Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The book name was dropped to just Thomas Guide and colors changed to match Rand McNally colors and product line releases. The popular map store was closed at the Irvine building, which was the last TBM store to close as they had they shut the ones in San Francisco, downtown Los Angeles, and the South Coast Plaza Mall years earlier.
The first Rand McNally Travel Store was opened in New York City in 1937. In the 1990s it became a chain with 29 locations, but by 2005 all were closed as a cost-saving measure. While Rand McNally is mainly known for its maps, in 1955 it published a book on random numbers. A Million Random Digits with 100,000 Normal Deviates by RAND Corporation.
The Ranally city rating system is a tool developed by Rand McNally & Co. to classify U.S. cities based on their economic function. The system is designed to reflect an underlying hierarchy whereby consumers and businesses go to a city of a certain size for a certain function; some functions are widely available and others are only available in the largest cities.
1960 Rand McNally (Gulf) map of New York and New Jersey - TwinsMetsFan (talk · contribs) 1969 H.M. Gousha (Chevron) map of New Jersey - Dough4872 ( talk · contribs ) 1970 General Drafting (Esso) map of New Jersey - Dough4872 ( talk · contribs )
Pages in category "Map companies of the United States" The following 35 pages are in this category, out of 35 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Macy's got its start as America's first department store before the Civil War, and with all the ups and downs of the last 160+ years, the brand still lives on today.
English: This folding railroad promotional brochure map is a fine example of a late nineteenth-century American railway map by one of the most important American railway mapmakers and publishers still in business today: Rand, McNally and Company of Chicago. Established in 1858 as a printing company, by 1873 the firm was known for its railroad ...
Upgrade to a faster, more secure version of a supported browser. It's free and it only takes a few moments: