The May Department Stores Company
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| Fate
| Bought by Federated Department Stores
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| Founded
| 1877 (Leadville, Colorado)
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| Defunct
| 2006
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| Location
| St. Louis, Missouri
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| Industry | Retail |
| Products | Clothing, footwear, bedding, furniture, jewelry, beauty products, and housewares. |
| Subsidiary | Lord & Taylor, Marshall Field\'s, Filene\'s, Kaufmann\'s, Hecht\'s, Strawbridge\'s, Foley\'s, Robinsons-May, Meier & Frank, L. S. Ayres, Famous-Barr, and The Jones Store |
The May Department Stores Company was a department store chain founded in 1877 by David May in Leadville, Colorado. Its headquarters moved to St. Louis, Missouri in 1905, and the company went public in 1911. David\'s grandson Morton May became the chairman in 1951 and headed the company for 16 years. Morton May was active in St. Louis civic affairs and was a patron of the St. Louis Art Museum.
In 2005 May Department Stores was acquired by Federated Department Stores for $11 billion in stock.[Federated Prepares to Absorb May Department Stores] They now operate under the brand name Macy\'s.
Prior to its acquisition by Federated, May operated department stores nationwide, under the following brand names: May D & F, Lord & Taylor, Marshall Field\'s, Filene\'s, Kaufmann\'s, Hecht\'s, Strawbridge\'s, Foley\'s, Robinsons-May, Meier & Frank, L. S. Ayres, Famous-Barr, and The Jones Store. In addition to its department stores, May operated a unit of bridal and formal apparel stores including After Hours Formalwear, David\'s Bridal and Priscilla of Boston.
Merger of Federated and May
On February 28, 2005, Federated Department Stores, Inc. announced that they would acquire the May company in a deal that would create the nation\'s second largest department store chain with over 1,000 stores and $30 billion in annual sales. To help finance the May Company deal, Federated agreed to sell its combined proprietary credit card business to Citigroup as well as May\'s bridalwear business.
The Federated/May merger was completed on August 30, 2005 after an assurance agreement was reached with the State Attorneys General of New York, California, Massachusetts, Maryland and Pennsylvania. Federated announced plans to close 76 store locations over the ensuing year, having pledged in its anti-trust settlement to sell most of them in the above mentioned states as viable businesses, with preference being given to a group of thirteen competitors.
By September 2006, all of the May regional nameplates, except for the Lord & Taylor chain, ceased to exist as Federated consolidated its operations under the Macy\'s mastheads, (including legendary Marshall Field\'s). All locations that were not sold off were rebranded as Macy\'s, (except for one Hecht\'s location in Friendship Heights. That was rebuilt,and rebranded as Bloomingdale\'s). In advance of the retail consolidation, May\'s credit call center in Lorain, Ohio, ceased operations on July 1, 2006. Lord & Taylor, the "lone" department store division not to be largely converted to the Macy\'s nameplate, was sold to a group of investors for $1.2 billion in October 2006. David\'s Bridal and After Hours Formalwear were also soon sold thereafter.
Historical department stores incorporated into May Company
Historical department stores incorporated into May Company
- The Donaldson Co., Minneapolis, Minnesota, was founded in 1883 and acquired by Allied Stores Corp. in 1928. In 1985 it acquired its struggling rival, The Powers Dry Goods Co., from Associated Dry Goods Corp., which gave it same breathing room against dominant rival Dayton\'s. In 1987, after Campeau Corp.\'s buy-out of Allied Stores Corp., Donaldson\'s was purchased by Carson Pirie Scott & Co. of Chicago which renamed its stores with its own imprimatur. Carson\'s in its turn was acquired by P.A. Bergner & Co. of Milwaukee (and formerly of Peoria, Illinois) in 1989, which in turn filed for bankruptcy in 1991. In 1995 Carson\'s sold the rump of the chain to Dayton\'s parent Dayton Hudson Corporation (now Target Corporation), which re-opened them under its moderate Mervyn\'s chain, mostly in a move to prevent serious competition in its Twin Cities stronghold. In 2004 when Dayton\'s successor Marshall Field\'s was acquired by May, it also agreed to buy the former Donaldson locations, which Mervyn\'s promptly shuttered, and be responsible for disposing of the real-estate.
- William Filene\'s Sons Co., Boston, Massachusetts, founded in 1881. It was one of the founding members of the Federated Department Stores organization in 1929. May acquired in the wake of Campeau Corp.’s 1988 acquisition of Federated. A major growth vehicle for May in the 1990s, absorbing the G. Fox & Co. chain based in Hartford in 1992, 2 Hess\'s stores in New York State in 1994, several Steiger\'s stores in Massachusetts in 1994, and took several former Sage-Allen locations after that chain\'s demise in 1993, as well as opening almost 20 new and replacement stores. In 2002 it assumed operational control of Kaufmann\'s
- Gimbels Bros., was never acquired by May as an entire chain, but when its then-owner, British-American Tobacco, shut down the historic chain in 1986, May purchased several desirable mall-based Pittsburgh area locations for its Kaufmann\'s division and Marshall Field\'s chose several Wisconsin Gimbels, most of which it subsequently closed.
- Marshall Field & Co., Chicago, Illinois, founded in 1852, adopting its present name in 1881 after having operating as Field, Palmer & Leiter and Field & Leiter. Operates a famous location on State Street in Chicago. Retained its independence until 1982 when it was acquired by an arm of British-American Tobacco. Sold to Dayton Hudson Corporation in 1990, who added to the Field\'s presence when they rebranded their Dayton\'s and Hudson\'s stores as Marshall Field\'s prior to selling the brand to May in 2004.
- The Hecht Co., Washington, D.C. was founded as a furniture store in 1857 in Baltimore, Maryland, eventually moving to Washington, D.C. and then being purchased by May in 1959, at which time it moved its Baltimore location into the May Company Baltimore location (formerly Bernheim-Leader until May acquired that store in 1929). In 1990 it acquired several locations in southern Virginia from the defunct Miller & Rhoads chain. And in 1992 it absorbed the Thalhimer\'s stores in Virginia and North Carolina. In 1994 it acquired 2 Hess\'s locations in Pennsylvania, and in 1995 acquired the Wanamaker\'s in the Philadelphia area (Pennsylvania, New Jersey & Delaware). In 1996 it absorbed the 13 former Strawbridge & Clothier stores in Philadelphia, and operated those and the previously acquired Wanamaker locations under the Strawbridge\'s name
- Hess\'s, Allentown, Pennsylvania was another division never acquired by May, but the rump of this secondary-market chain were divided between May and the Grumbacher Family\'s Bon-Ton chain in 1994, with Kaufmann\'s, Filene\'s and Hecht\'s splitting stores New York and Pennsylvania stores and May agreeing with Hess\'s former owner, mall-developer Crown America, to open several secondary locations in Pennsylvania
- Joseph Horne Co., Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania was a division of Associated Dry Goods. It was historically the high end department store of Pittsburgh. Was acquired by Associated Dry Goods in 1972 - and eventually acquired by May when ADG was purchased in October 1986. Due to anti-trust concerns and legal action by the City of Pittsburgh, it was promptly sold in December 1986 to an investor group. After several years of private ownership, it was announced the Dillards would be buying the chain to combine it with the Dillard/DeBartolo co-owned Higbee\'s stores based in Cleveland. The deal collapsed and was not completed. Eventually the Joseph Horne Co. was sold off in parts, with Dillard\'s acquiring its three Ohio stores in 1992 and Federated Department Stores\'s Lazarus division acquiring its remaining nine Pennsylvania stores in 1995. Federated eventually merged all of its divisions (including the former Joseph Horne/Lazarus locations) into Macy\'s.
- Kaufmann Brothers, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania founded in 1871 was acquired by May in 1946. In 1986 it acquired several mall-based locations from the defunct Gimbels to replace nearby freestanding locations, as well as absorbing May-owned Strouss stores, based in Youngstown, Ohio. Ironically Gimbels Brothers history in Pittsburgh had originated with the purchase of the Kaufmann & Baer store in 1926, founded by a rival faction of the Kaufmann family. In 1992 it absorbed the Sibley\'s chain in upstate New York, in 1993 it absorbed the May Company Ohio franchise based in Cleveland, and in 1994 it acquired 6 former Hess\'s locations in central Pennsylvania and upstate New York. In 2003 Kaufmann\'s acquired the 2 Marshall Field\'s locations in Columbus, Ohio.
- Lord & Taylor, New York, New York precursor founded in 1826. Was a founding member of the Associated Dry Goods Corp. organization (then American Dry Goods) in 1916 and became part of May with its 1986 acquisition of ADG. Was a long-time fashion leader, but as it attempted to expand nationwide it lost that reputation to upstart Nordstrom and long-time rival Saks Fifth Avenue. In the 1970s aggressively expanded into Texas, Illinois and Michigan and in the early 1980s south Florida saw 11 stores opened in quick succession. Shuttered a group of under-performing stores in the oil-shocked Texas and southern Florida markets in 1989-1990 after its acquisition by May. After continuing tepid results and repeated tinkering with its merchandising, May gave up its national ambitions for the division and announced the shuttering of 32 stores in 2003, many of them only a few years old, retreating to core Northeast markets along with locations in Chicago, Detroit, and St. Louis. Also occupies the former John Wanamaker landmark store in Center City Philadelphia. In January 2006, Federated Department Stores announced that the Lord & Taylor division for was sale. Federated announced its plans to divest May Company\'s Lord & Taylor division by the end of 2006 after concluding that chain did not fit with their strategic focus for building the Macy\'s and Bloomingdale\'s national brands. On June 22, 2006, Macy\'s announced that NDRC Equity Partners, LLC would purchase Lord & Taylor for US$1.2 billion, and completed the sale in October 2006.
- Sanger-Harris, Dallas, Texas was the result of the 1961 merger of the Sanger Brothers Dry Goods Co. of Dallas, founded in 1868, and acquired by Federated Department Stores in 1951 and A. Harris & Co. of Dallas, founded in 1887 and acquired by Federated in 1961. It expanded into Oklahoma in the early 1980s and absorbed the Levy\'s stores in Tucson in 1985, before itself being merged into the Foley\'s division in January 1987. In 1988, following the acquisition of Federated by Campeau Corp. of Canada, the resulting Foley\'s organization was sold to May, which then closed the former Sanger-Harris store in downtown Dallas. In the 1990s many of its former, out-dated locations were replaced by May.
- Thalhimer Brothers, Richmond, Virginia, an old-line Southern company founded in 1842 was acquired by Carter Hawley Hale Stores in 1978. CHH sold the chain, which by then operated throughout southern Virginia and North Carolina, in 1990 to May, which in 1992 sold stores in Charleston, South Carolina and Memphis, Tennessee to Dillard\'s, shut down a further 8 small, out-dated stores and merged the rest into Hecht\'s.
References
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