Parmelee-Dohrmann

American luxury items store chain
Parmelee-Dohrmann store at the Workman Block, 232–234 S. Spring St., c. 1900–1906

Parmelee-Dohrmann was a Los Angeles–based chain of stores that sold fine china, crystal, glassware, silver, and objects of art.[1]

The store dated back to 1878, when it occupied an adobe building near the Los Angeles Plaza.

On June 17, 1899, Parmelee and Dohrmann opened the "China Hall" store at the Workman Block, 232–234 S. Spring Street—at that time they also carried appliances like stoves and refrigerators.[2]

Throughout 1906, the company held several grand opening events to celebrate its new 70,000-square-foot (6,500 m2) flagship store, occupying five floors of a new eight-story building at 436–444 S. Broadway, which had by then become the city's busiest retail district. The store was designed by Morgan & Walls.[3] In addition to tabletop and home decoration, the store sold art. The store was described as the finest of its kind west of New York. It featured an innovation, pneumatic tubes for processing sales transactions between the sales floor and the cashiers' area.[4][5]

In 1927 it moved to the new upscale shopping area around West Seventh Street that took place after J. W. Robinson's moved to Seventh, Hope and Grand in 1917.[6] Its new quarters were at 741–747 S. Flower Street, also not far from Myer Siegel and Barker Brothers.

The Los Angeles Times described the company, once it had moved to its new Flower Street store, as the largest china, crystal and silver retail organization in the world at the time, with fifteen stores in total.[7]

In March 1933, the Los Angeles Flower Street flagship and Pasadena branch were closed and a joint venture was set up with upscale department store Bullock's whereby a "Bullock's Parmelee Dohrmann" opened inside Bullock's flagship store at Seventh and Broadway in Downtown Los Angeles. It took up the entire seventh floor and sold "dinnerware, glassware, kitchen utensils, refrigerators, ranges, and washing machines".[8]

The Dohrmann bought Parmelee out and in the 1950s the remaining stores' names were changed to Dohrmann's.

The San Francisco 76,000-square-foot (7,100 m2) Union Square store was demolished in 1967 and Macy's constructed a building on the site that would become part of the complex of the Macy's Union Square store. [9]

Dohrmann's was bought by the Broadway-Hale Corporation which would, in 1995, become part of Federated Department Stores, which itself was later renamed Macy's, Inc.[10]

References

  1. ^ Longstreth, Richard (1997). City Center to Regional Mall: Architecture, the Automobile, and Retailing in Los Angeles, 1920-1950. MIT Press. p. 41.
  2. ^ "Advertisement for "China Hall"". Los Angeles Times. June 17, 1899.
  3. ^ "New Building on Broadway". Los Angeles Evening Express. March 18, 1905.
  4. ^ "Beautiful Art Ware at Opening Display: Parmelee & Dohrmann Store Draws Crowds". Los Angeles Times. November 18, 1906.
  5. ^ "Really a Broadway Palace". Los Angeles Times. April 1, 1906.
  6. ^ "Steam Shovels Scooping Out Dirt At Site Of Big Store", Los Angeles Times, May 24, 1914
  7. ^ "Merchants Enter New Home Soon". Los Angeles Times. January 30, 1927.
  8. ^ "Add for Bullock's and Parmelee-Dohrmann". Los Angeles Times. February 6, 1933. p. 5.
  9. ^ "Old Dohrmann's Front Now New Door at Macy's". San Francisco Examiner. October 29, 1968.
  10. ^ Family Parmelee website
  • v
  • t
  • e
Department stores
with origins in
Central
Los Angeles
L.A. neighborhoods
Long Beach
Pasadena
Rest of L.A. Co.
Bakersfield
Inland Empire
Orange Co.
San Diego–Tijuana
Elsewhere
Clothing and shoesDiscount and
membership storesDrugstores
Furniture and
home furnishings
Grocery stores
Home enter-
tainment, appliances
  • Adray's
  • Cal Stereo
  • Federated Group
  • Golden Bear Home and Sport Centers
  • Ken Crane's
  • Leo's Stereo
  • Pacific Stereo
  • Rogersound Labs
  • University Stereo
Home improvement
MusicOn-street shopping
L.A.
shopping center
"firsts"
Shopping centers
Los Angeles
L.A. Central Area
Westside
San Fernando Valley
San Gabriel Valley
South Bay
Southeast L.A. Co.
Long Beach
Northern L.A. Co.
Orange
Riverside
San Bernardino
San Diego
Santa Barbara
Ventura
Elsewhere
See also: History of retail in Southern California –  History of retail in Palm Springs — Note: starred (*) listings indicate former regional mall now site of strip-style community center with new name