The Way It Was: Christmas Shopping in Downtown Detroit

Take a closer look at this image of Christmas shoppers in Downtown Detroit in 1952 and learn a little bit about the shops that once did business in the area.
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A photograph of Christmas shoppers in Downtown Detroit in 1952. // Photograph courtesy of the Walter P. Reuther Library, Archives of Labor and Urban Affairs, Wayne State University.

1952听

In today鈥檚 mercantile world of Amazon, Wayfair, eBay, and other e-tailers, it鈥檚 easy to forget that shopping once meant a sensory experience, not just a virtual one. Certainly, shopping online is convenient and expedient, but what鈥檚 lacking is a sensuous encounter of touch and scent, as well as the social element of interacting with store clerks and being among throngs of other patrons.

This image shows a horde of Christmas shoppers in downtown Detroit, back when the area claimed three department stores, all clustered nearby.

At right, at Woodward and Gratiot, is 碍别谤苍鈥檚, with its signature clock. 鈥淚鈥檒l meet you under the 碍别谤苍鈥檚 clock鈥 was a common saying among Detroiters. Just one block north, with Christmas trees displayed on its awning, is 贬耻诲蝉辞苍鈥檚, the granddaddy of Detroit department stores. A stone鈥檚 throw to the east and visible in the background is Crowley鈥檚.

The photo was taken the day after Thanksgiving, widely considered to be the official start of the Christmas shopping season 鈥 well before the term 鈥淏lack Friday鈥 was in wide circulation. It also predates the opening of malls such as Northland (1954) and Eastland (1957), which siphoned shoppers from the downtown retail center.

碍别谤苍鈥檚 opened in 1883 on St. Antoine, later moving to Randolph and Monroe and finally to its last location at Woodward and Gratiot. 碍别谤苍鈥檚 fourth-floor children鈥檚 department was a busy place at Christmas and its annual September Founders sale drew huge crowds, but its clock was its most distinguishing feature.

Sadly, 碍别谤苍鈥檚 closed its doors on Dec. 23, 1959, and was demolished in 1966. However, the clock was salvaged and placed in storage. Compuware Corp. (now called BMC Compuware) refurbished it and placed it in front of its headquarters at One Campus Martius, a comforting reminder that the hands of time can be turned back, if only in our imaginations.


This story is from the December听2022 issue of 香港六合彩图库资料 magazine. Read more in our digital edition.听