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Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsIt's back to school time, What store did you get your clothing and shoes at, that are no longer around. Mine were
Gimbels for clothing and Kenney"s for shoes. How about you?

sinkingfeeling
(56,431 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)
FalloutShelter
(13,826 posts)

debm55
(51,000 posts)
OldBaldy1701E
(9,132 posts)There was also a Roses in a nearby town that we would go to on occasion.
debm55
(51,000 posts)

debm55
(51,000 posts)
Americanme
(285 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)past.
Response to debm55 (Original post)
Midnight Writer This message was self-deleted by its author.
debm55
(51,000 posts)clothing, We always got an outfit for the first day of school and a new pair of shoes that lasted the whole school year.
Dave in VA
(2,235 posts)and Kenney's for shoes.
Two new shirts and two new pairs of pants. One new pair of shoes from Kenney's. There were three school age boys to buy for.
debm55
(51,000 posts)shoes were either passed down or bought at the thrirt shop.
SamKnause
(14,452 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)
LogDog75
(879 posts)My father was in the Navy so we bought at the Navy Exchange. In my early teens, he was the Navy liaison with Sikorsky Aircraft in Connecticut in the early 60s. No nearby bases so we bought our clothes at Sears.
debm55
(51,000 posts)
Ritabert
(1,668 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)
Beatlelvr
(756 posts)May Company, Robinsons-May. I miss them!
debm55
(51,000 posts)
BuddhaGirl
(3,690 posts)Macy's bought the chain out and ruined them...the Bullocks in Pasadena was so nice
May Co, Robinson's, Broadway...seems so long ago!
rsdsharp
(11,350 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)over to Penneys.
Aristus
(70,965 posts)IIRC, the owner's name was Fry. We got our new clothes from there. One year, I got a baby-blue turtle-neck sweater there that I wore for my school photo. I have the photo around somewhere. (The turtle-neck is obviously long gone...)
debm55
(51,000 posts)
In the "husky" section.
debm55
(51,000 posts)it wasn't very big.
FirstLight
(15,747 posts)sometimes Capwell's downtown if the had a good basement bargain going... They had a nice little soda fountain dwnstairs and if I was good, I'd get a sundae!
debm55
(51,000 posts)

Fiendish Thingy
(20,855 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)trying my shoes on before I buy, Not a lot of places to that anymore,
FuzzyRabbit
(2,191 posts)Mom made my sister's clothes.
debm55
(51,000 posts)
malthaussen
(18,293 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)
Walleye
(42,628 posts)And we got our essential name brand loafers. Weejuns
debm55
(51,000 posts)
FalloutShelter
(13,826 posts)Big flagship store in Newark, NJ.
debm55
(51,000 posts)
LeftInTX
(34,006 posts)We shopped where ever....
Dad was in the AF. We got some stuff on base and at discount stores. We got some stuff at department stores, which were local to where he was stationed.
debm55
(51,000 posts)
3catwoman3
(27,785 posts)...clothes. I'd spend hours poring over their catalog, picking out my ensembles. I still remember what some of the looked like. My dad worked for Allstate, which was part of the Sears family (or vice versa, I've forgotten which) so we got a 10% employee discount on everything. My depression-era born mother was very upset when Sears discontinued that discount many years later when the company's decline began.
Also, some purchases from local department stores in the greater Rochester (NY) area - E. W. Edwards, Sibleys, McCurdy's and Forman's. All really nice stores, on a par with Marshall Field, and all long gone.
Don't remember much about shoes, other than having trouble finding ones that fit well because of high arches.
I used to get hand-me-downs from my 2 older cousins, which was a treat as their mom had good taste. The older of the two topped out at 5'0'', and her sister at 5'4", so that came to a halt when I passed up both of them at 5'8".
debm55
(51,000 posts)
Jilly_in_VA
(13,103 posts)Sears, and a local outfit called Hills. My mom sewed some of my clothes, and when I was in HS I made a lot of mine too.
debm55
(51,000 posts)see David Bowie, they all had satin pant suits--all store bought. I made mine and like my velvet bridesmaid gown, would never sew those materials again.
TommieMommy
(2,387 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)
oberle
(197 posts)in downtown DC. They had the best lunch room with wonderful malted milkshakes and tuna fish sandwiches.
debm55
(51,000 posts)
beaglelover
(4,350 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)
debm55
(51,000 posts)
Mad_Dem_X
(10,032 posts)Grant's was a local store in my hometown (Pennsville, NJ). Not sure if they had stores in other locations.
debm55
(51,000 posts)
Solly Mack
(95,774 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)
Eugene
(66,411 posts)I haven't seen Hanlon in the Boston area since the 1970s.
For clothing, my family shopped a local non-chain stores, including a place called The Bargain Center in Quincy, MA.
debm55
(51,000 posts)
catbyte
(37,886 posts)Going to the "Big City" was always an occasion, lol.
debm55
(51,000 posts)
pdxflyboy
(885 posts)Wall Street, Norwalk, CT
debm55
(51,000 posts)
Freddie
(9,969 posts)Long-gone department store. Loved their clothes, Mom and Dad loved their prices.
debm55
(51,000 posts)
Coolgoober
(159 posts)My grandma worked there. It was in Hartford CT. My grandma worked there. It was something like 8 or 9 stories of retail. Each floor being it's own department, maybe two. The elevators and escalators were a blast to play on. Me and my brothers were always super polite and thoughtful and would even push the buttons for whatever floor the customers would want. I miss those times and those kinds of stores. I'd have to look it up but, I think a family owned it, maybe two, but not traded on exchange.
debm55
(51,000 posts)were made of wood at the time. I loved going to the Bridal Floor and looking the all the gowns,
Cloudhopper
(137 posts)and take the bus into Hartford and play on the elevators, too. We weren't that polite though... kids.
It was originally owned by the Fox family, and eventually daughter Beatrice Fox Auerbach took over. Mrs. A had a full apartment on the top floor I got to see once.
BigMin28
(1,772 posts)and Sanger Harris for clothes. Kenneys for shoes too. Although before my mother went to work, she made most of my clothes. I was the only girl of four. Great memories of going to the Hancocks Fabric store to pick out patterns and material. In no time she would have it made. Her mother retired as a seamstress from the first Neiman Marcus store in Dallas. Sadly, I did not inherit that talent.
debm55
(51,000 posts)You may not have their talent for sewing , but you have the love you both gave each other.
AllaN01Bear
(27,484 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)with the store decorations and the fancy clothing.
AllaN01Bear
(27,484 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)
Cloudhopper
(137 posts)But mom had a bookkeeping job at G.Fox & Co., a large department store in Hartford, CT, and when employees got special extra discount on top of the normal discount, combined with a back-to-school sale, we made out pretty good,
That store was eventually taken over by Filene's and now Macy's.
debm55
(51,000 posts)really good buys.
boonecreek
(1,233 posts)These were Chicago area stores. We got our shoes at a store on
North Ave. on the cusp of the Logan Square Humboldt park neighborhoods.
They sold the Red Goose brand of shoes. When you got a pair, they had this big
red goose on the counter and when you pulled its neck down, it would "lay" a
a golden egg which had a bag of M&Ms inside. This was far enough back that
the store had one of those Xray machines in the back, unplugged of course.
debm55
(51,000 posts)feet, I remember it was crowded as everyone wanted to use it.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(28,088 posts)Mid to late 50s and early 60s. Utica New York.
There were six of us kids, no money, and looking back I'm amazed and impressed that Mom took care of all of us.
debm55
(51,000 posts)
Emile
(37,796 posts)debm55
(51,000 posts)
ProfessorGAC
(74,600 posts)And a fine fashion store a called Baskin's. Got a new suit or sportcoat, and they were the store for our school uniform stuff. (Black pants, white shirt, red tie, black or red sweater.)
Baskin's had a second floor for women, but no girls' stuff. The girls went to Fehrenbacher's. They had the market cornered on girls' uniforms for all the catholic schools, including the high schools.
My wife got new outfits there every year. Plus, her best friend's mom was a seamstress. Made wonderful clothes for both girls.