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Department Stores
Wholesale
Stores |
Types of Department Stores |

Small Scale Stores |
When shopping, there's all types of department stores to shop at. We have the
Upscale stores where you need to make sure to have plenty of money, Mid-scale,
still have some money, but not as much, mid-range stores are our everyday people
stores, discount stores where you can probably buy twice as much for the same
money spent at an upscale store. Off-Price Retailer stores are one in
their own! |
Top 10 Upscale Stores |

Founded 1858 Headquarters Cincinnati, Ohio Products Clothing, footwear, bedding, furniture, jewelry, beauty products, and housewares. Website www.macys.com |
Macy's is a chain of mid-range American department stores with its flagship store
in Herald Square, New York City, which, with its one million square feet of selling
space has been billed as the "world's largest store" since completion of
the Seventh Avenue addition in 1924. (Though it actually ties with London's more
upmarket Harrods in terms of vastness of selling space.) The company also operates
two other national flagship stores, at San Francisco's Union Square and the
former Marshall Field's flagship Marshall Field and Company Building on State
Street in the Chicago Loop. Additionally, divisional flagship store locations
operate in Atlanta, Miami, Washington, D.C. and Seattle. The company produces the annual Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, a well known parade which was started in Newark, New Jersey by L. Bamberger & Co. and has been held on the streets of New York City annually since 1924. Macy's was founded in 1858 by Rowland Hussey Macy a Quaker businessman whose religion dominated Manhattan at that time. On the company's first day of business the sales totaled $11.06. Macy had established a dry goods store in downtown Haverhill, Massachusetts in 1851 that initially served the whaling community there. Macy moved to New York City and established a new store named "R. H. Macy & Company" on the corner of 14th Street and 6th Avenue, later expanding to 18th Street and Broadway, on the "Ladies' Mile", the 19th century elite shopping district, where it remained for nearly forty years. |