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History of retail in Southern California information


An 1853 ad in Spanish in the bilingual Los Angeles Star for Lazard & Kremer dry goods
S. Lazard & Co.'s store on Main St. between 1866 and 1872
Hamburger's, "The People's Store" Spring Street Early 1880s
Stern, Cahn & Loeb's City of Paris department store at 105-7 N. Spring St. (post-1890 numbering: 205-7 Spring), sometime between 1883 and 1890
Hamburger's building (later May Co. flagship) at 8th and Broadway, ca. 1912
1917 photo of Bullock's Downtown, opened 1907
J. W. Robinson's then-new flagship on 7th Street, 1915
Seventh St. looking west from Broadway, 1917
Buffums' then newly expanded flagship, Downtown Long Beach, 1924
Bullocks Wilshire 1929 art deco-style flagship
The 1939 Streamline Moderne style May Co. Wilshire, now The Academy Museum of Motion Pictures
Center court at South Coast Plaza mall, opened 1967
Fountain at Irvine Spectrum Center lifestyle center, opened 1995
Animated fountains at The Grove, opened 2002

Retail in Southern California dates back to its first dry goods store that Jonathan Temple opened in 1827 on Calle Principal (Main Street),[1] when Los Angeles was still a Mexican village. After the American conquest, as the pueblo grew into a small town surpassing 4,000 population in 1860, dry goods stores continued to open, including the forerunners of what would be local chains. Larger retailers moved progressively further south to the 1880s-1890s Central Business District, which was later razed to become the Civic Center. Starting in the mid-1890s, major stores moved ever southward, first onto Broadway around 3rd, then starting in 1905 to Broadway between 4th and 9th, then starting in 1915 westward onto West Seventh Street up to Figueroa. For half a century Broadway and Seventh streets together formed one of America's largest and busiest downtown shopping districts.

Branches in what were then the suburbs like Hollywood and Mid-Wilshire were built in the 1920s, and local department stores as well as branches of national variety stores and J. C. Penney opened in local downtowns in the outlying towns that would become the suburbs. However, real suburbanization took off in the 1950s with the building of shopping centers across the suburbs. By the 1960s few suburbanites ventured to Downtown Los Angeles to shop, and regional and community shopping centers flourished. Local chains Bullock's, The Broadway, J. W. Robinson's, May Co. and Buffums built out dozens of branches each in malls across Southern California, as did Sears and J. C. Penney.

In the 1990s the local department store chains either closed or were folded into Macy's. Alternative shopping center formats like power centers, lifestyle centers, and outlet malls arose, strip malls flourished, and as elsewhere in the country, shopping malls began to close or were transformed into strip-style community shopping centers. Retail in Southern California today is much like anywhere else in the United States, with a variety of shopping center formats, and ever-increasing competition from online shopping and major fallout of closed stores as a results of the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic which closed stores for months.

  1. ^ Newmark, Marco (1942). "Pioneer Merchants of Los Angeles". Historical Society of Southern California: 77.

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