List of department stores in Downtown Los Angeles
Appearance
This is a list of department stores and some other major retailers in the four major corridors of Downtown Los Angeles: Spring Street between Temple and Second ("heyday" from c.1884–1910); Broadway between 1st and 4th (c.1895-1915) and from 4th to 11th (c.1896-1950s); and Seventh Street between Broadway and Figueroa/Francisco, plus a block of Flower St. (c.1915 and after). They are ordered by geography (Spring Street and Broadway, north to south; Seventh Street, east to west). Part of the History of Retail in Southern California.
Store | Opened | Left | Moved or closed? | Location | Sq ft | Sq m | Architects | Current use | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
SPRING ST. BETWEEN TEMPLE AND SECOND | |||||||||
Coulter's (1st sequential location) |
1884 | 1898 | Moved | SW corner 2nd & Spring (Hollenbeck Block) |
Historic Broadway station | ||||
Hamburger's (1st seq. loc.) | 1888 | 1908 | Moved | Franklin & Spring (Phillips Block) |
Burgess J. Reeve | Site of City Hall | |||
Mullen & Bluett | 1889 | 1910 | Moved | 101–105 N. Spring | Empty lot | ||||
Jacoby Bros. (1st seq. loc.) |
1891 | 1900 | Moved | 128–138 N. Spring at Court | Site of City Hall | ||||
The Hub | 1896 | 1916 | Moved | Spring at Court (Bullard Block) |
Morgan & Walls | Site of City Hall. The Hub moved to 430 S. Broadway.[1] | |||
BROADWAY | |||||||||
Broadway from 2nd to 3rd | |||||||||
Ville de Paris[2] (A. Fusenot Co.) |
1893 | 1898 | Moved | 221-223 S. Broadway (Potomac Block) |
Block, Curlett & Eisen | added to Coulter's late 1907, demolished 1958, now a parking lot | |||
Coulter's (3rd seq. loc.) |
1905 | 1917 | Moved | 225-229 S. Broadway through to 224-228 S. Hill. 1907: expanded into 219-223 Broadway (Potomac Block) | 157,000[3] | 14,586 | Block, Curlett & Eisen | demolished, site of parking lot | |
Boston Dry Goods (J.W. Robinson Co.) |
1895 | 1915 | Moved | 237–241 S. Broadway | Theodore Eisen, Sumner Hunt | Parking lot | |||
I. Magnin/ Myer Siegel (1st seq. loc.) |
1899 | Moved | 251 S. Broadway[4] (Irvine Byrne Block) |
Sumner Hunt | Wedding chapel | ||||
Broadway from 3rd to 4th | |||||||||
Coulter's (2nd seq. loc.) |
1898 | 1905 | Moved | 317–325 S. Broadway through to 314–322 Hill St.[5] (Homer Laughlin Building) |
86,000[6] | John B. Parkinson | became Ville de Paris Now Grand Central Market | ||
Ville de Paris (2nd seq. loc.) |
1905 | 1917 | Moved. | 317–325 S. Broadway through to 314–322 Hill Street[5] (Homer Laughlin Building) |
96,000[citation needed] | 8919 | John B. Parkinson | Grand Central Market | |
Jacoby Bros. (2nd seq. loc.) | 1899[7] | 1935-6 | Moved[8][9] | 331-335 S. Broadway | 60,000 | 5574 | John B. Parkinson[10] | Was "Boston Store" in late 1930s.[11] Currently independent retail. 2 of 4 floors were removed. | |
J. J. Haggarty New York Store |
1905 | 1917 | Moved | 337–339 S. Broadway | Small retail. Only 2 stories remain. | ||||
J. M. Hale (Hale’s) | 1909 | 341–345 S. Broadway[12] (Karl's Building) |
Abram M. Edelman | retail, top floors were removed | |||||
Broadway from 4th to 5th | |||||||||
The Broadway (1st seq. loc.)[13] |
1896 | 1973 | Moved | SW corner 4th & Broadway, later through to Hill (Broadway Mart Center) |
1924, 577,000[14] | 53,605 | Parkinson and Bergstrom | ||
Bon Marché | 1907 | Liquidated[15] | 430 S. Broadway (Bumiller Building) |
Morgan & Walls | |||||
The Hub (2nd seq. loc.) |
1907 | 1916 | Moved | 430 S. Broadway (Bumiller Building) |
Morgan & Walls | In 1907, The Hub opened at the former Bon Marché.[15] In March 1916, The Hub moved to 337–9 S. Spring.[16] closing in 1922.[17] | |||
Myer Siegel (2nd seq. loc.) |
1899 | Moved | 455 S. Broadway | Became part of Fallas Paredes | |||||
Broadway from 5th to 6th | |||||||||
Fifth Street Store (Steele, Faris & Walker), later Walker's |
1905 | Closed | SW corner 5th & Broadway (Fifth Street Store Building) |
1917: 278,640[18] | 1917:25,887 | Alexander Curlett | Replaced existing store with new building in 1917.[18] Building later housed Ohrbach's | ||
Ohrbach's | Closed | SW corner 5th & Broadway (Fifth Street Store Building) |
Alexander Curlett | Former Walker's store.[18] Building later housed Ohrbach's | |||||
Silverwoods | 1904 | 556 S. Broadway (NE corner of 6th) (Silverwood's Building) |
1920: 115,420[19] | 1920: 10,723 | Walker & Eisen | Broadway Jewelry Mart | |||
Swelldom | 1920[20][21] | 1970s | Closed | 555–561 S. Broadway (NW corner of 5th) (Swelldom Building) |
Davis & Davis Henry F. Withey |
Small retail | |||
Broadway from 6th to 7th | |||||||||
Jacoby Bros. (3rd seq. loc.) |
1936[9] | 1938[22] | Liquidated | 605 S. Broadway[9] | Became a Zukor's (1940),[23] now mixed-use | ||||
Central Dept. Store[24] | 1907 | 1908 | 609–619 S. Broadway | 85,000[25] | 7897 | Samuel Tilden Norton | Demolished, now site of Los Angeles Theatre | ||
Myer Siegel (3rd seq. loc.) |
Moved | 617 S. Broadway | Samuel Tilden Norton | Demolished, now site of Los Angeles Theatre | |||||
Mullen & Bluett (2nd seq. loc.) | 1910 | 1960s | Moved | 610 S. Broadway (Walter P. Story Building)[26] |
Morgan, Walls & Clements | Mixed-use | |||
Desmond's | 1924 | 1972[27] | Closed | 616 S. Broadway (Desmond's Building) |
85,000[28] | 7897 | A. C. Martin[29] | Renovated 2019 as office space, a restaurant and a rooftop bar.[28] | |
Harris & Frank 2nd concurrent location |
1947 | 1980[30] | Closed | 644 S. Broadway (J. E. Carr Building) |
Robert Brown Young[31] | ||||
Bullock's (1st seq. loc.) |
1907 | 1983 | Closedb | NW corner 7th & Broadway by 1934, most of the block 6th/ 7th/ Broadway/ Hill |
1907: 350,000 1934: 806,000[32] |
1907: 32,516 1934: 74,880 |
Parkinson & Bergstrom | St. Vincents Jewelry Mart | |
Broadway from 7th to 8th | |||||||||
F.W. Woolworth | 1920 | 719 S. Broadway (Woolworth's Building) |
Weeks and Day | Ross Dress for Less | |||||
Reich and Lièvre | 1917 | c.1927 | 737–745 S. Broadway (Issacs Building) |
||||||
Broadway from 8th to 9th | |||||||||
Hamburger's (2nd seq. loc.) After 1925: May Company (1st loc.) |
1906 | 1986 | Moved | SW corner 8th & Broadway (May Company Building) |
1906: 482,475[33][34] 1930, >1,000,000[35] |
1906: 44,823, 1930 92,903 | Alfred F. Rosenheim | Under renovation to become tech campus | |
Eastern Columbia | 1930 | 1957[36] | 849 S. Broadway through to Hill (Eastern Columbia Building) |
1930: 275,650[37] (expanded in 1950)[38] | 1930: 25,609 | Claud Beelman | Residential condo | ||
Broadway from 9th to 10th | |||||||||
Blackstone's | 1917 | 901 S. Broadway (SE corner 9th) (Blackstone's Department Store Building) |
118,800[39] | 11,037 | John Parkinson | Building became The Famous, now residential, retail | |||
SEVENTH STREET BETWEEN BROADWAY AND FRANCISCO) | |||||||||
Seventh from Broadway to Hill | |||||||||
Bullock's (see above) | |||||||||
Seventh from Hill to Olive | |||||||||
Ville de Paris, from 1919 B. H. Dyas | 1917 | 1933 | Liquidated | 420 W. 7th (SE corner Olive) | Dodd and Richards | L.A. Jewelry Mart | |||
Seventh from Olive to Grand | |||||||||
Haggarty's | 1917 | 1963[40] | Closed | 520–530 W. 7th at Grand[41][42][43][44] (Brockman Building) |
George D. Barnett, Barnett, Haynes & Barnett |
Apartments | |||
Coulter's (4th seq. loc.) | 1917 | 1938 | Moved | 500 W. 7th (SW corner Olive) | Dodd and Richards | Mixed-use. Coulter's moved to Miracle Mile. | |||
Seventh from Grand to Hope | |||||||||
J. W. Robinson's (2nd seq. loc.) | 1915 | 1993 | Closed | 600 W. 7th (7th, Hope & Grand) | 1915: 400,000[45] 1923: 623,700 sq ft (57,940 m2)[46] |
1915: 37,161 1923: 57,944 |
Noonan & Richards (1915), Edgar Mayberry/Allison & Allison (1934 remodel) | Mixed-use | |
Desmond's 7th St. (2nd seq. loc.) | 1934,[47] expanded 1937[48] | Closed | 617 W. 7th. St. (2nd Union Oil Building) |
22,500 (1937)[49] | 2090 | Alexander Curlett and Claude Beelman | Walgreens[50] | ||
Seventh from Hope to Flower | |||||||||
The Broadway (2nd loc.), later Macy's | 1973 | Open | Open | 750 W. 7th (Hope to Flower) (Broadway Plaza) |
250,000[51] | 23,226 | Charles Luckman | In operation | |
Desmond's 7th St. (1st seq. loc.) (B'way store remained open) |
1927[47] | 1934 | Moved | 717 W. 7th St. (Roosevelt Building) |
Alexander Curlett and Claude Beelman | Shoo Shoo Baby (restaurant) | |||
Barker Bros. (final downtown loc.) | 1926 | 1984[52] | Closed | 818 W. 7th (Flower to Figueroa) | 1,000,000[53] | 93,000 | Curlett and Beelman | Offices | |
Seventh from Figueroa to Francisco | |||||||||
Bullock's (2nd seq. loc.), later Macy's | 1986 | 1996 | Closed | 735 S. Figueroa (Seventh Market Place) |
Jon Jerde[54] | Gold's Gym (level M1), Target (M2), Zara (M3) | |||
May Company (2nd seq. loc.), later Macy's | 1986 | 2009a | Closed | 735 S. Figueroa (Seventh Market Place) |
Jon Jerde[55] | Nordstrom Rack (level M1), Target (M2), H&M (M3) | |||
FLOWER STREET FROM SEVENTH TO EIGHTH | |||||||||
Weatherby-Kayser shoes | 1925 | 715–719 S. Flower | |||||||
Myer Siegel (4th seq. loc.) | 1927 | 733 S. Flower | |||||||
Parmelee-Dohrmann (homewares) | 1927 | 741–747 S. Flower |
aas Macy's, breopened in 1986 at Citicorp Plaza, now FIGat7th.
References
[edit]- ^ "Temporary Store: Hub CLothing Company Will Open Through The Holidays, on South Broadway". The Los Angeles Times. 13 October 1907. p. 23. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
- ^ "Ville de Paris 1901". Calisphere, University of California Library. Archived from the original on 9 September 2018. Retrieved 9 Sep 2018.
- ^ "Great Store for Coulter". Los Angeles Times. August 2, 1904. p. 13.
- ^ "We move Monday to 251 South Broadway", I. Magnin advertisement in the Los Angeles Times, 31 Dec 1898, p.4
- ^ a b "Ad for Ville de Paris". Los Angeles Herald. August 15, 1907.
- ^ "PCAD - Coulter's Department Store, Downtown, Los Angeles, CA". Pacific Coast Architecture Database. Retrieved 23 April 2024.
AKA: City of Paris Dry Goods Company, Ville de Paris Department Store #2, Los Angeles. Dates: constructed 1905. Total floor area: 96,000 sq. ft. 317 South Broadway.
- ^ "Los Angeles Herald 22 August 1899 — California Digital Newspaper Collection". cdnc.ucr.edu.
- ^ "Advertisement for Jacoby Bros./May Co". Los Angeles Times. May 19, 1935.
- ^ a b c "Pioneers' Modern Home: Jacoby Bros.Will Open New Store Soon". Los Angeles Times. January 31, 1936. p. 11.
- ^ "Will Go Up Rapidly: Work on the Jacoby Building Was Begun Today: Most of the Material for the Big Business Structure Is Already on the Ground". Los Angeles Evening Post-Record. September 1, 1899. p. 1.
Architect John Parkinson
- ^ "Boston Store Los Angeles 1939 - 331 S. Broadway (old Jacoby Bros.) and 4755 Whittier Blvd". The Los Angeles Times. 1939-11-06. p. 10. Retrieved 2020-12-06.
- ^ "Moving to Broadway: J. M. Hale Co. Go to Petticoat Lane". Los Angeles Evening Express. January 23, 1909. p. 4.
- ^ "Los Angeles Herald 4 August 1895 — California Digital Newspaper Collection". cdnc.ucr.edu. Retrieved 2020-12-06.
- ^ "Framework is now finished: Construction Started Late Last Fall: Additional Will Be Completed During July: Department Store Growth Is Consistent". Los Angeles Times. March 23, 1924. p. 91. Retrieved May 26, 2020.
- ^ a b "Temporary Store: Hub Clothing Company Will Open Through The Holidays, on South Broadway". The Los Angeles Times. 13 October 1907. p. 23. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
- ^ "The Hub ad". Los Angeles Evening Express. 10 March 1916. p. 3. Retrieved 9 April 2024.
- ^ "The Hub ad". Los Angeles Evening Post-Record. 8 September 1922. p. 7. Retrieved 8 April 2024.
- ^ a b c "Broadway Buildings: To Cost Million". Los Angeles Times. April 22, 1917. p. part V p. 13.
Eight stories…plus basement and sub-basement…172 feet on Broadway by 162 feet on Fifth
- ^ "Magnificent Pile That Now Graces Broadway Corner". Los Angeles Times. August 31, 1920. p. 9.
- ^ "Ad for Swelldom". Los Angeles Times. November 21, 1920. p. 45.
- ^ "Ad for Swelldom". Los Angeles Times. November 28, 1920. p. 47.
- ^ "Advertisement for liquidation of Jacoby Bros". Los Angeles Times. September 30, 1938. p. 45.
- ^ "Downtown Broadway Store Leased in $1,000,000 Deal: Business Prepares to Expend $150,000 in Converting Property to Its Uses". Los Angeles Times. February 11, 1940. p. 63.
- ^ "New Department Store Opens Doors to Public". Los Angeles Herald. March 26, 1907. p. 4.
- ^ "New Department Store Opens Doors to Public". Los Angeles Herald. March 26, 1907. p. 4.
- ^ "Walter P. Story Building". Los Angeles Conservancy. Retrieved August 9, 2020.
- ^ "Ad for Desmond's Downtown LA Removal Sale". Los Angeles Times. February 10, 1972. p. 7.
- ^ a b Vincent, Roger. "Historic home of clothier Desmond's is ready for its comeback on Broadway". latimes.com. Retrieved on 16 April 2019.
- ^ Gray, Olive (September 16, 1924). "New Desmond Store Opened". Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "Harris & Frank advertisement". Los Angeles Times. January 17, 1980. Retrieved 7 May 2019.
- ^ "Los Angeles Union Station Run-through Tracks Project", p. RA6-PP8
- ^ "Bullock's Department Store #1, Downtown, Los Angeles, CA (1906-1907)", PCAD
- ^ "Great Store's First Drill: Hamburger Army Through Paces for Opening; Get Familiar With "Lay" of New Establishment; Many Delights for Shoppers Are in Prospect". Los Angeles Times. July 26, 1908. p. V13. ProQuest 159211144.
- ^ "Hamburger's Big Store Celebrates: Thirty-Fifth Anniversary Sale To Mark Event; Started in Small Room on Main Street, Now Occupies Building with Thirteen Acres of Floor Space---History of the Great Emporium's Growth and Success". Los Angeles Times. October 29, 1916. p. III_A15. ProQuest 160381558.
- ^ "Advertisement for May Company". Los Angeles Times. March 25, 1930. p. 10.
- ^ "Eastern-Columbia closes down 1957". The Los Angeles Times. 1957-02-03. p. 26. Retrieved 2020-12-06.
- ^ "Concern Occupies New Home Tomorrow". Los Angeles Times. September 11, 1930. p. 8.
- ^ "Eastern-Columbia expansion 1950". The Los Angeles Times. 1950-06-18. p. 26. Retrieved 2020-12-06.
- ^ "Material Progress: Millions Going into Broadway Buildings: New Blackstones". Los Angeles Times. April 22, 1917.
90 feet of frontage on Broadway and 165 feet on 9th Street…with 6 stories plus two basement levels
- ^ "Haggarty's advertisement". June 23, 1963. p. 59.
- ^ "J.J. Haggarty Growth Laid to Enterprise". Los Angeles Times. 10 November 1940. p. 67 (Part IV Society, p.9).
- ^ Auerbach, Alexander (27 May 1970). "J.J. Haggarty Dress Chain Forced Out of Business by Debt". Los Angeles Times. p. 56 (part III Business & Finance, p.1). Retrieved 23 April 2019.
- ^ "New York Store's Life Dream Comes True: J. J. Haggarty Ready to Open New Emporium at Seventh and Grand Tomorrow". Los Angeles Evening Express. September 19, 1917.
- ^ "The "New York" to Start Building". Los Angeles Times. November 19, 1916. p. 27.
- ^ "24 May 1914, 79 - The Los Angeles Times at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2020-12-06.
- ^ "11 Jan 1923, 27 - The Los Angeles Times at Newspapers.com". Newspapers.com. Retrieved 2020-12-06.
- ^ a b "Desmond's New Store Open Today". The Los Angeles Times. 5 March 1934. p. 26. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
- ^ "Reasons for Expansion Told: Desmond Chief Cites Handicaps of Limited Space". The Los Angeles Times. 21 October 1937. p. 9. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
- ^ "Expansion of Desmond Store Planned". The Los Angeles Times. 27 December 1936. p. 53. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
- ^ "617 W. 7th St". Google Maps. Retrieved 17 March 2024.
- ^ "Broadway Plaza", Pacific Coast Architecture Database
- ^ "Ad for Barker Bros". Los Angeles Times. September 24, 1984. p. 6.
- ^ Whitaker, Alma (July 13, 1931). "Furniture Has Its Romance: Fascinating Tale Found in Barker Brothers: Enormous Business Started by Outraged Man: Fourth Generation Working at Present Time". Los Angeles Times. p. 23. Retrieved 19 May 2019.
- ^ "Grand Opening for Downtown Mall Scheduled : Bullock's, May Co. Anchor Stores in Seventh Market Place". Los Angeles Times. 1986-04-06. Retrieved 2020-12-06.
- ^ "Grand Opening for Downtown Mall Scheduled : Bullock's, May Co. Anchor Stores in Seventh Market Place". Los Angeles Times. 1986-04-06. Retrieved 2020-12-06.