Posted on 05/04/2015 7:35:35 PM PDT by ChildOfThe60s
The Big Store.
For generations, it was as synonymous with Christmas and fashion as it was Detroit. The store at Woodward and Gratiot avenues was absolutely massive, evolving with the Motor City until it became the tallest department store in the world. By the time it finished growing, the stores size almost defied belief.
A quick list of facts, many courtesy of the Detroit Historical Museum:
The store was 2,124,316 square feet, making it second in size among department stores to only Macys in New York. Even then, Macys is only 26,000 square feet bigger. The store was spread out over 32 floors: 25 floors, two half-floors, a mezzanine and four basements. At 410 feet, Hudsons was the tallest department store in the world. The building had 51 passenger elevators, 17 freight elevators, eight employee elevators and 48 escalators. Its largest freight elevator could accommodate a semi trailer. Hudsons had to have three transformer centers in the store: They generated enough juice to power a city of about 20,000. The store had 39 mens restrooms, 50 for women and 10 private ones for executives. The largest was a womens lounge on the fourth floor that had a whopping 85 stalls. It had 705 fitting rooms, a world record. The dining rooms and cafeterias served an average of 10,000 meals a day - not counting the 6,000 meals a day served in the employee cafeteria on the 14th floor. The 13th floor dining room was renowned for its Maurice salad and Canadian cheese soup. There were 49 large display windows facing Woodward, Gratiot, Farmer and Grand River Avenues, and there were an additional 50 interior display windows in areas such as the elevator corridors and in the Woodward Shops on the seventh floor. The store featured more than 200 departments across an incredible 49 acres of floor space, and it featured about 600,000 items from 16,000 vendors from 40 countries. The building had 51 elevators serving its 17 floors of retail.
Joseph Lowthian Hudson and his father were running a mens clothing store in the lumber town of Ionia, Mich., when the Panic of 1873 struck. When the sawmills were shuttered, their customers couldnt pay their bills. Then Hudsons father died. Three years later, Hudson went bankrupt, paying his creditors 60 cents on the dollar. Hudson dusted himself off and started over in Detroit. On April 2, 1881, Hudson opened his first store on the ground floor of the old Detroit Opera House. In 1888, he was so successful, he looked up all the creditors he had shorted in the bankruptcy proceedings 12 years earlier and paid them in full - with compound interest.
In 1911, he opened what would become the first piece of the behemoth. Many people thought Hudson was a fool opening so far north of Jefferson Avenue, then the heart of the citys commercial district.
Hudson himself was a legend. Easily one of the most successful businessmen in the citys history, Hudson also was a benefactor. He would serve as chairman and organizer of Detroits Associated Charities, which laid the foundation for the United Way Foundation.
In 1954, Hudsons had sales of more than $163 million (an astronomical $1.28 billion today).
In 1961, at age 29, Joseph L. Hudson Jr. - the founders grandnephew - became the business president. He had started out working on the docks of the downtown store in 1950. He emphasized fashion and special events and would grow the chain, expanding into the suburbs as the citys population sprawled into the countryside.
In 1969, Hudsons merged with Dayton Co. of Minneapolis, creating Dayton Hudson Corp. The merger led to growth not on in Michigan, but also Ohio and Indiana.
As the citys decline in population, reputation and wealth continued, Hudsons downtown store closed Jan. 17, 1983, after more than 90 years of business.
But the building was not abandoned at this point. The companys corporate offices remained in the Big Store, and about 1,200 people still worked there. A new lobby and security entrance were added on the Farmer Street side for employees and visitors. Employees would stick around the building until 1990, when the store was sold by Dayton Hudson Corp. to Southwestern Associates of Windsor, Ontario.
Various media sources wanted the public to believe that Hudsons had been vacant for 15 years, when in actuality, it was eight years, said historian Michael Hauser, which, by Detroit standards, is a relatively short period of time, compared to many other large vacant structures in the city that have been idle for decades. The big blast at the Big Store
Despite several pitches to redevelop the enormous structure, the building was imploded at 5:45 p.m. (the stores closing time) on Oct. 24, 1998.
With a deafening roar that will echo in the hearts of Detroiters for decades, the Hudsons building was blasted to the ground ending one era and beginning another in 30 ground-shaking seconds, The Detroit News wrote. A symbol of glamor for three generations, a symbol of decay for another, the mammoth structure wobbled like a drunk, hesitated, then collapsed into a 60-foot-high pile of rubble coating downtown streets with a fine gray dust.
Thirteen years after the big bang at the Big Store, no development has occurred at the site other than an underground parking garage. Hope that someone might wish to build on the property has left Detroiters with nothing but a giant empty space in the heart of downtown dotted by steel girders poking above a concrete expanse.
Which led to Minnesota getting Marx Dayton as trust fund baby goobernor.
My parents were both from Detroit. Back in the 20’s and 30’s Hudsons was a super-elegant department store, practically Beverly Hills in scope. My grandmother’s favorite place to eat lunch was at Hudsons, very white glove, very hoity-toity.
I lived in the Detroit metro area many years ago and Hudson’s Dept store was magnificent. Sic transit....
They also had a fine store out along NW Highway, in Southfield. The race rioting killed the Woodward Ave. store, and the Southfield store succumbed to the crime that moved there from Detroit itself.
That Hudson building would violate all kinds of federal laws and regulations now.
Reminds me of Canada’s Hudsons Bay Stores
My second job as a teenager was working at Hudson’s candy department in Flint. Great store and great macadamia nuts.
In 1950 I attended the big Thanksgiving parade Hudson’s sponsored. Had hot Vernor’s ginger ale at the Vernor’s store that cold November day.
I miss the Maurice salad. Hudson’s was a great store.
*Detroit ping*
Detroit is living off nostalgic fumes, it's gone, what was an industrial giant, progressive and industrious is over.
The only thing left there is a good sports town (except the Lions), a few Greek restaurants, the “Renthonthenner” (Renaissance Center) a few good Coney Island hot dog restaurants, a good Symphony orchestra and...the sprawling suburbs.
Detroit is a shell of what it was and it's mayors have been the absolute worst of what humanity can give us, starting with Coleman (marbles in his mouth) Young.
As long as people split from the city before sunset, business will be bad. Crime is the killer there...
Those darn Amish.
The Amish keep Detroit solvent (Sarc?)
With their hard work ethic, Detroit might be a thriving city instead of a decaying one...
BTW, are there Amish in Detroit? No.
Ah... Real ginger ale. One of many things I have missed since I was relocated by my employer in 1975.. They don't sell it here.
When I go back to visit my Sis, I stock up.. ;-)
Here in Seattle, we have the old Bon Marche building. It’s only eight floors, but covers a whole city block.
I worked there for years.
But it was sold during that time to Macys, sad, but at least they left the building stand.
...flashback city.
I remember shopping at JL Hudson’s store in downtown Detroit with my parents in the 60’s during Christmas time. The memories come rushing back to me every year when I watch “A Christmas Story”. We would actually get dressed up and spend the day shopping there, not like today. I use to love watching the mechanized elves in the window displays, and I was actually a walker in a couple of the JL Hudson’s sponsored Thanksgiving Day Parades. They sure didn’t have the stocking-clad gay dancers like todays Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parades.
Sadly, it was a different America, and the Lions have pretty much always sucked...
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