Halle Brothers Co.
The Halle Building is one of Cleveland’s oldest landmark buildings. Originally built in 1910 as the Halle Brothers upscale department store, the building is now reconfigured into 392,000 square feet of office space | |
Department store | |
Industry | Retail |
Fate | Closed |
Founded | 1891 |
Defunct | 1982 |
Headquarters | Cleveland, Ohio |
Products | Clothing, footwear, bedding, furniture, jewelry, beauty products, and housewares. |
Website | None |
Halle Brothers Co. of Cleveland, Ohio, commonly referred to as Halle's, is a defunct department store chain. During most of its 91-year history Halle's focused on higher-end merchandise which it combined with personal service. The company was the first major department store in Cleveland to open a suburban branch store.
History
The Halle Brothers Co. (1891–1982) was considered the leading department store company in Cleveland, Ohio. Founded on 7 February 1891 by brothers Samuel Horatio Halle and Salmon Portland Chase Halle, the very first store was located at 221 Superior Avenue near the city's Public Square where the brothers had bought out a hat and furrier shop owned by T.S. Paddock. Two years later, they moved to Euclid Avenue and East 4th Street and added ready-to-wear clothing to the merchandise mix. The firm was officially incorporated in 1902 as the Halle Bros. Co. After growing and moving several times, the company eventually built its main store at 1228 Euclid Avenue by 1910. By 1927, their new $5 million Huron-Prospect Building was opened, creating an emporium in what is now known as the city's Theater District.
Halle's was well regarded as a high-end department store, receiving praise for opening stores beyond the usual shopping district of Public Square in downtown Cleveland. When the flagship store expanded in 1927, Time Magazine praised the business for helping to turn the city of Cleveland into a more metropolitan city and compared Halle's to Lord & Taylor, B. Altman & Co., R.H. Stearns, Marshall Field's, Bullock's, and Maison Blanche.[1]
As of 1927, Halle's selling region included western New York, Pennsylvania, Northeast Ohio, and Indiana.[1]
On the Fiftieth Anniversary of the Halle Bros. Co. the employees presented to Mr. Samuel H. Halle several volumes holding pages one from each employee. In the upper corner is a the record of the name, department and years of employment. The rest of the page is the letter to Mr. Halle.
Although the company sustained losses during the Great Depression, business grew again after World War II as Halle's began developing suburban branches starting in 1948 under the leadership of Walter Murphy Halle, while completing a $10 million modernization at Playhouse Square that included a new service building on Prospect Avenue and the West Wing addition to its original building in 1949. Over time, the store came to be enjoyed by the city's carriage trade society, especially during the Christmas season when the flagship store had its very own popular version of Santa Claus, a man named Mr. Jingeling, who could be found, as a TV and radio jingle reminded kids, "on Halle's seventh floor" serving as Santa's "Keeper Of The Keys."
Halle's devotion to personalized service was well known, and each new employee received the company's pledge to service upon their hiring:
“ | Many of us are confronted by the necessity of deciding on matters that arise in the daily routine of business, not covered by the "Rules and Regulations." For helpful aid in such cases, remember one thing: This establishment puts no premium on clever tricks or cute business practice. Be open, frank, above all, Honest. Decide on the simple law of right or wrong-then you can't go wrong.[2] | ” |
While the company outlasted many other department and specialty stores in Cleveland, the 1960s brought hard times to the family business. With the closing of Sterling-Lindner Co. and Bonwit Teller, both located across from the main Halle's store in downtown, and the decline of Cleveland's Playhouse Square theaters, downtown shopping shifted to Cleveland's Public Square where rivals Higbee's and The May Company operated stores with easy access to Cleveland's Rapid Transit system. The company attempted to counter this competitive disadvantage by, in 1956, leasing a number of buses from the Cleveland Transit System for the purpose of providing a free shuttle service from Public Square to Playhouse Square, a move initially seen as an interim measure pending completion of a proposed subway line under Euclid Avenue (a project for which voters had approved public financing in 1953). When the planned subway failed to materialize (then-County Engineer Albert S. Porter refused to go forward with the project believing that the future of local transportation was linked to the freeway), Halle's was forced to continue the shuttle service.[3] Without the draw of other stores, and rising crime on Cleveland's near east side, it became more difficult for suburban shoppers to justify a trip to the flagship Halle's store.
Suffering from an overbuilt flagship, the abandonment of Downtown Cleveland and overexpansion into the outlying areas, the company was sold to Marshall Field's in 1970, under which it deteriorated, falling behind local rivals Higbee's and May Company. Attempts to lure less upscale patrons with mid-priced goods failed, forcing the 1974 resignation of then-president/CEO Chisholm Halle—Walter's son and the grandson of Samuel H. Halle who had died in 1954. Field's did attempt to modernize Halle's look, investing in a brand make-over campaign in the 1970s, including retiring Halle's traditional Old English Script logo to a new logo which matched Marshall Field's logo, however same store sales continued to slide.
In November 1981 Field's sold Halle's (now numbering 15 stores in Ohio and Pennsylvania) to Associated Investors Corporation, led by Columbus, Ohio businessman Jerome Schottenstein, whose primary holdings included the Value City discount store chain. At first the sale seemed to hold promise for Halle's. Schottenstein attempted to allay community fears by placing full page newspaper ads in which he promised to see to the continuation of the chain's traditions.[3]
However, Associated Investors subsequently liquidated the company in 1982 with all the stores either sold or closed despite attempts to operate them as a smaller suburban six-unit operation.[4] A location at Randall Park Mall in North Randall, Ohio was planned for the 1970s, but was canceled. That space sat empty until a multiscreen cineplex was built there in the late 1990s.
Its former flagship store at Playhouse Square Center was redeveloped as offices by Forest City Enterprises with space for retail shops on the main floor and a food court in the former Downstairs Store.[5] During the late 1990s, the building was also used as the main location of the fictional Winfred-Louder store in "The Drew Carey Show" on ABC.[6]
Actress Halle Berry, who was born in Cleveland, was named for the famed department store.
Columbus Locations
The Union Co., a division of Manhattan Industries, was an upscale department store with six locations in and around the Columbus, Ohio region. The chain was sold to Marshall Field Co. of Chicago in 1980. Marshall Field paid $8 million and the chain was rebranded to Halle's.[7]
See also
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Time Magazine, "Pioneer Buildings," June 6, 1927
- ↑ "Walter and Samuel Halle, with framed document.". Cleveland Press collection, Cleveland Memories. 1951. Retrieved June 10, 2012. (Photograph of Walter and Sam Halle holding framed A Leaf from our Policy)
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Wood, James M. (1987), Halle's: memoirs of a family department store (1891-1982), Cleveland, Ohio: Geranium Press, p. 192, ISBN 0-940601-02-8, LCCN 87015010
- ↑ Encyclopedia of Cleveland History The history of Halle Brothers Co. Accessed September 7, 2006
- ↑ Halle Building, Forest City Enterprises. Accessed 2007-08-23.
- ↑ Feran, Tom (1998-06-09). "Cleveland getting last laugh on TV". The Plain Dealer. Retrieved 2008-07-28.
- ↑ "http://www.dispatch.com/content/blogs/a-look-back/2010/03/what_a_downtown_bigbox_store_l_1.html" What a Downtown "big-box" store looked like in 1955, Columbus Dispatch, January 24, 2011