At the end of every holiday season, I, along with millions of others exasperated celebrators begin to take stock of all the spending. Where did you let loose your holiday funds this year? If recent trends are any indication, most people did their shopping online.
Though brick-and-mortar stores saw many spenders as well, it seems likely that online shopping will continue to be a very viable and preferred choice for most shoppers. Though our online purchasing power has ramped up over the last few years, shopping meccas remain in many major cities, such as New York, Chicago, and San Francisco. These stores brought the spending community together to one location that was easy to navigate and convenient for drivers as well as public transportation riders.
They also helped set retail trends that continue to this day. Below is a bit of history about each. Many Philadelphians carry with them memories of shopping at these places. Feel free to share yours in the comments section below. John Wanamaker was a well-known merchant, entrepreneur, and lifelong resident of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
This store later became the flagship store, which eventually branched out into central and southeastern Pennsylvania. Wanamaker was at the forefront in many areas in retailing including merchandising, employee relations and advertising.
In , flagship store employee Frederick Yost, also a visual merchandiser and advertiser created the Christmas Light Show that included lighted character timed to an audio recording. Strawbridge and Clothier —Market Street, between 8 th and 9 th streets.
This major department store began as a small dry goods store founded by Justus C. Strawbridge born , an enterprising young Quaker from Mount Holly, New Jersey, in in a rented three-story building at 8th and Market streets in Philadelphia.
He also addressed the disappointed employees. Generally pleasant, consistently principled, and wired for collaboration, Mr. Clothier also excelled for 40 years as an attorney at Dechert for trust and estate cases. He was a good listener and had a knack for resolving conflict. He taught Sunday school lessons to sixth graders at the Church of the Redeemer in Bryn Mawr for 15 years and served as a senior church official. Born July 14, , in Philadelphia, Mr. Clothier attended Chestnut Hill Academy and graduated from St.
He graduated with a degree in Middle Eastern studies from Princeton University in and from law school at the University of Pennsylvania in After four decades, he retired from Dechert in the late s. It is with deep sorrow that we announce the death of Isaac H. Clothier IV Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania , who passed away on August 16, , at the age of 89, leaving to mourn family and friends.
Family and friends can light a candle as a loving gesture for their loved one. Leave a sympathy message to the family in the guestbook on this memorial page of Isaac H.
Clothier IV to show support. There are no additional photos for Isaac H. Clothier IV at this time. You can add a photo to pay tribute to Isaac H. Clothier IV. Would you like to offer Isaac H.
Write your message of sympathy today. I met Quartie in when I joined Dechert as a lateral partner in the Boston office. Quartie showed me the ropes of being a Dechert partner and was always available with friendship and advice. We made periodic trips to Philadelphia for social functions and always enjoyed seeing Quartie and Barbara.
He was a warm, caring and intelligent man whom everyone respected and admired. The Georgian manor was recreated in the s by the same architect responsible for Colonial Williamsburg, and the entire site is now faithful to the period. John Wanamaker, inventor of the money-back guarantee, is best known in Philly for the store that's now called Macy's. In , the original Victorian Lindenhurst burned down destroying a lot of art , and it was rebuilt in the neoclassic style.
In , Henry Breyer yes, that Breyer bought the abandoned property and donated it to the Boy Scouts. It was destroyed in Ballytore Castle was his four-story Victorian mansion built near Wynnewood Station designed by Addison Hutton, who was the architect of many buildings on the Bryn Mawr campus.
The building was used by tony Agnes Irwin school between and and is now an Armenian church. Stephen Girard, founder of Girard College and bankroller of the War of , was perhaps one of the city's most prolific, most wealthy and most idiosyncratic historical whales. Gentilhommiere, Girard's country estate, was located at what is now 21st and Shunk in the Girard Estates neighborhood.
The estate was situated on acres and came with the relatively modest home and a working farm where Girard pursued his agricultural interests. He left the land to the city upon his death but stipulated that it had to generate income for Girard College. Some homes were constructed on the land in a rare planned community within city confines.
They were rented until the early s, at which point they were finally sold. Ardrossan, the acre estate in Radnor, was named for the family's hometown in Scotland.
The Georgian manor featured 50 rooms, including accommodations for 30 and required 12 full-time staff to manage it. The full estate housed several other structures, one of which was a working farm known for producing an award-winning herd of dairy cows. Peter Widener invested his public transit fortune to help found U.
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