Dayton's
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dayton's | |
Type | Department store |
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Founded | 1902 Minneapolis, Minnesota |
Headquarters | Minneapolis, Minnesota |
Industry | Retail |
Products | Clothing, footwear, bedding, furniture, jewelry, beauty products, and housewares. |
Website | None |
Minneapolis-based Dayton's was among the nation's leading department stores for nearly a century. Founded in 1902 by George Draper Dayton as Goodfellows (and later renamed Dayton Dry Goods), Dayton stores became synonymous with quality merchandise, superior service, fashion leadership, and community involvement. In 1969, the Detroit-based J.L. Hudson Company merged with the Dayton Corporation to form the Dayton-Hudson Corporation, adding 21 Michigan-based stores to the total. In 1990, the department store division of Dayton-Hudson (now Target Corporation) acquired Chicago-based Marshall Field's. Prior to changing its name to Marshall Field's in 2001, Dayton's stores numbered 19, serving communities throughout the upper Midwest.
Dayton's was the parent of Target Stores, opening the first Target in 1962 as the discount store version of Dayton's. Target quickly grew to become the majority of the company's business. In 2000, Dayton-Hudson was renamed Target Corporation. In 2004, Target finally divested their department store division to focus on discount retailing.
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[edit] Timeline
- 1902: George Dayton opens Goodfellows
- 1903: Name changed to Dayton Dry Goods
- 1910: Name changes once again, to Dayton Company
- 1956: Dayton Company opens Southdale Center, the world's first fully-enclosed two-level shopping center
- 1962: Dayton Company opens first Target store in Roseville, Minnesota
- 1969: Dayton's merged with J. L. Hudson Company, a dominant Michigan retailer with 21 stores. The combined firm became known as the Dayton Hudson Corporation.
- 1978: The company acquires Mervyn's and became the 7th largest retailer in the United States.
- 1990: Marshall Field's was acquired by the Department Store Division of the Dayton Hudson Corporation, now Target Corporation.
- 2000: Dayton-Hudson Corporation changes name to Target Corporation
- 2001: Much to the dismay of their local shoppers in Minneapolis and Detroit, Dayton's and Hudson's were renamed with the more nationally known Marshall Field's nameplate.
- 2004: Target and May Department Stores announced the sale of the Marshall Field's department store group, including the 62 stores serving communities in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin.
- 2005: Federated Department Stores merged with The May Department Stores Company - combining Macy's and Marshall Field's and creating a new retail company with national scope and presence.
- 2006: Marshall Field's stores in Chicago, Minneapolis and Detroit took the Macy's name, ending the run of Dayton's, Hudson's and Marshall Field's as its own unique, upscale midwestern department store community.
[edit] Former Dayton's locations
City | Shopping center | Existed | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Minneapolis, Minnesota | Downtown (Nicollet Mall) | 1902–2001 | |
Rochester, Minnesota | Downtown | 1954–1972 | |
Apache Mall | 1972–2001 | ||
Edina, Minnesota | Southdale Center | 1956–(1990) | Retained small portions of original store |
1990–2001 | Replacement store | ||
Home Store (freestanding) | 1978–2001 | ||
Saint Paul, Minnesota | Downtown | 1963–2001 | |
Brooklyn Center, Minnesota | Brookdale Center | 1966–2001 | |
Roseville, Minnesota | Rosedale Center | 1969–1991 | |
1991–2001 | Replacement store | ||
Home Store (freestanding) | 1976–2001 | ||
Fargo, North Dakota | West Acres Shopping Center | 1973–2001 | |
Minnetonka, Minnesota | Ridgedale Center | 1974–2001 | Womens' and Children's only 1995–2001 |
1995–2001 | Mens' & Home store; in renovated Donaldson's/Carson Pirie Scott store |
||
St. Cloud, Minnesota | Crossroads Center | 1976–2001 | |
Burnsville, Minnesota | Burnsville Center | 1977–2001 | |
Sioux Falls, South Dakota | Empire Mall | 1978–2001 | |
Grand Forks, North Dakota | Columbia Mall | 1978–2001 | |
La Crosse, Wisconsin | Valley View Mall | 1980–2001 | |
Bismarck, North Dakota | Kirkwood Mall | 1985–2001 | |
Appleton, Wisconsin | Fox River Mall | 1991–2001 | |
Eau Claire, Wisconsin | Oakwood Mall | 1991–2001 | |
Maplewood, Minnesota | Maplewood Mall | 1996–2001 | In renovated Powers/Donaldson's/Carson Pirie Scott store |
[edit] Of interest
Dayton's was the first department store to introduce the concept of a "mall" to the American shopper, building Southdale, the nation's first enclosed shopping center, in the late 1950s.
Target was introduced by Dayton's in 1962 as its discount store. Target remains and has grown into a large corporation that dominates upper-middle class discount retail.
Little known is that in Dayton's heyday, it competed on par with, or perhaps even above, stores such as Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus. After changing its name to Marshall Field's, the respected retailer has been marketed as a fashion-forward, exclusive shopping experience for upper- to middle-income families in the Midwest.
The corporation's merger with Federated Department Stores will see a close consolidation of retail brands and markets, and will reduce competition in many Midwestern areas, as well as other markets nationwide that the May Company and Macy's share an overlap of stores in.
[edit] References
History of Marshall Field & Company
Associated Companies: BATUS | Target Corporation | May Department Stores | Federated Department Stores
Associated Stores: Frederick & Nelson | The Crescent | Ivey's Store Conversions: Dayton's | Hudson's
Related Topics: Marshall Field | Marshall Field's Wholesale Store | Frango | Macy's North