Their hardware dept was unparalleled. Worked there as a stock man in my early 20s, climbing racks to get boxed baby cribs from the tiop shelf to wheel them out to the sales floor on a hand truck.
I miss Sears commitment to America. They tried to keep their stuff made in America. Also when their employees got activated for military service they not only kept your job they continued to pay into your retirement account and paid your families medical insurance.
I bought a house (built in 1960) about three and a half years ago. The previous owner left behind a clothes washer (Maytag), a dryer (Speed Queen), and a Sears Kenmore refrigerator… all from the early 1970s. All three appliances (some 50 years old) work just fine! None of them have computer chips inside… just good, old-fashioned MADE IN AMERICA quality.
Computer chips arent the problem with appliances....high end appliances and speed queen has computer chips and they still last a long time. A lot plastic is put appliances too
The downfall of Sears and so many other stores that the "people at the top" chose to do was focus on selling credit, rather than selling the products we need to use daily.
I had one of their TVs from the 60s and I also had one of their manual typewriters. Do you know that they both still work?❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉😊😊😊! Great quality! I wish Sears would re open & comeback!❤😊😊😊😊
@@kathywarren745 well, thats not going to happen. The company didn't adapt to the changing economy or paid attention to their competition ex...walmart, kmart, home depot and lowes.
My dad worked there for 30 years. Made a living selling vacuum cleaners, raising a family in the 1970s and 80s. Then they fired all the full time employees. That was the downfall of Sears. Needless to say, Sears was a big part of our lives growing up. As a kid, the Christmas catalog was amazing!
Sad to hear. That was the good American times when a man could provide for his family just in single income. I miss being a kid going to the toy section while my grandpa was in the tool section. Great times.
@@namastemcl I had to replace my fridge at the worst of times, during the pandemic. The salesman told us outright, they're made to last about 10 years max. To me, that's just criminal.
@@delledonne1 7:42 My parents just got rid of their Kenmore washer and dryer last year. Purchased in 1971, they were both still working, but the top of the dryer was getting too hot. I figured it might be time to replace them.
I'm from Mexico, Sears is still active in most malls from Mexico City. My dad worked for Sears for about 30 years. He was so proud of the company and what he was able to do working for them. He passed away in December 2023 and watching this video was a sweet trip down memory lane; I still have lots of Craftsman tools that he left me and even my old Nissan B12 has a Die Hard sticker on the bumper. Thank you!
You are right here in México Sears keeps being a big company working normally. Como bien dices cada centro comercial tiene un sears, Nunca trabajé en Sears, porque trabajé en Liverpool la competencia directa de Sears en México. i guess if usa citizens miss Sears, they are welcome to visit Mexican Sears stores.
@@beanovskydurst ya Volkswagen are still made there too. Obviously 🙄 ever since the Panama cannel & free trade BS . Mexico is the only country that still makes decent vehicles & appliances. Trump shut down America companies . Everything imported from china 🇨🇳 clothes & appliances suck . Complete disposable items soon after they are boughten. The new engineering kids who design everything now ?. Ain’t got a clue about longevity!!!. Everything made in Canada 🇨🇦 pretty much is a thing of the past. Modern disposable crap 💩. Clothing made from plastic is lethal & useless. Plastic clothing isn’t recyclable . It’s a fire 🔥 hazard dangerous for kids . Towels made from plastic & fleece is rediculous. Cheers 🥂
Death of Sears started when management changed the floor staffing model. Growing up, Sears had sales people and registers in each department. You never had to hunt down sales or information help. But some “college educated” business school executives decided to cut staff levels to almost nothing and centralized the registers to 1/4 of what they had. They cut personnel cost overhead but killed the best customer service in the retail industry. Combine that with market changes and Sears suffered a slow, agonizing death.
Same deal at Eaton's . I remember before they closed I sat in the shoe dept. with one shoe and nobody came over to help me . I had to get up and ask for help. Then I felt like I was just a hassle to them. A group of five or so employees stood at the cash talking and not working
This is pretty much going to be the same down fall of J. C. Penney. The store closest to us only has one register that I saw to check out in the middle of the store, and I only saw about 3 employees in the entire store. With that said, there is no one even walking around to see if they can help you with anything or straightening items. When you do find someone and call to them for help, they turn and walk the other way, they are for sure not there to work. Then the selection is very poor with about a quarter of the store full of racks and racks of "so called" discounted clothes. Nothing is sectioned off in sizes on those racks, so you're literally searching every rack, which I decided was not worth the hassle. That's been maybe a year ago and I've not been back. J. C. Penney use to be our favorite store after Sears went out.
I worked at Sears from 2008-2012, and you hit the nail on the head with the part about Eddie Lampert. I remember being a lowly sales associate and wondering why there was nothing being done in the way of getting products that people wanted to actually buy or streamlining the checkout processes, and instead all of this money was being wasted on useless stuff like iPads and pushing scammy Protection Agreements that cost 1/3 the price of the product itself, and the at-the-time predatory Sears card, and Customer Satisfaction surveys. They even introduced their own intranet social network thing so that you could network with other Sears employees across the nation. All of this time spent on useless stuff instead of getting products people actually wanted at price points they could afford. It was like Eddie and his direct underlings simply gave up. So many unhappy customers, and it wasn't the store employees' faults. To this day it boggles my mind how Sears ended up the way it did. Eddie sat back and did nothing as Sears died a slow painful death.
When I was a kid (1972-1984) there was this mood, this delightfully spontaneous feeling that everyone knew. We called it “the Christmas Spirit.” It was a feeling of warmth. And warm anticipation. It was knowing you’ll see relatives who you haven’t seen since last time the Nativity set was on display. It was Aunt T’s cream cheese spritz cookies and Grandma R’s Russian tea balls: almondy and rolled in confectioners sugar. It was falling asleep in the big back seat while dad drove us home from somewhere and something wonderful. It was each colorful bubble in the fancy Christmas tree baubles. It was knowing humanity has a Savior. That feeling was us. That feeling was all of us. Me and you. That feeling was America. And I miss it so much that sometimes it aches.
@@Bass.Player Trump unironically could bring a lot of this stuff back if people just let him do it. Trust me the alternative is a bigger nightmare than what we have now
Christmas spirit NO there wasn’t? I was born 66 there was NO Christmas spirit. My Christmas’s were huge but by the 70s Christmas was dead. False excitement
The same in Canada back in the day. Looking at Canada now with its mass immigration, I realize those days are not coming back. This is where we failed the western world and North America in particular. One could drive a semi or progress through a store like Sears and make a living out of it. Now...there's 5 immigrants driving (the same truck) willing to work for about min wage. Many immigrants come from poverty so making min wage in Canada is just peachy for them.
Oh Man, Do I miss those days. I was born in Aug 1956, So I grew up in the 60s & 70s. Times were so much simpler back then. It was a wonderful time to be a kid. There was so much more freedom as a kid back then. I feel sorry for the kids nowadays. They'll never know the joy of being out on a summer day with nowhere special to go, Hanging out with your friends, Riding our bikes, (And/or our horses in my case, I grew up on a farm in rural Oregon) With nothing but adventures to look forward to. We would spend our summer vacations riding or hiking and camping in the mountains, or going fishing in the rivers and lakes. I can remember at 12 or 13 years old spending the whole weekend camping, and never worrying about our parents freaking out because they didn't know where we were. With nothing more than a fishing pole and a .22 rifle. It was a lot like the Stephen King movie "Stand by Me". (Without a lot of the drama). We grew up poor, but didn't really notice it too much because everyone we hung out with were in the same boat. Things just seemed so much better than it does today. Lord, How I wish I could turn back the hands of time, Just to experience that again.
@@bobd9193 I was born in 56 also and agree with everything you said what a great time to grow up 60’ and 70’s and yes loved going to Sears along with Woolworth’s and the Ben Franklin in downtown El Paso.
I'm curious as to just where you grew up in rural Oregon, as did I Was born in Portland, lived there for a few years, then moved to Laurelwood, primarialy a Seventh Day Adventist community. They charged tuition for all of their schools, which my crop-picking parents couldn't afford, so three of we five kids walked a full two miles to a small one room school, where one teacher valiently tried teaching 25 students in grades 1 through 7, a wide variety of subjects. Then, my family moved on to Carlton, lived there for three years prior to moving to CA in '56, where I started my 3rd year of high school.....and, have lived in CA ever since, now in Gualala. Seems so strange now, but whenever my dad wanted some spending money for some groceries, he'd park alongside the road, walk along picking up the soda and beer bottles people had tossed out of thier car windows, as also did I.... We lived three miles out of town, I'd take a gunny sack, pick up beer/soda bottles and by the time I reached town, had enough for a hamburger and to take in a movie at the local theater....then walk the three miles back home in the dark. In '56, we moved to CA....and to a so much better life! BHE
I think many young people may think yeah right people looked at a catalog for hours but I can attest to personally having spent many many hours dreaming of the toys and bikes in the Sears catalogs. Especially at Christmas. Everyone I knew wether they bought from Sears or not used the catalog to decide what they wanted. It was REAL. My family bought almost all our household stuff from them. Even our clothes. I miss them personally.
Oh my goodness! I STILL remember (50 years ago) the feeling that ya'd get when a new Sears catalog showed up in the mail! You couldn't wait to just pour through it and look at EVERYTHING- not just toys and such...but EVERYTHING! You'd look at all the stuff- from lawn mowers and stereos to jon boats and rifles, and just picture what your life would be like when you grew up and could use all of this stuff. Spent many hours looking through every new catalog. Ya'd look at JC Penny's and Monkey Wards' catalogs...but it wasn't half as good- Sears had EVERYTHING! Get bored? Get out the Sears catalog and dream!
I still use my dads craftsman tools on a daily basis. Dad bought these in the mid 50's in Quebec Canada. These tools have travel mileage in the area of 150'000 miles all over the world. Special note to the socket wrench. Still works like a charm and never lets me down.
@@MsLaurieLu Not a theory: Lampert was mentored by the World Economic Forum association, so he did what he was supposed to do; hailing in the illumination of the (now visible) New World Order.
Yes he was....i told everybody at sears when he purchased sears, it was a matter of time...although sears was on the decline before he got there..he was the death blow
Great Video! Very well done! The CEO and upper management were the downfall of Sears, it was all about putting money in their pockets rather than give people a good product at a good price. They also didn't care about their employees much either. When they sold off their name brands it ended for my family. It was no longer the high-quality products that lasted for years and the guarantee that went with those products. Then it was also caused the downfall of Kmart! Several small groups of greedy people ruined two great stores forever!
K-mart was also good, but in the early of 1980's. Its downfall we can only ow to a lazy visionless top management. They just did not have any idea how to upgrade and modify their stores. I had a chance to compare Sears and K-mart in the US and Canada. Canadian stores were performing much better.
I worked for Sears for many years and they basically did three things that doomed them. 1. The last good CEO pushed in his son in law as the new CEO and he knew nothing about running it. 2. Got rid of full time employees who gave a crap and hired part timers to "save money" 3. Didn't listen to their I.T. Staff and create a strong online presence. They instead invested in mall stores when those were on the way out. They had a huge war chest and already had the distribution network in place and long paid for but no they let Jeff Brazos have that.
I worked for Sears in St.Davids, PA and King of Prussia, PA for 9 years in the late 70s to the late 80s. I financed my college education by working there. I have many happy memories from that time. With their distribution network and infrastructure, Sears could have been a rival to Amazon today. The takeover by Lampert -- who was a vampire sucking Sears dry -- was the final nail in the coffin. Sad.
I am retired and living in Mexico. Sears is alive and well in the upscale malls of the city (Guadalajara) and is a go to source for home goods, tools and appliances. The Mexico operations of Sears were bought by the billionaire Carlos Slim who continues to rake in millions from the iconic brand.
@@m.mickeypayne9811; Great point! We USA customers should all patronize the stores/businesses we want and make it known. This would be a way to get back our country on the right road to recovery of family life. I would insist the return of the original sign too. 👨👩👧👦
Edward Lampert should be in jail. Looks like he pocketed millions destroying Sears. He did the same thing to Sears Canada later on. I worked in the appliance dept at the Gateway Mall store shown in the video. They cut the commisions shortly after I left and everything went to hell.
Sears was an outing for us as kids! We wouldn't ask for anything but were always hoping for popcorn or an ice or a chocolate treat!! I really miss those days 😢❤
There are so many memories as a kid in the 70s and 80s. My mom would take us there for school shopping and my parents go to for appliances. I worked there part-time in the 90s to supplement my income. It's still heartbreaking that corporate greed took over. This world would be a better place if we went back to family and morals and respect for each other. I yearn the good ole days.
I’m 58, as a boy I recall browsing Sears catalogs at my Grandma’s house.i was stationed onboard USS Fulton in New London, Conn during my first enlistment in the USN. This was a submarine tender, AS-11, we spent a good bit of time in port tending to our squadron. I was able to get a part time job at the Sears as a tire buster, brakes, alignment, alternator , electrical mechanic. After my service I went home and worked at Sears garage in Watertown, NY for a few years. Watching Sears fade away has saddened me. I worked with many great people at Sears
Lambert was a corporate raider. Whenever you hear that a hedge fund has bought in, that means the beginning of the end. US Toys R Us went that way, as well as KB Toys. That's why our economy isn't about consumerism anymore, it's about Wall St.
Yeah, this POS Lambert killed a brand and American Icon only for his personal gain..Reminds me of a certain Presidential candidate. I bet he still yuks it up with his golf course buddies over how much money he made. What he did wasn't illegal but it was immoral, and it would be great if some internet sleuth out there could let us know what companies or holdings he is involved with so we could bankrupt this guy.
Don't forget Red Lobster. Private Equity, Hedge Funds. Nothing but Wall Street Scams that make the Rich Richer and people unemployed. If you care to google the NBC story on the Red Lobster Debacle. I'll give you a hint...It wasn't the All You Can Eat Shrimp that Bankrupt them.
@@lynnlobliner3933 The raiders destroyed so much of the businesses. Same thing with Continental Can, which had been a great place to work until Oliver Goldsmith and others bought it and liquidated it.
I loved their Craftsman tools. They were made in America. I still have some Craftsman tools that were made in America and I got them at Sears. I miss Sears.
Fresh out of high school I worked for Sears, from 1990 - 1992, and, looking back, I loved my time at Sears! The first year was in Paint & Hardware, and the second in Home Office Electronics (plus Sewing Machines & Vacuum Cleaners; it was a smallish store). In '92, I moved to the big city to try to follow my dreams, which never really panned out.
Too bad by the 00's the tools were overpriced foreign junk. It had become so mismanaged, like they thought they'd just always be there no matter how much they let the place slip. Such a shame.
My mom used to get the Sears catalog where she would order our Easter and Christmas outfits . It was a family event when we would all pile in the family car to collect the packages . The memories come flooding back
Greetings: Sears was not just a store or supplier. It was a family. Customer service, good products, service and atmosphere. That was part of their reputation and success. The new era of retail sales, corporate and social mentality was not of their's. The new retail sales mentality is impersonal, poor if any customer service and crap products. The new is buy it, break it 2morrow and buy another. Thx 4 the share. Very well presented.
Remember their motto “We service what we sell”? That was so true. My parents purchased a big stereo from them in the 70s and when the turntable went out, she called the repair service and he came out fixed it the next day! That stereo lasted for decades!
So much different in retail stores of today. Now, when one goes into one of these huge 'box' stores, ask an employee for some help, they SNARL at you....That is, of course, WHEN/IF they're in a GOOD mood!
@@blackholeentry3489 Greetings: Indeed correct. U said it. If they do reply, they have no knowledge of their department or products. Indeed society has degraded. Such lack of home training and respect will lead 2 it's demise. Mo worries, we R due 4 another Ice Age in about 100,000 years or less. The shifting of the poles is evident of that. Perhaps the next life on the planet will do better?
@@blackholeentry3489 I absolutely attest to this! A couple of weeks ago, I went with my sister for the first time in years to the shopping centre, to buy clothes for the kiddos and shoes. When we could not find the price tag or the price checkers by the sales desk. We kindly asked a woman about the pricing and if they had other sizes for three different ages. She snapped at us with a "Go over there I'm busy right now. I'll get to it when I get to it"😬 I was concerned and very much cringed at the idea of her behaviour! I contacted the store's management and told them what happened to Sears/Kmart, Fashion Bug, RadioShack and other retailers when their downfall began. Soon after they emailed me with an apology and a coupon. I do not intend to use it. But at least they know to re-train their employees on how to best give customer service. Don't get me wrong, this whole experience could have affected employees' livelihood. I have worked in hospitality, retail, medical healthcare and banking as an over-the-phone sales personnel. So, I do know that my behaviour at work has to be top-notch and professional and everything else must remain at home. I don't feel well or have my mood swings? I call in sick. Avoiding uncomfortable situations at a work setting.
@MichaelMcCaulTX That's wonderful blessing for you to have!The materials of that area was better quality than today. Far more equipped during that time, than it is now. The marketing values today is ski rockets prices today for houses,you would never pay off mortgage fees 🙄 .Never let go of what you have. Sears made possible. And era gone, but never forgotten.
To me as a newcomer to America, the name of SEARS was a symbol of American prosperity. Nothing else was as popular and famous than Sears. Collapse of this legendary mammoth should ring alarm to all Americans.
@@US_Joe yeah you couldn't find anyone who knew anything , especially in their auto department That started going to pot in about 2010 when they let women who didn't know anything run their dept .
@@brot5246 In 2001 I worked for Sears and the loyalty to that Card was unbelievable. The rate was 22% and people would pay with it when their wallets had Visa, etc. at around 13%. I wasn't going to argue as many of my customers in their 30's and 40's, and older, almost insisted on using it. When Sears told us they were not taking it anymore, we couldn't believe it. Some of the customers didn't believe us, some walked out and didn't buy anything.
I worked for them in 1985-86 and 1990. I noticed the fall was coming back then. Still I have fond memories of the Christmas Wish book and doing one stop back to school shopping. Lesson here, even the mighty can fall when mismanaged.
When I was a teenage garage band musician my band landed a good paying steady gig. But I needed bigger amplifier. A salesman at our local Sears store sold me just the model that I needed and set me up with a payment plan that I could afford from my job as a musician. Then he ran an ad in the classifieds that sold my old small amp. That’s the kind of service and sales support that is sadly gone forever. I should mention that the year was 1964.
I miss Sears big time. From when I was a little kid in the 50s, we were always in Sears. Clothing, shoes, tools, appliances. You name it. Always looked forward to the catalog. There should be an investigation into the top management. How many employees lost their jobs. How many employees of their suppliers lost their jobs? Not only did he foolishly abandon the catalog, he also stopped putting ads (circulars) in newspapers.
@@glennso47 Studabaker was failing and bleeding cash when it merged with Packard. Packard was in better shape at the time. My grandpa said Packard would have survived without Studabaker. Kmart had a bankruptcy filing in 2002. When Kmart reemerged from their bankruptcy they had Eddie Lambert who invested in their sinking empire. Kmart owned a lot of real estate, and that is all Lambert wanted. Sears was a cash rich company at the time, and just received a large payment from the sale of their credit business from Citibank. Kmart bought Sears in 2005. Sears was in better shape at the time, and did not have any bankruptcy filing. Sears then bought from Kmart several closed stores because they wanted to open stores off the mall in shopping centers under the Sears Grand name. Kmart then took the cash from the sale of the stores, and used it to buy Sears. Kmart also had several investments in other retailers before they filed for bankruptcy protection that failed. Kmart also had an interest in buying Sears back in the late 1990's but they were already in trouble. The shareholders of Kmart and Sears voted by proxy vote in two seperate proxy votes (one for each company) to merge overwhelmingly. Lambert voted on Kmart's side his 54 percent share since he owned 54 percent of Kmart's stock at the time.
Sears & Penny's were the two stores to go to for everything in Albany, GA as I grew up in the 60's. Sears had an escalator, how exciting. I got most of my clothes there and we had Kenmore products. I even got a minibike there when I was about 12. Employees had an old-fashioned retirement plan, too. My Dad was buying shoes for me when I was a kid one day and the same man who worked there for years told him of a good pension he had waiting. They always had that metal shoe-size-measuring device that you put your foot in. Also, you could return just about anything for a full refund and that built patronage. Unheard of now. Lost days in so many ways.
Back when my grandfather passed away (1982), we found dress pants with tags still on them. They were old. I went to Sears to see if I could return them and they actually did let me!!! When we found them, they were at least 5-6 years old. I miss the way they decorated for Christmas 🎄 It felt like a wonderland... the toys. So wonderful.
@@frankanderson4176 They’re called Brannock Devices and you can still find them in stores but good luck if the employees know how to use them or help you with your shoes.
It’s 2024. I bought 2 towels 50 years ago from Sears and I still have them and use them! I use them as rags and you can almost see them but they are still good! Today towels may last 6 months, maybe even a year. Good old Sears!
My auntie in the 70's bought a Sears hi fi system, the turntable, amp, equalizer, cassette player and speakers had the Sears brand stamped. It sounded quite well and cheaper that the Japanese brands that were so famous, unfortunately she sold it. I bought my bicycle there in the late 80's which I still have today and every time I ride it people come to me with amaze asking me about it, there is a young lady who is in love of my bike and of the ringer, ring, ring
Sears & JC Penny's were the "Go To" stores that ALWAYS had the consumer goods you needed. If one store was out of stock for whatever item, you could surely find it at the other. BOTH stores had catalogs. These two stores were where EVERYBODY'S mom bought your school clothes and Christmas shopping. Sears and JC PENNY'S were American icons as the NY Yankees were to baseball......They were part of the American way of LIFE!!.....
@@eddiesimms9301 I remember when I was a teen it was a prestigious place to work. If you got to work at Sears or JCPenney’s that was really something. Just like working at Bell Telephone. It’s sad really that these companies forgot the people along the way.
Sears failed to adapt to the changes that were rapidly occurring in the retail market. With the online shopping experience and other factors that would have made a huge difference in the retail industry future for Sears. I’m an 80’s kid. Watching this video makes me feel so old and happy that I was able to live in that generation to experience it all. I was very disappointed to see my local Sears store being permanently closed that I had so many memories in as a child with my family and friends.
I disagree, a corporate raider Eddie Lamber (ESL) got into sears sold properties to himself bled raised rents, the stores dry, and closed retirement health insurance closed successful stores such as the one in Tucson that was always busy and profitable as anyone who had visited it or had their care there to purchase tires. I agree in part that Sears didn’t go quick enough into online sales…on the other hand, was still trying to wring funds out of the company after 20 years by arguing that the inventory was worth more (orderly going out of business sale) than the proper valuation of “fire sale prices” such as 99 Cent Stores performed…the US Supreme Court refused to hear his case which his company’s interest was to suck millions out of the company. Maybe not as Quick as Mitt Romne Usually, bankruptcies ideally try to restructure debt to save a company…Lambert (or should I type Lamprey) was CEO and also board member but that’s a long time for bankruptcy to go on. Maybe not as quick as Bain Capital or Michael Milliken, but just as questionable as the amount of real estate was truly valued, the management practices that drove away loyal long term employees, in a service oriented business, to only one in a department and never a cashier to be found.
Dad worked for Sears. Started in the tire dept. Then because of his radar background in the USAF was sent to tv repair school. Back then someone would come to your house to fix the tv. He was promoted to appliance salesman, the to dept. manager. I remember when he bought home a color tv in 1960, the first in the neighborhood. The Flintstones was one of the few color programs on and our living room was packed with most everyone in the neighborhood to watch it just because a color program was a novelty.
I was there to watch color TV too. LoL. may be not to your house but my neighbor's house and we, the kids, fighting to get the best seat but the son of TV owner said "sit down and watch tv, who make loud noise get out the here" So we quiet as pin drops. Oh fond memory of childhood. Now I am in 70s
When I was a kid in the 70s, I remember well ordering a toy from the catalog and going to a Sears catalog center to pick up the order. The whole experience was memorable. As an adult a couple decades later, I went to Sears for work clothes and shoes. When work sent me on a trip, I went to Sears for the first luggage I had ever owned. That's just where you went for such things. As a homeowner in need of a lawnmower, I got a Craftsman. When someone stole that mower, I got another one. Sears was always dependable. Sad to see what happened. I still have that luggage. It is falling apart a bit but still good. My car has a Diehard battery. Not sold BY Sears but it is at least their brand.
One of the craziest memories that I have was when I first used dial-up internet in the late 1980s on a 1200 baud modem via a service named Prodigy. Prodigy had been co-developed by Sears. I remember thinking, "Wow! Now Sears could digitize their catalog!!" It had occurred to me, but never to Sears executives.
The old Sears on Lamar in Dallas Texas was incredible, I used to go eat at their's Sear's cafeteria in the basement when I was in high school because a friend worked there and it was not far from school, it is an old art deco building, the building was made into a swanky apartment building after Sears closed, amazing building.
What a wonderful store i went to the first in my life 1976 in Barranquilla Colombia 🇨🇴 when i moved to Miami USA 🇺🇸 it was greater more merchandise that i ever saw in my life and yes my first bike was from Sears
When I was very young, my father went to Sears nearly every payday and bought more tools for improvements. I loved going with him. While he shopped, I would look in the sporting goods section, toys and peruse what are now classic record albums. Then they moved to the mall. The shopping experience was never the same. While in college, I worked in the stockroom during summer recess. It was a nice job at the time. We made lots of friends at the mall and enjoyed many Friday happy hours. There were still a few old timers left that were part of the profit-sharing program who would often reflect on the "good old days". Of course, now the store is closed. Currently in its rather large footprint are several new ventures. Nearly all are propped up by substantial public tax dollars in some form. Quite a downfall, thanks for the memories.
There were 5 of us kids. We never got any toys through the year, but Christmas was fantastic! We would take turns marking our wish lists in the Sears Toy Catalog. Thanks for the memories.
What a heartwarming memory! 🎄 That Sears Toy Catalog was pure magic, and marking your wish list with your siblings sounds like such a special tradition. Thanks for sharing-it’s moments like these that make the holidays unforgettable! 😊
@@dlcalbaugh There are two open Sears near me: Stockton, CA and Concord, CA. I could shop at both of them tomorrow afternoon. In a long driving day, I could even visit the other two in Whittier and Burbank, CA.
Sears was a big part of our lives growing up. As a kid, the Christmas catalog was amazing! and my Kenmore washer and dryer from Sears in 1997 and it’s still running for 25 year
IMHO, The downfall of Sears is indicative of the change in corporate management culture from building value through customer service and respect (acting as an important member of the family) to a management focused on maximizing profits for those corporate executives even if it meant causing the eventual death of the company and the loss of livelyhood for in many cases, thousands of loyal workers. Shameful!
That's chiefly the doing of... Oh, who was that General Electric CEO in the late 70s early 80s who first pushed this business model? He pretty much gave birth to late stage capitalism.
Still have last catalogue somewhere. Bought my tools there, boat speakers, lawnmower, list goes on & on. Loved looking at their toy catalogue!!!! They always honored anything broken.
The sears catalog was special for at the time the only entertainment was television with three channels and no internet. This was also a time when we played outside all day long, there was no A/C so you might as well stay outside. The schools were not air-conditioned the entire time I went from the 1st through the 12th grade. BTW: Sears has reopened a few stores in 2024!
Growing up in the 1960s, a constant sound in our house was my mother spelling our name, letter by letter, to the order taker when she placed Sears catalog orders over the phone. Like every other kid in the country, my siblings and I anxiously anticipated the arrival of the Christmas Wishbook, where we could drool over all the cool toys our parents wouldn't be able to afford. My parents bought my first bass guitar and amplifier from Sears. My dad loaded up our garage with Craftsmen tools, both hand and power. I still have some of them.
What an awesome memory! It’s amazing how Sears played such a big role in so many childhoods, especially with that iconic Christmas Wishbook. And Craftsman tools? Those things were built to last-so cool that you still have some! Thanks for sharing your story; it really brings back the nostalgia! 🎄🛠
Grew up with Sears my whole life. I worked there in hand tools in the late 90's. It was a great job and I really liked it. Shame this is all gone. Great video!
Thank you for sharing that! Working in the hand tools section must have been a great experience, especially with all the history behind it. It really is a shame it’s all gone now, but I’m glad the video could bring back some good memories. 😊
In the 1960s my parents bought everything from clothing to home improvements from Sears. After several years product quality and customer service went downhill. Sears is now nothing but a distant memory.
I once bought a pair of floor mats for my car from Sears. They turned out to be so flimsy that they were bunching up around my feet when I tried to access the pedals. Very dangerous! I tried to return them and the customer "service" rep actually accused me of stealing the mats! I wrote the main office a letter explaining the situation and how badly I was treated, warned them that calling me a thief without proof was slander and I could sue them, then told them to either make it right or they would receive my Sears credit card cut up into little pieces. They called and apologized, and refunded my money. Said I didn't even need to return the mats. This was just one example of their lousy customer service in their later years. Got too big for their britches and developed a very bad attitude.
I'll never forget the Sear's Wishbook. It was a large part of my childhood. My father had one of the large Craftsman tool boxes, as well. I bought my first riding lawnmower and other tools at Sears. So sad that they closed.
Worked in Sears music department in San Diego from 1967-69. Made $2.35 an hour part time. Loved that job. My boss was Dick Pick who managed the music and television department.
Since High School, I was hired as a stock boy and started to make a career at Sears. I worked at the stockroom, then in charge of layaways department. Them went to the auto department as bookkeeper. I was the one that pay the mechanics their commission. From there went to Catalog department, which was very small at that time and help build as a powerhouse. From there my last job had been a buyer assistance. I was in charge of buying the tools, paints, toys, camping equipment, home dec, kitchen appliances, office equipment, luggage, women stockings, etc. I was the one that planned the promotion and order the products 3 months in advance. It all came down when a new CEO took over Sears. In his visit to our stores, he mentions that we had 11 managers too many and 150 employees too many. With the cuts, service suffer, sales coverage was not enough. I decided to leave Sears, when the store manager ask me to work half the day in the office and the other half on the sales floor. They centralize the cash register on four sections, north, south, east and west. No more department section, not enough employees. That is when I quilt.
@@bobfrantz534 Not really. What should have been done is move the Sears Catalog to the internet. They already had the distribution centers around the nation. The stores will be the supporting role of the internet. Think about it, you order thru the internet, you don't like it or it is not what you though it was. You go to your local Sears store to return it and while you are walking in the store you see something that caught your eye. You buy something. Besides, there are things that is best if you see it in person and ask question about it. Tools, paint, lawn care, cameras are thing that you need to interact with the item or a salesperson. If Sears have converted to the internet, there will be no Amazon or eBay and many others. Sears will completely dominate the market. But the shortsighted new management missed the boat.
I worked for them 1976 to 1984 it was a good company then. But things changed and it is sometimes difficult to make changes and keep up with the ideas that changed people
Sears could have been at the very top of the retail chain if they had not went to China with their products manufacturing and kept their manufacturing here. At one time I believed in craftsman tools because they were so good. Not anymore. Harbor Freight are as good as craftsman and a lot cheaper in the end.
I wish Sears was open back for business not only l missed shopping there l also miss working there too thanks a lot Edward Lamper for not saving the store
I'm still using my Kenmore toaster. It was top of the line cast stainless when purchased in the 1990's, and still toasting perfectly. Outlived my Kitchenaid toaster.
I bought my cheap $13 toaster at Target in 1996 and it still works There were two others to choose from $8 one or a $15, so I bought the middle priced. So I guess toasters are built to last, maybe KitchenAid is a bad brand?
Great, nostalgic video down memory lane. With all due respect, it’s easy to forget that Sears’ business model closed numerous small “mom and pop” stores 100+ years ago
As a kid, everything we got for Christmas was put on Layaway. I would hear my folks talking late at night about putting things on Layaway or getting them out. Stores like Sears, White's Auto, Western Auto, Gibson's and McCrory's were all in the area of East Texas where I grew up. And all of the products in these stores only had .... MADE IN AMERICA on them. That was a true time when America Was Great.
That’s incredible! 😄 The fact that your old Sears typewriter and TV are still working is a true testament to their quality. Talk about vintage treasures! Thanks for sharing-that’s so cool! 🎉💯
I LOVED Sears! I grew up shopping there and then when I was grown with my own family! Multiple times over the years, my husband and I both have missed something specific about Sears! It was the best place to shop!
Yes...a house. And they were very well designed, attractive, and made of quality materials....probably better than modern homes. Most are still standing. And in some places, there are entire neighborhoods consisting of these homes, as some companies ordered these kits in bulk, to create a nice living area for workers.
Not long ago, I was hospitalized in the VA, with a veteran, who actually bought a LIVE DONKEY, from Sears, in 1936! It was shipped by rail, he had to go to his local train station to pick it up. He was 8 years old, at the time. That has to be one of the most far out things, that Sears ever sold!
I worked at Sears Service center on Griggs road in Houston Texas from May 1980 to May 1991. The Griggs Road service center was attached to the Sears Distribution center at the time. I learned everything I know on how to treat customers and be proud of a company to work for. An amazing experience and incredible memories. Thank you Sears and Roebuck for the great memories!
Sears once stood for dependable quality. So in 1987 I paid almost $500 for the best Kenmore micro wave oven they had. It lasted about 13 months. I had not paid extra for the extended service becasue I had trust in the quality of Sears products. My mistake, a mistake I NEVER made again. That micro wave oven was the last major product purchase I ever made from Sears. Losing life time customers, such as myself, is why Sears is gone now.
@@brot5246 I used to take pride in my ability to shop at Sears and afford to pay for quality products. The later years management of Sears took that good customer feeling cashed it in and turned it in to executive bonus pay.
Quality went downhill in the 1980s. At the time I was an auto mechanic and purchased several power tools. They didn't last and replacement parts didn't exist.
I worked for Sears back in the 1980's for four and a half years. They said that they shorted the third world manufacturers to save money to our face. They would higher people for 4.5 years and get rid of them before they vested. Advanced people were hired or brought in as a consultant to "Fix the computer systems" then lay them off with the assumption that new college employees "could handle it." This was a false assumption and job security went out of the company. They rotted from the inside starting with the executive staff. This started in the 1980's and kept on expanding from that point.
A little trivia: Frank Nixon built one of the Sears mail order kit homes - one of his sons that was born in that home later became known is President Richard E. Nixon. It's my understanding that the home is still standing although moved to a different location to become part of his birthplace memorial and he and Pat are interred a few yards away,.
The first thing I remember as a child walking into a Sears was the sound of keys being made. The next sound after that was the announcements over the PA system every few minutes that made no sense as a kid, 'Number nine?...Number nine?' Huh?? The loss of Sears in Canada was a continuation of department store decline the occurred in previous decades with the losses of Simpson's, Woodward's, Eaton's, and Nordstrom. And discount stores like Woolco (which became Walmart), K mart, and Zellers (which briefly became Target that failed) disappeared as well. Depending on where you live in Canada, your choices are down to two places - Hudson's Bay and Walmart. And if you live in a smaller community, you might be limited to Dollarama.
Sears & Roebuck ... when I was a boy, was where we shopped for everything that Woolworth didn't carry. Clothes, appliances, tools, toys, Boy Scout uniforms and camping equipment, everything. It was the greatest store ever. And the Sears Christmas Catalog.....we dog-eared page after page, so when we made our annual trip to Richmond (dressed in our Sunday best), we could see it all, and meet Santa at the same time.
Enjoyable although there is sadness mixed with old memories. Grew up with Sears. In San Antonio we had the downtown store at Romana Plaza and the Southside location on Loop 13. Later, by the time I had children, we shopped at the Sears at Central Park Mall. All gone!
What do you miss most about Sears?
When I was a child it was the toy department. It was awesome.
Their hardware dept was unparalleled.
Worked there as a stock man in my early 20s, climbing racks to get boxed baby cribs from the tiop shelf to wheel them out to the sales floor on a hand truck.
Sears! Toys, tools and tractors.
You could get a charge that was die hard play a stereo, open a fridge
Even buy a watch.
@@ThoseWonderYears the firearms and hunting department. I still have Sears firearms that I bought 45 years ago.
I miss Sears commitment to America. They tried to keep their stuff made in America. Also when their employees got activated for military service they not only kept your job they continued to pay into your retirement account and paid your families medical insurance.
I bought a house (built in 1960) about three and a half years ago. The previous owner left behind a clothes washer (Maytag), a dryer (Speed Queen), and a Sears Kenmore refrigerator… all from the early 1970s. All three appliances (some 50 years old) work just fine! None of them have computer chips inside… just good, old-fashioned MADE IN AMERICA quality.
Wow! I wish we could find great quality appliances. Everything today is disposable!
Computer chips arent the problem with appliances....high end appliances and speed queen has computer chips and they still last a long time. A lot plastic is put appliances too
The downfall of Sears and so many other stores that the "people at the top" chose to do was focus on selling credit, rather than selling the products we need to use daily.
I had one of their TVs from the 60s and I also had one of their manual typewriters. Do you know that they both still work?❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉😊😊😊! Great quality! I wish Sears would re open & comeback!❤😊😊😊😊
@@kathywarren745 well, thats not going to happen. The company didn't adapt to the changing economy or paid attention to their competition ex...walmart, kmart, home depot and lowes.
My dad worked there for 30 years. Made a living selling vacuum cleaners, raising a family in the 1970s and 80s. Then they fired all the full time employees. That was the downfall of Sears. Needless to say, Sears was a big part of our lives growing up. As a kid, the Christmas catalog was amazing!
You’re right, thanks for sharing
Loved the Christmas catalog ❤
Sad to hear. That was the good American times when a man could provide for his family just in single income.
I miss being a kid going to the toy section while my grandpa was in the tool section. Great times.
Didn't Sears for many years have a pension plan for it's employees?
Yup, the catalog was awesome. Had the biggest toy section I ever saw in those catalogs
Bought my Kenmore washer and dryer from Sears in 1997 and it’s still running fine in 2024.
They were the best!
Mine are still running good too
All my appliances came from sears
Great, ain't it? They really used to make things 😪 to last.
I still have my Kenmore dryer, too. I just bought a new washing machine in 2024.
I miss their appliances, they were top quality and never gave me grief.
@@delledonne1 the appliances have gone way downhill
@@namastemcl I had to replace my fridge at the worst of times, during the pandemic. The salesman told us outright, they're made to last about 10 years max. To me, that's just criminal.
@@delledonne1
7:42 My parents just got rid of their Kenmore washer and dryer last year. Purchased in 1971, they were both still working, but the top of the dryer was getting too hot. I figured it might be time to replace them.
My brother was a repairman for Sears and he told me that Sears, GE and Whirlpool are all the same internal parts.
@@delledonne1 And lasted forever. My dad's house still has Kenmore appliances.
I'm from Mexico, Sears is still active in most malls from Mexico City. My dad worked for Sears for about 30 years. He was so proud of the company and what he was able to do working for them. He passed away in December 2023 and watching this video was a sweet trip down memory lane; I still have lots of Craftsman tools that he left me and even my old Nissan B12 has a Die Hard sticker on the bumper. Thank you!
Are they in catalog too?
You are right here in México Sears keeps being a big company working normally. Como bien dices cada centro comercial tiene un sears, Nunca trabajé en Sears, porque trabajé en Liverpool la competencia directa de Sears en México.
i guess if usa citizens miss Sears, they are welcome to visit Mexican Sears stores.
@@Hu6uinho Liverpool y Sears ya son hermanos, los verás juntos en todos los malls más recientes. La competencia es Palacio de Hierro.
@@beanovskydurst ya Volkswagen are still made there too. Obviously 🙄 ever since the Panama cannel & free trade BS . Mexico is the only country that still makes decent vehicles & appliances. Trump shut down America companies . Everything imported from china 🇨🇳 clothes & appliances suck . Complete disposable items soon after they are boughten. The new engineering kids who design everything now ?. Ain’t got a clue about longevity!!!. Everything made in Canada 🇨🇦 pretty much is a thing of the past. Modern disposable crap 💩. Clothing made from plastic is lethal & useless. Plastic clothing isn’t recyclable . It’s a fire 🔥 hazard dangerous for kids . Towels made from plastic & fleece is rediculous. Cheers 🥂
Death of Sears started when management changed the floor staffing model. Growing up, Sears had sales people and registers in each department. You never had to hunt down sales or information help. But some “college educated” business school executives decided to cut staff levels to almost nothing and centralized the registers to 1/4 of what they had. They cut personnel cost overhead but killed the best customer service in the retail industry. Combine that with market changes and Sears suffered a slow, agonizing death.
Sears is well Seared now.
Same deal at Eaton's . I remember before they closed I sat in the shoe dept. with one shoe and nobody came over to help me . I had to get up and ask for help. Then I felt like I was just a hassle to them. A group of five or so employees stood at the cash talking and not working
This is pretty much going to be the same down fall of J. C. Penney. The store closest to us only has one register that I saw to check out in the middle of the store, and I only saw about 3 employees in the entire store. With that said, there is no one even walking around to see if they can help you with anything or straightening items. When you do find someone and call to them for help, they turn and walk the other way, they are for sure not there to work. Then the selection is very poor with about a quarter of the store full of racks and racks of "so called" discounted clothes. Nothing is sectioned off in sizes on those racks, so you're literally searching every rack, which I decided was not worth the hassle. That's been maybe a year ago and I've not been back.
J. C. Penney use to be our favorite store after Sears went out.
@@terryweatherford5070 you explained all just right ,unfortunately they killed sears !
Agree! What a mess that was/is!
I worked at Sears from 2008-2012, and you hit the nail on the head with the part about Eddie Lampert. I remember being a lowly sales associate and wondering why there was nothing being done in the way of getting products that people wanted to actually buy or streamlining the checkout processes, and instead all of this money was being wasted on useless stuff like iPads and pushing scammy Protection Agreements that cost 1/3 the price of the product itself, and the at-the-time predatory Sears card, and Customer Satisfaction surveys. They even introduced their own intranet social network thing so that you could network with other Sears employees across the nation. All of this time spent on useless stuff instead of getting products people actually wanted at price points they could afford. It was like Eddie and his direct underlings simply gave up. So many unhappy customers, and it wasn't the store employees' faults. To this day it boggles my mind how Sears ended up the way it did. Eddie sat back and did nothing as Sears died a slow painful death.
When I was a kid (1972-1984) there was this mood, this delightfully spontaneous feeling that everyone knew. We called it “the Christmas Spirit.” It was a feeling of warmth. And warm anticipation. It was knowing you’ll see relatives who you haven’t seen since last time the Nativity set was on display. It was Aunt T’s cream cheese spritz cookies and Grandma R’s Russian tea balls: almondy and rolled in confectioners sugar. It was falling asleep in the big back seat while dad drove us home from somewhere and something wonderful. It was each colorful bubble in the fancy Christmas tree baubles. It was knowing humanity has a Savior. That feeling was us. That feeling was all of us. Me and you. That feeling was America. And I miss it so much that sometimes it aches.
At 73 they are all gone now with only the memory remaining of a time to never be repeated
Beautifully said! It was exactly as you described!
@@Bass.Player Trump unironically could bring a lot of this stuff back if people just let him do it. Trust me the alternative is a bigger nightmare than what we have now
Christmas spirit NO there wasn’t? I was born 66 there was NO Christmas spirit. My Christmas’s were huge but by the 70s Christmas was dead. False excitement
The same in Canada back in the day. Looking at Canada now with its mass immigration, I realize those days are not coming back. This is where we failed the western world and North America in particular. One could drive a semi or progress through a store like Sears and make a living out of it. Now...there's 5 immigrants driving (the same truck) willing to work for about min wage. Many immigrants come from poverty so making min wage in Canada is just peachy for them.
Oh Man, Do I miss those days. I was born in Aug 1956, So I grew up in the 60s & 70s.
Times were so much simpler back then. It was a wonderful time to be a kid. There was so much more freedom as a kid back then.
I feel sorry for the kids nowadays. They'll never know the joy of being out on a summer day with nowhere special to go, Hanging out with your friends, Riding our bikes,
(And/or our horses in my case, I grew up on a farm in rural Oregon) With nothing but adventures to look forward to. We would spend our summer vacations riding or hiking and camping in the mountains, or going fishing in the rivers and lakes. I can remember at 12 or 13 years old spending the whole weekend camping, and never worrying about our parents freaking out because they didn't know where we were.
With nothing more than a fishing pole and a .22 rifle. It was a lot like the Stephen King movie "Stand by Me". (Without a lot of the drama).
We grew up poor, but didn't really notice it too much because everyone we hung out with were in the same boat. Things just seemed so much better than it does today.
Lord, How I wish I could turn back the hands of time, Just to experience that again.
@@bobd9193 I was born in 56 also and agree with everything you said what a great time to grow up 60’ and 70’s and yes loved going to Sears along with Woolworth’s and the Ben Franklin in downtown El Paso.
I'm curious as to just where you grew up in rural Oregon, as did I
Was born in Portland, lived there for a few years, then moved to Laurelwood, primarialy a Seventh Day Adventist community. They charged tuition for all of their schools, which my crop-picking parents couldn't afford, so three of we five kids walked a full two miles to a small one room school, where one teacher valiently tried teaching 25 students in grades 1 through 7, a wide variety of subjects. Then, my family moved on to Carlton, lived there for three years prior to moving to CA in '56, where I started my 3rd year of high school.....and, have lived in CA ever since, now in Gualala.
Seems so strange now, but whenever my dad wanted some spending money for some groceries, he'd park alongside the road, walk along picking up the soda and beer bottles people had tossed out of thier car windows, as also did I....
We lived three miles out of town, I'd take a gunny sack, pick up beer/soda bottles and by the time I reached town, had enough for a hamburger and to take in a movie at the local theater....then walk the three miles back home in the dark.
In '56, we moved to CA....and to a so much better life!
BHE
Well said. I couldn't agree more. Kids today ,I just feel so bad for them. This country is NOTHING like it was before tolerance and diversity.
I think many young people may think yeah right people looked at a catalog for hours but I can attest to personally having spent many many hours dreaming of the toys and bikes in the Sears catalogs. Especially at Christmas. Everyone I knew wether they bought from Sears or not used the catalog to decide what they wanted. It was REAL. My family bought almost all our household stuff from them. Even our clothes. I miss them personally.
Thank you for sharing
Guns Too..Haha
Not so different nowadays. What people used to read as catalogs, they do it today through the web. I bet those catalogs were amazing.
Yep, id sit there and look at the toys
Oh my goodness! I STILL remember (50 years ago) the feeling that ya'd get when a new Sears catalog showed up in the mail! You couldn't wait to just pour through it and look at EVERYTHING- not just toys and such...but EVERYTHING! You'd look at all the stuff- from lawn mowers and stereos to jon boats and rifles, and just picture what your life would be like when you grew up and could use all of this stuff. Spent many hours looking through every new catalog. Ya'd look at JC Penny's and Monkey Wards' catalogs...but it wasn't half as good- Sears had EVERYTHING! Get bored? Get out the Sears catalog and dream!
I still use my dads craftsman tools on a daily basis. Dad bought these in the mid 50's in Quebec Canada. These tools have travel mileage in the area of 150'000 miles all over the world. Special note to the socket wrench. Still works like a charm and never lets me down.
Eddie Lampert must have been a nightmare to those poor employees. So sad Sears is just a memory now.😢
@@MsLaurieLu
Not a theory:
Lampert was mentored by the World Economic Forum association, so he did what he was supposed to do; hailing in the illumination of the (now visible) New World Order.
Yes he was....i told everybody at sears when he purchased sears, it was a matter of time...although sears was on the decline before he got there..he was the death blow
14:55 - "I take responsibility for our mistakes". I bet he took a nice salary as well.
Lampert is a conman.
Great Video! Very well done!
The CEO and upper management were the downfall of Sears, it was all about putting money in their pockets rather than give people a good product at a good price. They also didn't care about their employees much either. When they sold off their name brands it ended for my family. It was no longer the high-quality products that lasted for years and the guarantee that went with those products. Then it was also caused the downfall of Kmart! Several small groups of greedy people ruined two great stores forever!
K-mart was also good, but in the early of 1980's. Its downfall we can only ow to a lazy visionless top management. They just did not have any idea how to upgrade and modify their stores. I had a chance to compare Sears and K-mart in the US and Canada. Canadian stores were performing much better.
@@johnfalstaff2270 Not surprising!
Thank you! You just said the true story 😢 Greed is the root of evil.
I worked for Sears for many years and they basically did three things that doomed them. 1. The last good CEO pushed in his son in law as the new CEO and he knew nothing about running it. 2. Got rid of full time employees who gave a crap and hired part timers to "save money" 3. Didn't listen to their I.T. Staff and create a strong online presence. They instead invested in mall stores when those were on the way out. They had a huge war chest and already had the distribution network in place and long paid for but no they let Jeff Brazos have that.
@@johnfalstaff2270Remember those Kmart Blue Light Specials?
School clothes shopping at Sears was family ritual for my family for many years.
Yes😂😂😂 it was plaid heaven in the 80s! Going to school looking like a lumberjack in corduroy 😂
Ditto
@@almVancouver Remember Tough Skins Jeans? If you got a hole in the knee, bring them back and exchange them for a new pair.
@@alextheskaterdude07 I wore them as well. I had them in different colors.
Loved the Sears Christmas catalog! When I saw it in our home I knew Christmas was right around the corner!!!
I miss Sears, it was our family destination for our needs and fun.😢 I miss you Sears and I miss K- Mart too.
I can remember Sears advertising slogan for many years was,
"Sears, Where America Shops." Sadly no more. 😢😢
I worked for Sears in St.Davids, PA and King of Prussia, PA for 9 years in the late 70s to the late 80s. I financed my college education by working there. I have many happy memories from that time. With their distribution network and infrastructure, Sears could have been a rival to Amazon today. The takeover by Lampert -- who was a vampire sucking Sears dry -- was the final nail in the coffin. Sad.
I original from Philadelphia, Sears owned Leo Mall in Roosevelt Blvd. NE and we brought our 1st Allstate insurance policy from Lou Chicon a sales rep.
I am retired and living in Mexico. Sears is alive and well in the upscale malls of the city (Guadalajara) and is a go to source for home goods, tools and appliances. The Mexico operations of Sears were bought by the billionaire Carlos Slim who continues to rake in millions from the iconic brand.
@billbruff9613; Wow! that is promising for the future in the US (maybe)🤷🏼♀.
If Mexico Sears still has catalogs or a website, lots of older Sears customers in the rural USA, would probably buy from it.
@@m.mickeypayne9811; Great point! We USA customers should all patronize the stores/businesses we want and make it known. This would be a way to get back our country on the right road to recovery of family life. I would insist the return of the original sign too. 👨👩👧👦
That is excellent. at least somebody somewhere is keeping it alive..
Edward Lampert should be in jail. Looks like he pocketed millions destroying Sears. He did the same thing to Sears Canada later on. I worked in the appliance dept at the Gateway Mall store shown in the video. They cut the commisions shortly after I left and everything went to hell.
So sad.
Sears was an outing for us as kids! We wouldn't ask for anything but were always hoping for popcorn or an ice or a chocolate treat!! I really miss those days 😢❤
There are so many memories as a kid in the 70s and 80s. My mom would take us there for school shopping and my parents go to for appliances. I worked there part-time in the 90s to supplement my income. It's still heartbreaking that corporate greed took over. This world would be a better place if we went back to family and morals and respect for each other. I yearn the good ole days.
I agree. It's very sad and disheartening to see how low society has sunken over the decades.
Excellent historical analysis. An American tragedy.
I’m 58, as a boy I recall browsing Sears catalogs at my Grandma’s house.i was stationed onboard USS Fulton in New London, Conn during my first enlistment in the USN. This was a submarine tender, AS-11, we spent a good bit of time in port tending to our squadron.
I was able to get a part time job at the Sears as a tire buster, brakes, alignment, alternator , electrical mechanic. After my service I went home and worked at Sears garage in Watertown, NY for a few years.
Watching Sears fade away has saddened me. I worked with many great people at Sears
Lambert was a corporate raider. Whenever you hear that a hedge fund has bought in, that means the beginning of the end. US Toys R Us went that way, as well as KB Toys. That's why our economy isn't about consumerism anymore, it's about Wall St.
Exactly.
Yeah, this POS Lambert killed a brand and American Icon only for his personal gain..Reminds me of a certain Presidential candidate.
I bet he still yuks it up with his golf course buddies over how much money he made. What he did wasn't illegal but it was immoral, and it would be great if some internet sleuth out there could let us know what companies or holdings he is involved with so we could bankrupt this guy.
And I hate this for us. Even the government is now owned by corporations. Sickening
Don't forget Red Lobster. Private Equity, Hedge Funds. Nothing but Wall Street Scams that make the Rich Richer and people unemployed. If you care to google the NBC story on the Red Lobster Debacle. I'll give you a hint...It wasn't the All You Can Eat Shrimp that Bankrupt them.
@@lynnlobliner3933 The raiders destroyed so much of the businesses. Same thing with Continental Can, which had been a great place to work until Oliver Goldsmith and others bought it and liquidated it.
When K Mart bought Sears , that was the beginning of the end for Sears !
That was right up there with AOL buying Time Warner. At least those to companies survived.
I loved their Craftsman tools. They were made in America. I still have some Craftsman tools that were made in America and I got them at Sears. I miss Sears.
Fresh out of high school I worked for Sears, from 1990 - 1992, and, looking back, I loved my time at Sears! The first year was in Paint & Hardware, and the second in Home Office Electronics (plus Sewing Machines & Vacuum Cleaners; it was a smallish store). In '92, I moved to the big city to try to follow my dreams, which never really panned out.
Used to love going to Sears...they had it all. Always loved the catalog.
I am in my 60s. I loved Sears walking through my neighborhood store looking for new Craftman tools,shopping for appliances and automotive section!!!
Too bad by the 00's the tools were overpriced foreign junk. It had become so mismanaged, like they thought they'd just always be there no matter how much they let the place slip.
Such a shame.
Me too😊
Same here🙂
I wished they hadn’t discontinued the Craftsman Professional tools.
My mom used to get the Sears catalog where she would order our Easter and Christmas outfits . It was a family event when we would all pile in the family car to collect the packages . The memories come flooding back
This was so therapeutic to watch, RIP Sears.
Greetings: Sears was not just a store or supplier. It was a family. Customer service, good products, service and atmosphere. That was part of their reputation and success. The new era of retail sales, corporate and social mentality was not of their's. The new retail sales mentality is impersonal, poor if any customer service and crap products. The new is buy it, break it 2morrow and buy another. Thx 4 the share. Very well presented.
Remember their motto “We service what we sell”? That was so true. My parents purchased a big stereo from them in the 70s and when the turntable went out, she called the repair service and he came out fixed it the next day! That stereo lasted for decades!
So much different in retail stores of today. Now, when one goes into one of these huge 'box' stores, ask an employee for some help, they SNARL at you....That is, of course, WHEN/IF they're in a GOOD mood!
@@blackholeentry3489 Greetings: Indeed correct. U said it. If they do reply, they have no knowledge of their department or products. Indeed society has degraded. Such lack of home training and respect will lead 2 it's demise. Mo worries, we R due 4 another Ice Age in about 100,000 years or less. The shifting of the poles is evident of that. Perhaps the next life on the planet will do better?
@@blackholeentry3489 I absolutely attest to this! A couple of weeks ago, I went with my sister for the first time in years to the shopping centre, to buy clothes for the kiddos and shoes. When we could not find the price tag or the price checkers by the sales desk. We kindly asked a woman about the pricing and if they had other sizes for three different ages. She snapped at us with a "Go over there I'm busy right now. I'll get to it when I get to it"😬
I was concerned and very much cringed at the idea of her behaviour! I contacted the store's management and told them what happened to Sears/Kmart, Fashion Bug, RadioShack and other retailers when their downfall began. Soon after they emailed me with an apology and a coupon. I do not intend to use it. But at least they know to re-train their employees on how to best give customer service.
Don't get me wrong, this whole experience could have affected employees' livelihood. I have worked in hospitality, retail, medical healthcare and banking as an over-the-phone sales personnel. So, I do know that my behaviour at work has to be top-notch and professional and everything else must remain at home. I don't feel well or have my mood swings? I call in sick. Avoiding uncomfortable situations at a work setting.
I live in a Sears house that was built in 1912. The walls are ply-board and still look good to this day.
That would be cool to see
@MichaelMcCaulTX That's wonderful blessing for you to have!The materials of that area was better quality than today. Far more equipped during that time, than it is now. The marketing values today is ski rockets prices today for houses,you would never pay off mortgage fees 🙄 .Never let go of what you have. Sears made possible. And era gone, but never forgotten.
My grandfather worked for Sears and Christmas was special walking through sears in 60s and 70s. The aroma ❤
To me as a newcomer to America, the name of SEARS was a symbol of American prosperity. Nothing else was as popular and famous than Sears. Collapse of this legendary mammoth should ring alarm to all Americans.
Great post - Thanx for the memories. 👍👍👍👍👍
Thanks for watching!
@@US_Joe yeah you couldn't find anyone who knew anything , especially in their auto department
That started going to pot in about 2010 when they let women who didn't know anything run their dept .
Sears approved my first credit card application.
When I was poor I used to buy a lot of their floor models at a huge discount.
thanks for sharing, I hope things are going much better for you now.
In 1997 their credit card interest rates were 24%..
@@brot5246 I have my credit card way before that.
@@brot5246 In 2001 I worked for Sears and the loyalty to that Card was unbelievable. The rate was 22% and people would pay with it when their wallets had Visa, etc. at around 13%. I wasn't going to argue as many of my customers in their 30's and 40's, and older, almost insisted on using it. When Sears told us they were not taking it anymore, we couldn't believe it. Some of the customers didn't believe us, some walked out and didn't buy anything.
My sears refrigerator 40 years old still looks and works brand new .!!!
I worked for them in 1985-86 and 1990. I noticed the fall was coming back then. Still I have fond memories of the Christmas Wish book and doing one stop back to school shopping. Lesson here, even the mighty can fall when mismanaged.
Thanks for sharing. Valuable lesson.
Sears was an amazing store quality products not like today all disposable Cheap products
True!!
When I was a teenage garage band musician my band landed a good paying steady gig. But I needed bigger amplifier. A salesman at our local Sears store sold me just the model that I needed and set me up with a payment plan that I could afford from my job as a musician. Then he ran an ad in the classifieds that sold my old small amp. That’s the kind of service and sales support that is sadly gone forever. I should mention that the year was 1964.
I miss Sears big time. From when I was a little kid in the 50s, we were always in Sears. Clothing, shoes, tools, appliances. You name it. Always looked forward to the catalog. There should be an investigation into the top management. How many employees lost their jobs. How many employees of their suppliers lost their jobs? Not only did he foolishly abandon the catalog, he also stopped putting ads (circulars) in newspapers.
So, basically... the Sears catalog was the first internet. AMAZING.
Perusing that annual Sears catalog was super fun.
Sears and Kmart merging was like Studebaker and Packard merging!😮
@@glennso47 Studabaker was failing and bleeding cash when it merged with Packard. Packard was in better shape at the time. My grandpa said Packard would have survived without Studabaker.
Kmart had a bankruptcy filing in 2002. When Kmart reemerged from their bankruptcy they had Eddie Lambert who invested in their sinking empire. Kmart owned a lot of real estate, and that is all Lambert wanted. Sears was a cash rich company at the time, and just received a large payment from the sale of their credit business from Citibank. Kmart bought Sears in 2005. Sears was in better shape at the time, and did not have any bankruptcy filing. Sears then bought from Kmart several closed stores because they wanted to open stores off the mall in shopping centers under the Sears Grand name. Kmart then took the cash from the sale of the stores, and used it to buy Sears. Kmart also had several investments in other retailers before they filed for bankruptcy protection that failed. Kmart also had an interest in buying Sears back in the late 1990's but they were already in trouble. The shareholders of Kmart and Sears voted by proxy vote in two seperate proxy votes (one for each company) to merge overwhelmingly. Lambert voted on Kmart's side his 54 percent share since he owned 54 percent of Kmart's stock at the time.
@@glennso47 Exactly what I was thinking.
Just like the Pennsylvania Railroad and the New York Central.
I bought my first flat screen plasma TV from SEARS in 08 it still works perfectly fine 😊
I loved Sears,it was a great store. I wish Sears was back and Wal-Mart was gone
Sears & Penny's were the two stores to go to for everything in Albany, GA as I grew up in the 60's. Sears had an escalator, how exciting. I got most of my clothes there and we had Kenmore products. I even got a minibike there when I was about 12. Employees had an old-fashioned retirement plan, too. My Dad was buying shoes for me when I was a kid one day and the same man who worked there for years told him of a good pension he had waiting. They always had that metal shoe-size-measuring device that you put your foot in. Also, you could return just about anything for a full refund and that built patronage. Unheard of now. Lost days in so many ways.
Thanks for sharing your story Frank, hope you have enjoyed the video.
I have some of the same memories of Sears and J.C. Penney stores in Valdosta, GA.
Back when my grandfather passed away (1982), we found dress pants with tags still on them. They were old. I went to Sears to see if I could return them and they actually did let me!!! When we found them, they were at least 5-6 years old. I miss the way they decorated for Christmas 🎄 It felt like a wonderland... the toys. So wonderful.
@@frankanderson4176 They’re called Brannock Devices and you can still find them in stores but good luck if the employees know how to use them or help you with your shoes.
It’s 2024. I bought 2 towels 50 years ago from Sears and I still have them and use them! I use them as rags and you can almost see them but they are still good! Today towels may last 6 months, maybe even a year. Good old Sears!
The Christmas 🎄 catalog was my childhood dreams! Thank you for sharing this historic look back.
My auntie in the 70's bought a Sears hi fi system, the turntable, amp, equalizer, cassette player and speakers had the Sears brand stamped. It sounded quite well and cheaper that the Japanese brands that were so famous, unfortunately she sold it. I bought my bicycle there in the late 80's which I still have today and every time I ride it people come to me with amaze asking me about it, there is a young lady who is in love of my bike and of the ringer, ring, ring
Sears & JC Penny's were the "Go To" stores that ALWAYS had the consumer goods you needed. If one store was out of stock for whatever item, you could surely find it at the other. BOTH stores had catalogs. These two stores were where EVERYBODY'S mom bought your school clothes and Christmas shopping. Sears and JC PENNY'S were American icons as the NY Yankees were to baseball......They were part of the American way of LIFE!!.....
@@eddiesimms9301 I remember when I was a teen it was a prestigious place to work. If you got to work at Sears or JCPenney’s that was really something. Just like working at Bell Telephone. It’s sad really that these companies forgot the people along the way.
Sears was popular here in Canada too, although Penny's never came here. We had Eaton's and, in Alberta and BC, Woodwards, both also now gone.
Don't forget Montgomer Ward...
I can still shop and muliple Sears and JC Penney stores near me - two sears and well over a dozen JCP stores within easy driving distance.
Being from CT, G. Fox & Co. will also remain in my memories of a lost icon store.
Back in the day it was bigger than E-Bay, and Amazon, and Walmart all put together!
@@leftylou6070 they were ahead of the times. Now look at home shopping.
Sears failed to adapt to the changes that were rapidly occurring in the retail market. With the online shopping experience and other factors that would have made a huge difference in the retail industry future for Sears. I’m an 80’s kid. Watching this video makes me feel so old and happy that I was able to live in that generation to experience it all. I was very disappointed to see my local Sears store being permanently closed that I had so many memories in as a child with my family and friends.
I disagree, a corporate raider Eddie Lamber (ESL) got into sears sold properties to himself bled raised rents, the stores dry, and closed retirement health insurance closed successful stores such as the one in Tucson that was always busy and profitable as anyone who had visited it or had their care there to purchase tires. I agree in part that Sears didn’t go quick enough into online sales…on the other hand, was still trying to wring funds out of the company after 20 years by arguing that the inventory was worth more (orderly going out of business sale) than the proper valuation of “fire sale prices” such as 99 Cent Stores performed…the US Supreme Court refused to hear his case which his company’s interest was to suck millions out of the company. Maybe not as Quick as Mitt Romne
Usually, bankruptcies ideally try to restructure debt to save a company…Lambert (or should I type Lamprey) was CEO and also board member but that’s a long time for bankruptcy to go on.
Maybe not as quick as Bain Capital or Michael Milliken, but just as questionable as the amount of real estate was truly valued, the management practices that drove away loyal long term employees, in a service oriented business, to only one in a department and never a cashier to be found.
@@Renshen1957 Yeah, my dad got screwed on the retirement thing. Too.
You are right.
Dad worked for Sears. Started in the tire dept. Then because of his radar background in the USAF was sent to tv repair school. Back then someone would come to your house to fix the tv. He was promoted to appliance salesman, the to dept. manager. I remember when he bought home a color tv in 1960, the first in the neighborhood. The Flintstones was one of the few color programs on and our living room was packed with most everyone in the neighborhood to watch it just because a color program was a novelty.
I was there to watch color TV too. LoL. may be not to your house but my neighbor's house and we, the kids, fighting to get the best seat but the son of TV owner said "sit down and watch tv, who make loud noise get out the here" So we quiet as pin drops. Oh fond memory of childhood. Now I am in 70s
When I was a kid in the 70s, I remember well ordering a toy from the catalog and going to a Sears catalog center to pick up the order. The whole experience was memorable. As an adult a couple decades later, I went to Sears for work clothes and shoes. When work sent me on a trip, I went to Sears for the first luggage I had ever owned. That's just where you went for such things. As a homeowner in need of a lawnmower, I got a Craftsman. When someone stole that mower, I got another one. Sears was always dependable. Sad to see what happened. I still have that luggage. It is falling apart a bit but still good. My car has a Diehard battery. Not sold BY Sears but it is at least their brand.
One of the craziest memories that I have was when I first used dial-up internet in the late 1980s on a 1200 baud modem via a service named Prodigy. Prodigy had been co-developed by Sears. I remember thinking, "Wow! Now Sears could digitize their catalog!!" It had occurred to me, but never to Sears executives.
The old Sears on Lamar in Dallas Texas was incredible, I used to go eat at their's Sear's cafeteria in the basement when I was in high school because a friend worked there and it was not far from school, it is an old art deco building, the building was made into a swanky apartment building after Sears closed, amazing building.
What a wonderful store i went to the first in my life 1976 in Barranquilla Colombia 🇨🇴 when i moved to Miami USA 🇺🇸 it was greater more merchandise that i ever saw in my life and yes my first bike was from Sears
When I was very young, my father went to Sears nearly every payday and bought more tools for improvements. I loved going with him. While he shopped, I would look in the sporting goods section, toys and peruse what are now classic record albums. Then they moved to the mall. The shopping experience was never the same. While in college, I worked in the stockroom during summer recess. It was a nice job at the time. We made lots of friends at the mall and enjoyed many Friday happy hours. There were still a few old timers left that were part of the profit-sharing program who would often reflect on the "good old days". Of course, now the store is closed. Currently in its rather large footprint are several new ventures. Nearly all are propped up by substantial public tax dollars in some form. Quite a downfall, thanks for the memories.
Thank you for sharing your story :)
There were 5 of us kids. We never got any toys through the year, but Christmas was fantastic! We would take turns marking our wish lists in the Sears Toy Catalog. Thanks for the memories.
What a heartwarming memory! 🎄 That Sears Toy Catalog was pure magic, and marking your wish list with your siblings sounds like such a special tradition. Thanks for sharing-it’s moments like these that make the holidays unforgettable! 😊
I work for Sears as a buyer for womens department. I love it . Thank you for this history
@elsafischer3247
Where is there a Sears in the USA? I thought they had all been closed by 2024. I doubt you are a buyer for any department with Sears.
@@dlcalbaugh There are two open Sears near me: Stockton, CA and Concord, CA. I could shop at both of them tomorrow afternoon. In a long driving day, I could even visit the other two in Whittier and Burbank, CA.
@@marci.5597 My apologies.
@@marci.5597 ; there is hope for the rest of the States. 🤷🏼♀🤷🏼♀🤔🤔💔💔🤷🏼♀
@@dlcalbaugh It's equally possible the person made a typo, or they are not native English speakers. You need to do something about that hostility.
I have fond memories of Sears in Orlando FL. I like the choices in many types of products!😃
Thanks for the memories, especially the popcorn.
Sears was a big part of our lives growing up. As a kid, the Christmas catalog was amazing! and my Kenmore washer and dryer from Sears in 1997 and it’s still running for 25 year
IMHO, The downfall of Sears is indicative of the change in corporate management culture from building value through customer service and respect (acting as an important member of the family) to a management focused on maximizing profits for those corporate executives even if it meant causing the eventual death of the company and the loss of livelyhood for in many cases, thousands of loyal workers. Shameful!
Greed strikes again. 😞
@@BrianAiello it’s all about profits and not wanting to earn them.
That's chiefly the doing of... Oh, who was that General Electric CEO in the late 70s early 80s who first pushed this business model?
He pretty much gave birth to late stage capitalism.
@@nrrork Jack Welch. He was another corporate raider
@@MaureenDeVries-wd9mh Yeah, that's him. I knew I'd know the name when I heard it.
Thanks. 😁
I had a Kenmore washer I bought new that lasted over 30 years! I have a ton of Craftsman hand tools.
Still have last catalogue somewhere. Bought my tools there, boat speakers, lawnmower, list goes on & on. Loved looking at their toy catalogue!!!! They always honored anything broken.
The sears catalog was special for at the time the only entertainment was television with three channels and no internet. This was also a time when we played outside all day long, there was no A/C so you might as well stay outside. The schools were not air-conditioned the entire time I went from the 1st through the 12th grade.
BTW: Sears has reopened a few stores in 2024!
Where?
@@alexisdiva9 Texas
My first bicycle
First saddle
First cordless drill
I’m 75 and I still have some of my Dad’s craftsman tools
Oh wow! That's when good quality mattered! Things were definitely made to last. My Daddy is 81 and still has some Craftsman tools! ❤
Growing up in the 1960s, a constant sound in our house was my mother spelling our name, letter by letter, to the order taker when she placed Sears catalog orders over the phone. Like every other kid in the country, my siblings and I anxiously anticipated the arrival of the Christmas Wishbook, where we could drool over all the cool toys our parents wouldn't be able to afford. My parents bought my first bass guitar and amplifier from Sears. My dad loaded up our garage with Craftsmen tools, both hand and power. I still have some of them.
What an awesome memory! It’s amazing how Sears played such a big role in so many childhoods, especially with that iconic Christmas Wishbook. And Craftsman tools? Those things were built to last-so cool that you still have some! Thanks for sharing your story; it really brings back the nostalgia! 🎄🛠
...This all went bad, I was Born in 05.
And I want to go back to the olden days where this stuff used to be actually good...
Grew up with Sears my whole life. I worked there in hand tools in the late 90's. It was a great job and I really liked it. Shame this is all gone. Great video!
Thank you for sharing that! Working in the hand tools section must have been a great experience, especially with all the history behind it. It really is a shame it’s all gone now, but I’m glad the video could bring back some good memories. 😊
Greetings: Since Sears closings, I do not purchase craftsman. I retain my old tools and aquire other. RIP Sears. I miss U.
In the 1960s my parents bought everything from clothing to home improvements from Sears. After several years product quality and customer service went downhill. Sears is now nothing but a distant memory.
I once bought a pair of floor mats for my car from Sears. They turned out to be so flimsy that they were bunching up around my feet when I tried to access the pedals. Very dangerous! I tried to return them and the customer "service" rep actually accused me of stealing the mats! I wrote the main office a letter explaining the situation and how badly I was treated, warned them that calling me a thief without proof was slander and I could sue them, then told them to either make it right or they would receive my Sears credit card cut up into little pieces.
They called and apologized, and refunded my money. Said I didn't even need to return the mats.
This was just one example of their lousy customer service in their later years. Got too big for their britches and developed a very bad attitude.
Incompetent management issues.
I'll never forget the Sear's Wishbook. It was a large part of my childhood. My father had one of the large Craftsman tool boxes, as well. I bought my first riding lawnmower and other tools at Sears. So sad that they closed.
Thank you for sharing your experience
Yes. Same here
Worked in Sears music department in San Diego from 1967-69. Made $2.35 an hour part time. Loved that job. My boss was Dick Pick who managed the music and television department.
My first bike,first girlfriend ,lost virginity 😎
Since High School, I was hired as a stock boy and started to make a career at Sears. I worked at the stockroom, then in charge of layaways department. Them went to the auto department as bookkeeper. I was the one that pay the mechanics their commission. From there went to Catalog department, which was very small at that time and help build as a powerhouse. From there my last job had been a buyer assistance. I was in charge of buying the tools, paints, toys, camping equipment, home dec, kitchen appliances, office equipment, luggage, women stockings, etc. I was the one that planned the promotion and order the products 3 months in advance. It all came down when a new CEO took over Sears. In his visit to our stores, he mentions that we had 11 managers too many and 150 employees too many. With the cuts, service suffer, sales coverage was not enough. I decided to leave Sears, when the store manager ask me to work half the day in the office and the other half on the sales floor. They centralize the cash register on four sections, north, south, east and west. No more department section, not enough employees. That is when I quilt.
Those moves were smart moves...what killed them was not moving on improving the "mail order" sales when people were shopping from home
Also very slow on moving all those stores out of the dead cities out to the suburbs where people did their shopping at malls
@@bobfrantz534 Not really. What should have been done is move the Sears Catalog to the internet. They already had the distribution centers around the nation. The stores will be the supporting role of the internet. Think about it, you order thru the internet, you don't like it or it is not what you though it was. You go to your local Sears store to return it and while you are walking in the store you see something that caught your eye. You buy something. Besides, there are things that is best if you see it in person and ask question about it. Tools, paint, lawn care, cameras are thing that you need to interact with the item or a salesperson. If Sears have converted to the internet, there will be no Amazon or eBay and many others. Sears will completely dominate the market. But the shortsighted new management missed the boat.
I worked for them 1976 to 1984 it was a good company then. But things changed and it is sometimes difficult to make changes and keep up with the ideas that changed people
Sears could have been at the very top of the retail chain if they had not went to China with their products manufacturing and kept their manufacturing here. At one time I believed in craftsman tools because they were so good. Not anymore. Harbor Freight are as good as craftsman and a lot cheaper in the end.
I wish Sears was open back for business not only l missed shopping there l also miss working there too thanks a lot Edward Lamper for not saving the store
Sadly this is one of my cherished childhood memories. Sadly because it is just a memory. I miss Sears.
I'm still using my Kenmore toaster. It was top of the line cast stainless when purchased in the 1990's, and still toasting perfectly. Outlived my Kitchenaid toaster.
Thanks for sharing!
I bought my cheap $13 toaster at Target in 1996 and it still works There were two others to choose from $8 one or a $15, so I bought the middle priced. So I guess toasters are built to last, maybe KitchenAid is a bad brand?
Great, nostalgic video down memory lane. With all due respect, it’s easy to forget that Sears’ business model closed numerous small “mom and pop” stores 100+ years ago
As a kid, everything we got for Christmas was put on Layaway. I would hear my folks talking late at night about putting things on Layaway or getting them out.
Stores like Sears, White's Auto, Western Auto, Gibson's and McCrory's were all in the area of East Texas where I grew up. And all of the products in these stores only had .... MADE IN AMERICA on them. That was a true time when America Was Great.
Sounds like the CEO destroyed at the line his own pockets
Simply worded, exactly!!!
@@charliegardner2098 the ultra rich are going to destroy America if we do not stop them !!
They raid a company of its cash so they can line their own bank accounts, then move on to another company.
Thank you, i cry with this video so many memories, it is very bad how they didn't do anything to make it work 😨😞😞
It made me sad..... I grew up in 70s/80s and it was so wonderful to shop there! I remember so much. Great memories!
I still have an old Sears typewriter and an old Sears tv and they both work!❤🎉🎉🎉😊😊😊!
That’s incredible! 😄 The fact that your old Sears typewriter and TV are still working is a true testament to their quality. Talk about vintage treasures! Thanks for sharing-that’s so cool! 🎉💯
I LOVED Sears! I grew up shopping there and then when I was grown with my own family! Multiple times over the years, my husband and I both have missed something specific about Sears! It was the best place to shop!
Yes...a house. And they were very well designed, attractive, and made of quality materials....probably better than modern homes. Most are still standing. And in some places, there are entire neighborhoods consisting of these homes, as some companies ordered these kits in bulk, to create a nice living area for workers.
yep
Not long ago, I was hospitalized in the VA, with a veteran, who actually bought a LIVE DONKEY, from Sears, in 1936! It was shipped by rail, he had to go to his local train station to pick it up. He was 8 years old, at the time. That has to be one of the most far out things, that Sears ever sold!
Replaced all the commission departments and replaced everyone with Min Wage Idiots.
Unfortunately, Sears killed themselves 😮.
I worked at Sears Service center on Griggs road in Houston Texas from May 1980 to May 1991. The Griggs Road service center was attached to the Sears Distribution center at the time. I learned everything I know on how to treat customers and be proud of a company to work for. An amazing experience and incredible memories. Thank you Sears and Roebuck for the great memories!
Sears once stood for dependable quality. So in 1987 I paid almost $500 for the best Kenmore micro wave oven they had. It lasted about 13 months. I had not paid extra for the extended service becasue I had trust in the quality of Sears products. My mistake, a mistake I NEVER made again. That micro wave oven was the last major product purchase I ever made from Sears. Losing life time customers, such as myself, is why Sears is gone now.
Sounds like a painful experience for you. Thanks for sharing your story
I brought a tv from them in 1997 and got it home and it would not play.
@@brot5246 I used to take pride in my ability to shop at Sears and afford to pay for quality products. The later years management of Sears took that good customer feeling cashed it in and turned it in to executive bonus pay.
Quality went downhill in the 1980s. At the time I was an auto mechanic and purchased several power tools. They didn't last and replacement parts didn't exist.
I miss Sears so much... thanks for sharing. Please do a full documentary about kmart history
@@imatteo
Yep, they had nice clothes and great house products and fitness equipment.
@@NewCreationInChrist896 you’re right 🥹
I worked for Sears back in the 1980's for four and a half years. They said that they shorted the third world manufacturers to save money to our face. They would higher people for 4.5 years and get rid of them before they vested. Advanced people were hired or brought in as a consultant to "Fix the computer systems" then lay them off with the assumption that new college employees "could handle it." This was a false assumption and job security went out of the company. They rotted from the inside starting with the executive staff. This started in the 1980's and kept on expanding from that point.
A little trivia: Frank Nixon built one of the Sears mail order kit homes - one of his sons that was born in that home later became known is President Richard E. Nixon. It's my understanding that the home is still standing although moved to a different location to become part of his birthplace memorial and he and Pat are interred a few yards away,.
nice -- "Best Poker Player in the U.S. Navy"
The first thing I remember as a child walking into a Sears was the sound of keys being made. The next sound after that was the announcements over the PA system every few minutes that made no sense as a kid, 'Number nine?...Number nine?' Huh??
The loss of Sears in Canada was a continuation of department store decline the occurred in previous decades with the losses of Simpson's, Woodward's, Eaton's, and Nordstrom. And discount stores like Woolco (which became Walmart), K mart, and Zellers (which briefly became Target that failed) disappeared as well. Depending on where you live in Canada, your choices are down to two places - Hudson's Bay and Walmart. And if you live in a smaller community, you might be limited to Dollarama.
Sears & Roebuck ... when I was a boy, was where we shopped for everything that Woolworth didn't carry. Clothes, appliances, tools, toys, Boy Scout uniforms and camping equipment, everything. It was the greatest store ever. And the Sears Christmas Catalog.....we dog-eared page after page, so when we made our annual trip to Richmond (dressed in our Sunday best), we could see it all, and meet Santa at the same time.
Enjoyable although there is sadness mixed with old memories. Grew up with Sears. In San Antonio we had the downtown store at Romana Plaza and the Southside location on Loop 13. Later, by the time I had children, we shopped at the Sears at Central Park Mall. All gone!