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In 1974, in a news release it states, CHH stated that to reflect the executives' contributions, the corporate parent was adopting the name Carter Hawley Hale Stores, Inc. [15] The new name was a major tongue twister, and stock analysts sometimes called it "Ego, Inc." [citation needed] The Wall Street Journal reported in 1984 that some critics ...
Edward W. Carter (1911–1996) succeeded Hale in the post, followed by Philip M. Hawley. The company, later known as Carter Hawley Hale Stores Inc., owned the Emporium, Weinstock's and The Broadway, as well as Neiman-Marcus, prior to its two famous bankruptcies. He was also a vice president of the Bank of America and a member of the Bohemian ...
John Wanamaker or Wanamaker's (Philadelphia), sold to Carter Hawley Hale in 1979, then Washington, DC–based Woodward & Lothrop owned by Alfred Taubman; sold to May Company in 1995; merged with Federated Department Stores in 2005 (now known as Macy's, Inc.) Kaufman's ; Kaufmann's (Pittsburgh), converted to Macy's 2006
Carter Hawley Hale poured another $80 million into renovating the stores, [14] but to no avail—customers had gone elsewhere in the intervening decades and did not come back. In late 1986, the now 15-store chain was sold to Woodward & Lothrop , owned by Detroit shopping-mall magnate A. Alfred Taubman , for around $180 million (~$424 million in ...
Broadway-Hale Stores, later Carter Hawley Hale Stores, acquired Emporium-Capwell Co. in 1970, [4] [5] and consolidated its San Francisco Bay Area operation under the (still separate) Emporium and Capwell names, finally merging them in 1980 under the Emporium-Capwell name, [6] [7] later shortening the name to Emporium in 1990.
In 1949, Hale's bought their Sacramento rival, Weinstock, Lubin & Co. [6] In the same year, Hale's merged with Los Angeles–based Broadway Department Stores, becoming Broadway-Hale Stores, Carter Hawley Hale Stores, and later Broadway-Hale Stores.
Vaccine stocks continued to fall in premarket trading on Friday, following a sharp decline on Thursday after President-elect Donald Trump announced he would appoint Robert F. Kennedy Jr. to head ...
The chain was purchased by Hale's in 1949, becoming part of Broadway-Hale Stores, later Carter Hawley Hale. In 1978, Weinstock's expanded into Utah by rebranding its sister chain The Broadway's location at Fashion Place in Murray into that name, with two stores later in Ogden and Salt Lake City.