours from Sears. I can still remember the order envelope with the words "Please Rush" in capital letters.
@doug2078
11 күн бұрын
Cool !! 👍@@andrewlisenby9693
As a child, we would go to Sears once a month on Saturday night. My mom would get me a hot dog and a Hires root beer. She would do her shopping and I'd go downstairs to the toy department. We'd get home in time to watch Gilligan's Island. Good memories 😆
Just 20 years ago, a world without Sears, Kmart, or JC Penney was unimaginable to me. Try to imagine a world without Walmart, or McDonalds.
@scottrayhons2537
12 күн бұрын
Keep voting for democrats and you won't see anything left of this country!
Growing up in the 1950s, I was very familiar with how great it used to be to shop there. I remember the Sear's Catalog and how I couldn't wait to go through it when it came. The "Christmas" edition was something the whole family loved. My parents bought their Appliances, my school clothes, and my dad bought his first power mower there and would even get tires in the years later. It was so much fun to shop there. The candy department was always a must stop by. The internet has taken away that way of life. K-Mart was the beginning of the end of Sears. K-Mart's low-end products were almost an embarrassment.
@ronhoover5516
Ай бұрын
Agree about KMart. For some reason I always thought when Sears began to introduce carts in their stores they lost something. The Lands End clothing was a mistake also.
@ericknoblauch9195
Ай бұрын
Kmart management was an even bigger embarrassment. When Kmart bought Sears they started to manage it. It started sinking. Sears could have survived without Kmart. Kmart sold crap. We called it Krap Mart, and Kame Apart. Everything that came from Kmart came apart. After merging the quality of merchandise at Sears declined, and it became more of the same stuff you could buy at Kmart. Sears did have some good clothing lines before merging with Kmart. After the merger Sears clothing was cheap poor quality, and the good brands disappeared.
@Dadsezso
Ай бұрын
@fob1xxl I was a kid in the 50s and 60s also. Rest assured there was no other appliance and tool choices on the planet for my parents than Kenmore and Craftsman. It is sad to see what was once an icon of American retail sales, disappear into memories.
@rp9674
Ай бұрын
The candy counter!
@olehippy13
Ай бұрын
we used to always hit the candy counter. My favorite was Malted Milk Balls. My brother and I would eat so many of them we would start to get sick of them... but not for long.... we'd throw them at each... then later, we would be back eating them again. I still love them from time to time to this day. And I'm 71 years old. Smilin😊
Did you see that beautiful cursive spelling. 😊 How nice the word Sears written out in cursive. Children of today have no idea how to write like that 🤔🤦♂️ how I remember. Sears and Roebuck ❤
@pjesf
Ай бұрын
Sadly it’s not only children. I used to have gorgeous penmanship (remember that word?) but lack of practice has led to a steep decline 😕
@timlabell
Ай бұрын
@@pjesf yes I do. 🙋♂️
@djbille4283
Ай бұрын
Yes, it was so mid-century modern and nostalgic too. So sad when they switched to the generic, boring, block lettering 😢
@oldngood190
19 күн бұрын
@@claudialupper For years, I would have to read the birthday card from my mom to her granddaughter, because she couldn't read cursive.
@scottmarcil5050
11 күн бұрын
I don't understand how you could not have a signature these days 🤨
Worked for Sears, absolutely loved it. The real downfall started when they sold the credit card division, which was making money. Then came "Fast Eddie ". Proud to be from Sears Hardware #5181!
@AaronHeath-rd8qs
Ай бұрын
I completely agree. I started working there a couple years before Eddie Lambert bought them in 2005 and it was like the difference between night and day after he bought Sears. He completely sabotaged them buy selling off Lands End and selling the licensing of all of their major brands (Craftsman and Kenmore)
@robinalecia7554
22 күн бұрын
Oh wow I worked for Sears when I was about 17 in the big catalog dept in Philadelphia on Roosevelt Blvd and I got laid off Then May years later 2011 I got hired again at Sears in Texas Pasadena . Lawn and garden I loved it both times . I miss Sears I stayed there for almost 10years this time , and I truly miss the place Sears was an American Icon
Sears died from the same thing that killed Borders - astonishingly inept management. It is a real shame that nobody bought Kenmore. My mother bought a Kenmore dryer in 1980, and it was still going strong when she sold her house in 2021. Good that Craftsman and Die Hard were rescued, because both offered superior products. By the way, Sears, we Chicagoans will stubbornly continue to call the skyscraper Sears Tower no matter the reality.
@jayl8034
Ай бұрын
Sears tried to "lock" certain things they thought had value. A lot of times they were right; however nothing lasts forever. They "locked" Whirlpool and made it their Kenmore brand. I have a series 70 doing clothes today. The "diehard" Battery was produced by Gould and it was new technology requiring no water to be added to the cells in the battery. I imagine they did the same thing with "Craftsman tools", But I don't know who that was. Sears literally had everything!
@katana258
Ай бұрын
same as montgromy wards every wrong they did
@Namratiug
28 күн бұрын
Yes, they ended up with inept and incompetent management 100%.
We had a Sears about 5 blocks from my house. It was not far from my high school. When school lunch sucked, I would eat at Sears.
I was a lifelong customer of Sears appliances, tools, and yard equipment and still own many of them. I worked in the catalog dept for several years in high school during the 70s and absolutely loved Sears. It's such a shame they ran the store into the ground. If Sears had moved into strip centers focused on the 3 core products above, I think they'd still be going strong.
@D-Fens_1632
Ай бұрын
Aw man, that's like working for Santa! Yeah they had quality tools, it's surprising they didn't ditch the other retail goods and focus on that stuff, probably could have stayed a name in the power tool game.
The late Lowell George of Little Feat used an 11/16 Craftsman spark plug socket for his guitar slide because if he lost it "every town had a Sears but not every town had a music store."
@williambozynski1176
Ай бұрын
13/16"
For many years, Sears advertising slogan was "Sears, Where America Shops." Sadly no more. 😢😢 Shutting down their catalog department in 1993 was a huge mistake. Sears already had the infrastructure to become Amazon before Amazon was even thought of.
@czechmate6916
Ай бұрын
I agree
Christmas and the Sears catalog. Talk about fond childhood memories. Also, during this whole video, I could smell the candy and popcorn. 😋
Yes, Sear's & Roebuck sold EVERYthing, and their paint was THE BEST! In 1947 my dad was killed in a mid-air collision and Mama bought a white Carrara marble headstone from Sear's. As a child, one of my favorite entertainments was leafing thru the Sear's & Roebuck catalog. For Birthday and Christmas, Mama gave me a dollar figure I could 'spend' picking out what I wanted. Our first radial tires were Sear's branded Michelon tires in 1967, which were on every one of our cars into the 1990's. SO sad Sear's is gone.
Lived in a Sears house in Wiggletown, NY USA. Craftsman tools were arguably the best made in the USA.
@charleholst3881
19 күн бұрын
When I was in the Air Force (late 70s), all of our hand tools were Craftsman. We were working on multimillion dollar aircraft, so our tools had to be the best.
I remember my sisters and I would get so happy when our school clothes would finally arrive from Sears via the mail. Always C.O.D... Ahh, the 70's. I miss you....
As I like to say, Sears was the Amazon of the 20th century. My German immigrant father worked for Sears from 1958-87 servicing televisions, stereos and other electronics, all under the Sears or Silvertone store brands. He was paid enough to sustain the whole family without my mother having to have a full-time job. With my dad's employee discount we had everything Sears in our house, down to the Toughskins and Adidas "Winner" knockoff sneakers I wore. And we'd get the Christmas catalogs early, in September.
This was the BEST historical presentation from the many Sears videos I haved viewed. Great narration, great job.🏆
When I was a chlld (1950s-60s), our parents would leave us (and other children) in the TV section while they shopped elsewhere in the store. There was no danger then of child-snatching - we were perfectly safe! I remember Christmas time, when a whole section of the store, next to the Catalog department, was turned into a Santa extravaganza - electric trains, cowboy/cowgirl paraphernalia, games, dolls, puzzles, toy trucks - you name it! When I grew up, I worked in the Credit Department, where the SRC and EP credit accounts (and another I can't remember) were available for people with every kind of budget. Salesmen and women peopled each department, and each knew his or her inventory thoroughly. Full-time employees could participate in owning part of the company, a plan in which I participated. It was a grand place to visit, to shop, and ultimately to work in, before family issues led me elsewhere Those were the days!
@czechmate6916
Ай бұрын
It’s so nice that we still have great memories and they didn’t take that away. I also worked there and joined in their profit sharing. Those were the best years of my career.
@johnbrowneyes7534
Ай бұрын
Yes. I’d wander around the toy department or the record department while my mother shopped.
@lightningblue648
Ай бұрын
Best years of my life were the years at Sears.
@pjesf
Ай бұрын
Christmas or no, there was always a tinge of excitement about going to Sears Roebuck ❤
Sears was the go to store for tools, appliances, and car battery's! For kids the toy section was pure joy and the Wishbook was a mail day sensation!!! Went to the last days our Sears when it was still open, as I had been going to that store ever since I was a kid in the 1960's.
I sooooo miss Sears Roebuck. I grew up in Sears in the 60s, going to work with my Mom. Great times.
@pjesf
Ай бұрын
Even if you hadn’t mentioned a time period I would have recognized it instantly because of the “Roebuck”. That’s also how I remember it 👍🏻
Working for Sears was a source of pride for the employees.
@scarygary-qq1pj
29 күн бұрын
No it wasn't.
Sears was our Amazon growing up, we lived for the Christmas Sears catalog every Christmas in the 70s, 80;s and some 90's. We would spend hours going through the pages and hoping we would get it all for Christmas.
It was always my favorite store and the family’s favorite store growing up. We bought just about everything we owned from Sears. Then I went to work for Sears and worked there for eighteen years before they started letting full time employees go. Those were the best days of my career I enjoyed every minute working there. It was like an extended family. I will always remember the smell of candy, popcorn,and peanuts in the store and buying some to keep my energy up. Those were the days. It was a great place to be at Christmas time too.
I loved shopping at Sears when I was a kid in the 1970's. Always heading to the candy counter. I was happy when the Xmas catalog came in the mail,checking the toys I wanted. Kids today missed out on a great time.
@BrodyJoeandBriars
Ай бұрын
Yes, as a kid, I couldn't go to Sears without getting malted milk balls from the candy counter!
Lil Fast Eddie Lampert, last CEO killed SEARS….firmer SEARS employee. Nice story work-up in this video 👍🏻
@czechmate6916
Ай бұрын
Yes he did but he had help to.
Growing up in the 60's it was always a treat to visit the Sears store in downtown Trenton NJ with my parents. Years later the same building became the regional center for the DMV for the State of NJ.
Oh those catalogs, they were popular in the outhouses of America 🇺🇸
@czechmate6916
Ай бұрын
😆😂🤣yes they were
At our Sears, the second you walked in the door, the aroma of roasted, salted cashews met you. No matter what else we purchased, we ALWAYS bought a bag of cashews.
I miss Sears for their appliances, tools and garden equipment. I walked in to JC Penney the other day and I’m glad its still here. Great shopping experience.
OUTSTANDING PRODUCTION. THANK YOU FOR SHARING. BRINGS BACK SO MANY FOND MEMORIES.
My mom used to take us shopping at Sears in the 60s. She would by patterns and fabric to make her own clothes. Our bonus was that our store had a soda fountain, so we always got ice cream. I still have my first set of Craftsman sockets that my folks gave me for my 14th birthday (60 years ago). Great memories.
Had my very first charge account, what was called a revolving charge account, at Sears. Loved that store
The Sears store in the Southridge shopping center in Milwaukee had a small candy counter with the most awesome double dipped chocolate covered peanuts. They really were doubled dipped with a chocolate coating so thick they looked like large marbles. Every year on my birthday I used to stop and buy a pound or two.
@gobbletegook
Ай бұрын
Remember the Sears restaurant on the West side? It had those white concrete canopies when you entered and before the mall entrance...long before food courts (The area later became the lawn and garden area/tools). And the majority of Die Hard batteries were built in Glendale at the old Globe Union (now Johnson Controls), They were shipped nationwide on the rail lines that were behind it ,,,and are now gone...turned into a bike trail behind them).
I'll always have fond memories of Sears. As a child of the 1960s, I remember mom loading my brothers and me into the station wagon to go shopping at Sears for school clothes for the new fall year. We always made a B-line for the popcorn. As mom shopped, I'd snuck over to the toy section and dreamed of the upcoming Christmas Season. It was truly an adventure for us.
@289cobra9
Ай бұрын
Just like me. I grew up in the 70's. 62 today. Miss Sears.
It’s unfortunate that Kenmore appliances are no longer being made. We purchased a refrigerator, washer and dryer when we bought our first new home. They survived a move from California to Texas and then back to California a few years later and lasted years longer than any appliance on the market today would last. Sears was a great go to store that carried everything you might possibly need, sort of like the old general stores but on a huge scale. I remember going to Sears as a child with my Mom and smelling the freshly made popcorn they sold. It’s sad to see the way retail in the US has gone, customer service, quality and reasonable pricing have all gone out the window. Would love to see some of the valued customer mentality on display in the retail establishments today.
@peacefuldaizy5717
Ай бұрын
Kenmore still makes appliances. Transformco owned the Kenmore brand; this is the same company that owns Sears and KMart.
I feel as Sears is to retail stores as Oldsmobile was to the car industry.😮
@Jerry-ok8gj
Ай бұрын
Amen! I only drove Oldsmobile for 30 years. Can't believe they're gone too!
@googleusergp
Ай бұрын
@@Jerry-ok8gj One of the most solid cars out there. I have owned (and still do own) several.
@lightningblue648
Ай бұрын
I agree so much with the comparison with Oldsmobile. I think it’s sad to see businesses that were the bedrock of middle class America like Oldsmobile, Sears, Mercury, Montgomery Ward, Pontiac, Plymouth, etc. all die off in such a short time period. They all represented a step above the Walmart and Chevrolet lifestyles.
@deznootz5109
Ай бұрын
@@lightningblue648 that and cutting corners/quality, and corporate greed..
Many thanks to The History Lounge for this nostalgic video. I'm 74 yo and it brought back many wonderful memories. Kudos.
I have always loved Sears, my first credit purchase was at a Sears store in Sacramento, CA in 1961. I have never forgotten how much I appreciated having credit at Sears. Credit was very helpful in purchasing school clothes for my kids on credit through the years. I never missed a payment on my Sears account and I have always been proud of that.
I loved shopping at Sears...😊
@scarygary-qq1pj
29 күн бұрын
No you didn't.
When I was a kid I would thumb through the Sears Christmas wish book for hours on end, looking at all the wonderful toys I couldn't afford - but oh man did I love Sears
The trip to Sears in The Brady Bunch Movie was brilliant. Sears was everything back then.
Sears in the local mall was a one - stop shop for everything from A to Z...then grab a bite in the mall food court...I miss the Craftsman brand quality and guarantee...😢
I grew up with Sears, and various bands they sold! I was always interested because My Grandfather gave Me a reproduction of the 1900 Sears and Roebuck Catalog, the same year He was born, as He palso grew up with Sears! There were so many items You could order in 1900, and the prices!!! I gradually saw Sears fade away like Kmart, JC Penneys and others with the changing retail landscape.i remember Sears Catalogs in the 80s, as We kept a couple in the Outhouse to pass the time and a few pages would occasionally come in handy when the Toilet Paper was running short (I was living in the Country then)
Sears used to be really great store. It started going downhill in the 1990's - a classic case of management running a company into the ground. The products were high quality and you could buy repair parts for anything they sold in their dedicated parts department.
Our local Sears in Milwaukee was once the largest store outside of Chicago. It was a stand alone store (no malls back then) called "Sears City" at one point. And back then, you bought every thing from them. No big box stores back then until the very late 80's or early 1990's or so in our areas. And I remember the store in Oak Brook Il. that you have a picture of. It was like you were transported to some place like Palm Springs, or another planet with the curved futuristic looking concrete roof. Thanx for the old photos.
Sears was a American Icon!
They were literally all set up to become what Amazon is today. They had nationwide catalog distribution centers, delivery vehicles and a huge customer base plus decades of experience in the mail order biz. All they needed was a CEO who knew to focus on the internet and they would have been even bigger than they were in the 50’s and 60’s. Eddie zigged when he should’ve zagged!
For the longest time there was a Sears in the Ala Moana Shopping Center and I used to go there for all my clothes and automotive needs.
Sears Auto centers, and even repair centers to bring your Sears TV or Lawnmower to for repair!
Every time I pass the closed Sears store near me, I wish that it was open. For years I thought that I would like to work there part time when I retired. So many memories. 🙂
I’ve got a 1936 Sears Supertone guitar still in the box it came in. It has 5 of the 6 original black Diamond strings on it. Sears glued decorative ads from the catalog to the box.
I remember walking into the store and the scent of fresh popcorn and a counter with all kinds of delicious candy...we loved going to that store...they had so many things to buy!
I was in a resale shop a few hours ago to buy a pair of walking shoes. I took once last look at the footwear displays when I noticed some house slippers. It was then I remembered I had purchased and stored away several pairs of black suede moccasins suitable for street wear, sensing it would the last time I'd be able to find them at a reasonable price. They were from Sears.
Spent a lot of time in Sears, down town Peoria Illinois, bought several items there, they later moved to Northwoods Mall in Peoria ., sears is now gone, was a great store in it's day!
All those “Big Boxes” will always be better than the net.
@scarygary-qq1pj
29 күн бұрын
No they won't.
Great work! Sooo interesting! So much I didn't know about the history of the Sears empire. I have many fond memories of compiling my Christmas wish list from the Sears catalog. Makes me want to run out and experience it while I still can, and tell the people who work there everything I learned from this video! 👍
My uncle's neighbor (who we call Uncle Mike, a family friend) managed three separate Sears from 1953 to 1993. Many items in my house (and those of relatives) came from Sears. About three years ago, he gave me a snowblower that he bought there after he retired. 95% of my tool collection is Sears Craftsman. I still have the receipt for the first set of sockets I bought in 1990. The set is 95% original with only a few items replaced in those 30+ years. Sears was the "go to" place for many things. This same uncle also invested in the company as employees were encouraged to do. I recently spoke to him and he spoke fondly of his time at Sears, but not Mr. Lampert. I think if Sears had continued on a different path, they'd still be a formidable force in retail today.
Growing up as a Gen X kid getting that catalog and looking through it or going to Sears with my family was always fun. Amazon and other online shopping sites just don't have that nostalgic vibe Sears did. Maybe they will in the future. Plus back then I don't remember people getting their Sears packages stolen off their front porches like today.
Thank you.
Growing up in the 80s I remember getting my clothes there and Colecovision. The catalog was awesome around Christmas for the wishlist items.
I go past a defunct Sears in Federal Way, WA every Saturday on the bus. I visited it a few times in the 00's before it went belly up a few years ago, just for nostagia's sake, remembering the Sears' of my child and early adulthood in El Monte and Azusa, CA.
Great time machine! Great memories 1968. Sub.👍
@scarygary-qq1pj
29 күн бұрын
No they weren't.
Sears was one of my family's favorite stores. I remember having "tough-skin" jeans with reinforced knees as a kid. The last thing I bought at Sears was my washer/dryer Kenmore brand. The demise of Sears was just another sign, that the "Golden Age" of the America that I and my father knew was over...😢
Our Sears in the early 60's had an elevator with nicest sounding chime. I also vividly remember the smell of the roasting nuts.
My uncle was a department manager at our local Sears store in the Del Amo Shopping Center in Torrance, CA. I remember going there with my parents in the 1950s through 70s.
Growing up in the 60s, as my mother shopped in the fabrics department, I remember sitting by the counter perusing the pattern catalogs that were available. I remember my sister and I circling all the stuff we'd like to have from the Sears catalog when we were kids. My parents had Kenmore appliances at home because its service contract was amazing and very reliable, and I remember buying my first Kenmore washing machine from Sears as a newlywed in 1973. I have wonderful memories of Sears and was very sad when, as an adult, I witnessed its demise. That CEO who ruined Sears is probably somewhere sitting pretty with millions of dollars while a beloved store died due to his mismanagement.
I remember getting a Hoola hoop at Sears in 1958 for a dime.
@richardsabino7110
Ай бұрын
No way it was a dime. I went to May's Department store and they were exactly $1.04 . Remember that well.
@JohnSmith-cf4gn
Ай бұрын
@@richardsabino7110 Hey Einstein, I was there at a tent sale out front. We're you there in 1958?? Go far away and troll troll troll away.
Happy to report Sears is still open in Merida Mexico Going strong and considered a quality store
Still have my made in USA Craftsman tools. Most of them are older than some of the kids in my shop. Always got the latest tool catalog because there's always something new I needed to have just to have it.
@g5flyr169
Ай бұрын
Albert, I have Craftsman tools that are 70 years old or older and they’re still going strong! They were my Dad’s. He worked for Sears in Philadelphia. I’m certain of the age of those tools because I’m 68 and I can’t remember them not being in Dad’s toolbox.
Sadly miss that store. As a kid growing up in the 1960’s I always looked forward to getting the toy catalog at Christmas time. As an adult I loved walking through the tool sections and deciding which tool I needed next :-)
I loved SEARS …. Very good memories of shopping …even with my parents.
I was just remembering with my mom that Sears was the only place to find pistachios back then (I was a kid in the 70's). That candy section was heaven as a kid. Plus, every Christmas list was made by going through the Sears book.
Can't understand or will never understand how Sears and Penny's for that matter, lost out on the mail order (internet/online) business ! Sears Catalog sales were HUGE and yet they let the whole thing slip away through their fingers? 50 years head start on catalog sales(early model of online) and they have ended up with NOTHING ? Amazing !
@mjg263
Ай бұрын
IKR!!
@eyeshalfwayopeneyeshalfway2603
Ай бұрын
Maybe they were forced to close.
@peacefuldaizy5717
Ай бұрын
@eyeshalfwayopeneyeshalfway2603: If you research it, the stores and brand names were sold off, the money was invested into dividends, and the biggest shareholder was Eddie Lampert. Eddie made a lot of money off Sears and then bought it out of bankruptcy.
@gobbletegook
Ай бұрын
In the Milwaukee area, we had a JCPENNEY catalog distribution enter, and it was huge. Built alongside a freeway interchange for easy access, the massive parking lot was always full. I had friends in both high school and then college (1970's) that worked there...especially during the holidays. It also had corporation offices for things like data entry and key punch operations (remember those!). It was a 2 million-square-foot building located on 77 acres, and sold in 2018 for over $31 millions dollars when they finally closed it.
I remember my brother and I fighting over the Sears and Montgomery Ward's Christmas catalogs. Great memories.
Sears Toughskins - a staple in my childhood wardrobe. My parents would buy only those jeans. Respect for the fact that, although we were not rich, we always had everything we needed. RIP Dad and Mom ❤
I remember the store very well and yes shopped there!
@scarygary-qq1pj
29 күн бұрын
No you didn't.
In my family going to Sears was special. It’s when you wanted or needed something special. That would last and was made “good”. I miss Sears!
As a kid we loved when our mom got in the new catalog. It was a book of dreams and possibilities. It's a shame that they couldn't hold. Heck people were able to buy home kits. They were pretty amazing.
@scarygary-qq1pj
29 күн бұрын
No they weren't.
Loved the catalogue! We ordered from it a lot.
I have a wicker rocking chair I bought from Sears in the 1980's through the catalog. It's still in storage. Cindy
My mom and uncle worked at our local Sears which remained as a stand alone store until it's closing about 10 years ago. The building still stands. I remember as a kid getting a hot dog and popcorn which you ate while you shopped.
Those were days of shopping. My dad always bought tools and lawn mowers for Sear
@scarygary-qq1pj
29 күн бұрын
No he didn't.