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Macy's

R. H. Macy and Company was founded in New York City and had its first store at 18th Street and Broadway on the "Ladies Mile," a shopping district in the Chelsea for nearly 40 years.

It moved uptown to Herald Square, 34th Street and Broadway in Manhattan in the 1920s. Beginning with one building, and through expanded new construction or merging, eventually it grew into the world's largest deparment store, with some 10 million square feet of selling floor. (Some claim that the GUM store is Moscow, Russia is larger.) Macy's now occupies the entire block from 7th Avenue to Broadway and 34th to 35th Streets -- except for one small brownstone on the corner of 34th and Broadway, which remains a separate property.

The same property problem presented itself when Macy's built a store on Queens Boulevard in Jackson Heights, Queens, New York This resulted in a architecturally unique round department store on 90% of the lot, with a small privately owned house on the corner. It was a case literally of the "little lady who wouldn't sell."

Macy's is a nationwide store in the USA, with a presence in every American state.

Macy's has entered the psyche of the United States in a number of ways:

  • The movie Miracle on 34th Street is set in Macy's, and remains a holiday season staple on US television.
  • The Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade, the most famous and most watched parade of its type, has been sponsored by Macy's for over 75 years. Among New Yorkers it is often referred to as "the Macy's Day Parade."
  • The phrase "does Macy's tell Gimbels?" used in the USA as a put off to inquiring people. Gimbels was the other large deparment store, directly across 34th Street from Macy's. It has since folded.

Macy's has also been sponsoring fireworks displays in New York for decades.




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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Macy's".