Sears timeline: Rise, fall and restructuring of a Chicago icon over 130 years (2024)

Sears Holdings Corp. filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in October 2018. The company’s chairman, Edward Lampert, won a bankruptcy auction in January 2019, that will keep the retailer in business and seek to save tens of thousands of jobs. He’s now being sued by Sears for allegedly taking $2 billion in assets from the company. Here’s a look back at the company since its founding more than 130 years ago.

1886: Richard Sears begins selling watches in Minneapolis

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Sears was a station agent in Minnesota when a shipment of gold watches arrived for a local jeweler, who refused them.

The rebuffed wholesaler told 22-year-old Sears he could have the watches for $12 apiece. He said yes, pivoted, and offered them to agents along the line for $14. With that type of watch retailing for $25, there was room for the agents to profit, and Sears pocketed $2 for each one sold.

Within six months, Sears had made $5,000, and his watch business started to outstrip his railroad salary. “The tail had begun to wag the dog,” he said in a 1906 Chicago Tribune story.

1887: Sears moves to Chicago, hires Alvah Roebuck

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Setting up at Dearborn and Randolph streets, Sears hired a watchmaker “thin to emaciation,” Alvah Roebuck. Their watch company grew rapidly into a general mail-order company that used high volumes to enable low prices.

1888: First catalog released

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Sears first uses a printed mailer to advertise watches and jewelry. Under the banner “The R.W. Sears Watch Co.,” Sears promises his customers “we warrant every American watch sold by us, with fair usage, an accurate time keeper for six years — during which time, under our written guarantee we are compelled to keep it in perfect order free of charge.”

1895: Key financier joins company

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Julius Rosenwald would later become president of Sears, Roebuck & Co. in 1908, when Richard W. Sears retired, then chairman of the board in 1924. The philanthropist’s generosity can still be seen throughout Chicago.

1908: Sears retires as president

Richard W. Sears’ fortune, at the time, was estimated at $25 million. Sears became chairman of the board and continued to participate in the company for several more years.

Sears died in 1914 — a decade or so before the company he founded opened a single store.

April 12, 1924: WLS signs on the air with a train whistle

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After several days of trial broadcasts, WLS joined the airwaves. The station took as its motto, “Bringing the world to the farm.” WLS’ founder, Sears, Roebuck and Co., was already doing that with its mail-order catalog. It provided access to consumer goods to households many, many miles from a department store. The call letters WLS stood for “World’s Largest Store.”

Feb. 2, 1925: First retail store on Chicago’s West Side

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The Homan Square site was already home to the company’s mail-order plant when the store, which featured an optical shop and a soda fountain, opened. Sears national headquarters was based here on a 55-acre site. Retail operations moved to the new Sears Tower headquarters in 1973, then the current headquarters in Hoffman Estates in 1995.

1927: Launches Craftsman tools, Kenmore appliances

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Sears pays $500 for the rights to name from the Marion-Craftsman tool company. The products, which include power tools and lawn mowers, become known for their warranties.

A Chicago street provided the name for Sears’ lines of home appliances, according to company lore. The Kenmore name appeared on washing machines starting in 1927, though the nameplate debuted on a Sears sewing machine in 1913.

1931: Establishes Allstate

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Launched to provide mail-order car insurance, Northbrook-based Allstate Insurance Co. was founded as a wholly owned subsidiary of Sears. In choosing a name for the new business, managers borrowed the trademark of a Sears product, Allstate Automobile Tire.

1933: Launches Christmas catalog

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The 87-page catalog featured toys, holiday decorations, housewares, tools, clothing, jewelry and appliances — something to appeal to every family member.

Sept. 10, 1973: Moves HQ to Sears Tower

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Four hundred people are the first of 7,000 Sears employees to be moved — from 13 buildings at two locations in Chicago and one in Skokie — into the company’s new headquarters in what was then the world’s tallest building.

1975: Becomes the exclusive retailer of Pong

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Produced by Atari, the popular home version of the electronic ping-pong game with its “blips” and “bloops” is sold only at Sears.

Jan. 26, 1986: Discover Card debuts nationally

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Two months ahead of schedule, the credit card is introduced nationally to compete with industry giants MasterCard, Visa and American Express.

February 1991: Loses its crown as king of American retail

Based on total sales revenue for fiscal 1990, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart becomes the country’s top retailer, followed by Kmart. Sears slips to No. 3 on the list.

Jan. 25, 1993: Catalog discontinued

The company announces the closing of its money-losing catalog division and the demise of its storied Big Book. Founder Richard W. Sears first offered his watches and jewelry for sale in a catalog in 1888. A general merchandise catalog came along in 1896.

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November 1994: Sears Tower sold

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Getting out with unpaid interest mounting, Sears announces it will give up ownership of the tower as part of a restructuring of the massive debt. AEW gains control of the property.

March 31, 1995: Allstate, Sears split

Sears began cutting the cord with Allstate, then the country’s second-largest insurance company, in 1993, when Sears sold almost 20 percent of its stock at an initial public offering.

The split let Sears proceed without dealing with any catastrophic payouts common in the insurance industry, while Allstate investors didn’t have to be concerned about the ups and downs of retailing.

Aug. 10, 1995: HQ officially moves to Hoffman Estates

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Sears headquarters had been in Chicago since Richard W. Sears moved his watch company here from North Redwood, Minn., in 1887.

Now, nearly 5,000 employees would be working at the suburban site.

1998: Christmas catalog debuts online

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One year before launching Sears.com, the company places its Christmas items for sale on Wishbook.com.

May 13, 2002: Acquires Lands’ End for $2 billion

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Under the deal, Lands’ End clothing would begin appearing in Sears’ stores as early as fall 2002. Sears had struggled for years to bring nationally known brands to its apparel mix.

July 16, 2003: Credit division sold to Citigroup

The sale provided Sears with a $3 billion premium on its credit-card portfolio — the nation’s 8th largest with 25 million active accounts — and returned an additional $3 billion in invested capital to the company.

By selling its finance arm, Sears jettisoned a division that had provided more than half of its annual profits and helped boost sales by giving customers a way to pay for big-ticket items. But it also was rid of a division that had cost a top executive his job after Sears had to boost its bad debt reserves by $222 million in October 2002 to offset rising delinquencies.

Nov. 17, 2004: Company announces merger with Kmart

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Valued at $11 billion, Kmart Holding Corp. scooped up Sears, Roebuck & Co. The new company, which was called Sears Holdings Corp., would become the nation’s third-largest retailer and continue to occupy Sears headquarters in suburban Hoffman Estates.

Leadership of the new company was controlled by Kmart’s chairman, Edward J. Lampert, a 42-year-old Connecticut investor who made his name buying Kmart out of bankruptcy in 2003 and raising almost $1 billion by selling many of its stores to other retailers, including Sears.

“This is going to be an enormous undertaking,” said Lampert, who owned 52.6 percent of Kmart and 15 percent of Sears.

Feb. 2, 2008: Executive shakeup

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After the company suffered through a dismal holiday selling season, CEO Aylwin Lewis is ousted.

Lewis served as CEO of Kmart Corp. in 2004, and became head of the combined company after Kmart acquired Sears Roebuck & Co. in 2005.

Jan. 8, 2013: Lampert takes over as CEO

Company Chairman Edward Lampert takes over the position from Louis D’Ambrosio. Lampert was the company’s fifth CEO in eight years.

Feb. 22, 2013: Calumet City store to close

At the same location for 50 years, the Sears store in the River Oaks Center mall closed in May 2013. The company cited poor financial performance.

April 4, 2014: Lands’ End spun off

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Started in Chicago in 1963 as a sailboat equipment catalog, Lands’ End evolved into an upscale casual clothing retailer. Sears purchased the company for $1.9 billion in 2002.

April 6, 2014: State Street store closes

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Highlighting a growing trend away from bricks-and-mortar shopping, Sears closes the 13-year-old location.

Sept. 15, 2014: CEO gives $400 million loan

One week after Fitch Ratings downgrades Sears Holdings’ credit rating to CC status, Sears CEO Edward Lampert’s hedge fund, ESL Investments, lends the company $400 million.

Jan. 27, 2015: 115 jobs eliminated at Sears

Spanning various departments, these positions were cut in an effort to reduce expenses in the face of years of losses.

Aug. 20, 2015: Posts first quarterly profit in three years

Sales declined in the second quarter, but Sears was bostered by selling and leasing back some of its buildings to a new real estate investment trust, Seritage Growth Properties.

Feb. 25, 2016: 250 employees laid off

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After posting fourth-quarter losses following a poor holiday shopping season, Sears eliminated 250 positions and also said 151 open corporate office positions would not be filled.

April 21, 2016: 80 stores to close by summer

Two months after announcing it was accelerating plans to shutter unprofitable locations, Sears said it would close 10 Sears and 68 Kmart stores.

May 5, 2016: Ravenswood store to close

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After 90 years in operation — the longest-standing store in Sears’ chain — the Lawrence Avenue Sears would close.

Dec. 8, 2016: $748 million lost in third quarter

It was the fifth consecutive quarter of losses for Sears.

Jan. 4, 2017: CEO to give loan up to $500 million; his tab now near $1 billion

CEO Edward Lampert — the company’s largest investor — agreed to loan Sears $321 million immediately with another $179 million more available in the future. It’s the second time in a week he stepped in to fund the ailing retailer. Lampert and his hedge fund had now lent Sears more than $1 bilion since September 2014.

Jan. 5, 2017: Craftsman sold

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The well-known for $525 million and another $250 million after three years. Stanley agreed to pay Sears a percentage of its new sales of Craftsman products for 15 years, and during that time, Sears would be able to continue selling Craftsman products royalty-free.

Feb. 23, 2017: 130 corporate employees laid off

Sears eliminated the employees, who mostly worked at its Hoffman Estates headquarters, as part of a restructuring plan aimed at cutting at least $1 billion in costs during 2017.

March 23, 2017: Company loses $2 billion in 2016

After years of losing money, Sears said there was “substantial doubt” it would be able to keep its doors open.

March 24, 2017: CEO takes bigger stake in Sears

Sears CEO Edward Lampert, already the company’s largest shareholder, bought nearly 526,000 shares, causing shares to jump more than 9 percent.

April 21, 2017: 50 auto centers, 92 Kmart stores to close

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The stores, including two in downstate Illinois, were to be closed as part of an effort to cut costs by $1.25 billion in 2017.

June 8, 2017: 66 more stores in U.S. to close

Seventeen Sears and 49 Kmart stores were to shut in late July or early September.

June 13, 2017: Cuts 400 jobs, no longer qualifies for state tax breaks

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The announcement meant Sears’ head count in Hoffman Estates had been cut by more than a third since 2011, when it employed 6,200 people at its headquarters and received a package of tax breaks after threatening to leave Illinois.

At the end of 2016, Sears reported having just three more employees than the 4,250 minimum it was required to maintain to be eligible for the tax credits, according to the Illinois Department of Commerce and Econonomic Opportunity.

June 23, 2017: More store closings

It was announced that 18 Sears and two Kmart stores, sold by Sears to Seritage in 2015, would close in September.

These closures came in addition to the closing of 226 stores announced earlier in 2017.

July 20, 2017: Kenmore products sold on Amazon

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Sears partnered with the e-commerce behemoth to sell the full line of Kenmore appliances, including smart home appliances integrated with Amazon’s voice-controlled Alexa platform.

Aug. 24, 2017: 3 more Illinois Kmart stores to close

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After closing or announcing plans to close 330 stores already in 2017, Sears Holdings Corp. said it would shutter 28 more — including Kmart stores in Oak Lawn, Elmhurst and Belleville.

Oct. 30, 2017: $60 million loan is Sears’ 3rd time tapping CEO’s pockets in a month

Earlier the same month, Sears had borrowed $100 million — $40 million on Oct. 18 and $60 million one week later — from affiliates of Sears CEO Edward Lampert’s hedge fund, ESL Investments.

Nov. 3, 2017: 63 more stores to close

The company informed employees at 18 Sears and 45 Kmart stores that those locations would be shutting down by late January 2018.

Nov. 30, 2017: Revenue falls 27 percent as sales plunge

Revenue dropped 27 percent in the third quarter to $3.66 billion with more than half of that decline coming from store and pharmacy closures, the company said.

Sales at established stores, a key measure of a retailer’s health, plunged 15.3 percent during the third quarter — more than double the decline it reported in the same period a year earlier.

Dec. 14, 2017: DieHard auto batteries, other products sold on Amazon

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Less than six months after Sears began selling its full line of Kenmore appliances through the e-commerce giant, the Hoffman Estates-based retailer began selling its DieHard auto products on Amazon too.

Jan. 4, 2018: Orland Park, Boubonnais and Marion Sears stores to close

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Three Sears and three Kmart stores in Illinois would close in the company’s latest round of cuts. Thirty-nine Sears and 64 Kmart stores nationwide would close by April, it was announced.

The Sears in Orland Park was set to be converted into a 45,000-square foot AMC movie theater.

Jan. 10, 2018: CEO’s firm gives company $100 million loan

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Sears Holdings Corp. announced it had received the loan, but it did not disclose the source of the funds. But in a regulatory filing the next day, Sears said entities controlled by CEO Edward Lampert’s hedge fund, ESL Investments, provided the loan.

Jan. 31, 2018: 220 corporate employees laid off

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Most of these employees worked at the company’s Hoffman Estates headquarters, and the cuts affected various business units and roles across the organization.

Feb. 15, 2018: Posts profit despite sales drop

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During the fourth quarter of 2017, which included the holiday season, Sears sales fell 15.6 percent at established stores — its worst showing for the crucial holiday period since at least 2012. But the struggling department store operator posted a profit for the quarter, mainly due to a tax benefit.

March 23, 2018: Sheds more than 50,000 jobs in 2017

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In the company’s annual report, Sears Holdings Corp. revealed it slashed about 36 percent of its U.S. workforce in 2017 — from 140,000 full- and part-time employees as of Jan. 28, 2017, to 89,000 as of Feb. 3, 2018.

May 14, 2018: Explores sale of Kenmore, other divisions

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Sears announced it was beginning a formal process to explore the sale of three pieces of the business that CEO Edward Lampert’s ESL Investments expressed interest in acquiring: Kenmore, the home improvement business of the Sears Home Services Division and the Parts Direct business of Sears Home Services.

Sears Holdings Co. had been exploring alternatives for those businesses — as well as the Craftsman tools and DieHard battery brands — for nearly two years, saying it believed they had room to grow by expanding their reach beyond Sears.

May 31, 2018: Gurnee Mills, Hawthorn Mall locations to close

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Both stores were among five Illinois stores scheduled to be closed in September after another quarter of losses and slowing sales for the company. The Gurnee Mills stores opened in August 1991 and the Vernon Hills store was an anchor when its location, Hawthorn Mall, opened in 1973.

These stores were among 63 closing stores Sears identified, part of a group of 100 unprofitable stores the ailing Hoffman Estates-based retailer was targeting for closure.

June 4, 2018: More time to repay loans

The company extended the maturity of two loans totaling about $320 million, originally due in July 2018, to July 2020.

Lenders include affiliates of Sears Chairman and CEO Edward Lampert and Bill Gates’ Cascade Investment.

June 26, 2018: 200 more employees laid off

Following a round of 220 job cuts earlier in 2018, another 200 corporate employees — about 150 of them working at the company’s Hoffman Estates support center — were laid off.

July 15, 2018: Closes last store in Chicago

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Just shy of its 80th anniversary, the store on the edge of Chicago’s Portage Park neighborhood shut its doors. The store opened in 1938 in a $1 million building designed by Chicago architecture fir, Nimmons, Carr & Wright.

In October, it was announced that Springbank Real Estate Group was converting the four-story building into apartments and ground-floor retail space.

Aug. 14, 2018: CEO makes $400 million bid for Kenmore

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ESL Investments, the hedge fund run by Sears CEO Edward Lampert, proposed buying Sears’ popular Kenmore appliance brand and a piece of its home services division.

Aug. 23, 2018: 2 more Illinois stores to close

Sears Holdings announced that a Kmart in Steger and a Sears store in Bloomington would close in November as part of the latest group of 46 stores — 13 Kmart and 33 Sears locations — identified as unprofitable.

Sept. 13, 2018: Another quarterly loss

The company had now reported a loss in six of its last eight quarters. Same-store sales, a key gauge of performance, also shrank.

Sept. 24, 2018: CEO proposes selling real estate to avoid bankruptcy

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Sears CEO Edward Lampert’s hedge fund, ESL Investments, suggested selling about 200 company-owned stores to lighten the company’s debt load. But even if the plan were to succeed in preserving the company, it likely would accelerate the decline of Sears’ physical presence.

Oct. 6, 2018: Niles store to close

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Though not among 46 Sears and Kmart locations previously announced to close before the holidays, the Niles store at Golf Mill Shopping Center was set to close in mid-December.

Oct. 10, 2018: Eyes bankruptcy

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With a $134 million debt payment due October 15, it was unclear whether the company would be able to avoid a trip to bankruptcy court.

Sears, which has lost $11 billion since 2011, announced it had added a restructuring expert to its board.

Oct. 15, 2018: Files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection

The last man standing while storied Chicago competitors like Wieboldt’s, Montgomery Ward and Carson Pirie Scott fell by the wayside, Sears survived the Great Depression, adapted as its shoppers traded catalogs for downtown department stores, and followed customers to suburban shopping malls. But it faltered as discounters, specialty chains and online merchants wooed consumers away in recent decades, and it never seemed to find the niche that would bring them back.

Under the bankruptcy court’s protection, Sears buys more time for a turnaround, one it’s been attempting for years. Despite efforts to cut costs by closing hundreds of stores, Sears has lost more than $11 billion since 2011. In the last two years alone, the company has closed more than 725 Sears and Kmart stores. The company will close 142 more stores before the end of the year.

Jan. 16, 2019: Stays in business

Sears chairman Eddie Lampert’s bid — valued at more than $5 billion — prevails over competing proposals from liquidators that would have forced the retailer to shut down and sell its assets.

Feb. 7, 2019: Federal Bankruptcy Court judge approves Lampert’s plan

Lampert’s $5.2 billion purchase, made through his hedge fund, ESL Investments, intends to keep 425 Sears and Kmart stores open, preserving some 45,000 jobs. It was the only plan submitted that would have kept the once-mighty department store giant in business and avoid liquidation.

April 18, 2019: Lampert sued by Sears

The company files a complaint in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in New York seeking to recover about $2 billion in assets, which it alleges was fraudulently transferred by Lampert and his hedge fund as Sears headed for bankruptcy.

April 22, 2019: Renovated store set to close

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Sears announces its Oakbrook Center store, which reopened after a remodeling/downsizing that took 13 months to complete, will close as part of the company’s bankruptcy proceedings. The remodeled store was open only seven months.

Sept. 16, 2021: Sears closing Woodfield Mall store, its last in Illinois

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The Daily Herald first reports news of the store’s closing, which comes 50 years after Woodfield Mall opened, with Sears as one of its initial anchor stores.

Sept. 12, 2023: Data center firm acquires former Sears HQ

Compass Datacenters will most likely demolish and replace the massive structure, located on 197 acres at 3333 Beverly Road, with several data centers, high-tech facilities that provide the backbone for the internet and corporate IT operations.

Sources: Chicago Tribune reporting and archives, Sears Holdings Corp., AP

Sears timeline: Rise, fall and restructuring of a Chicago icon over 130 years (2024)

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