Farmall450
Well-known member
The last Sears store in the city of Chicago closed up in the middle of last year.
Woodfield mall's still seems decent.
The last Sears store in the city of Chicago closed up in the middle of last year.
You have a point. The only time I visited back in the day was for warranty.
Does Lowe's have the same prices? If I bring my old Craftsman broken socket...will they warranty?
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I agree with the above post. Corporate greed produced a society where nearly all things are treated as disposable.
Does Lowe's have the same prices? If I bring my old Craftsman broken socket...will they warranty?
While that may be true, wouldn’t they be buying the disposable items from Sears?
The tool division of Sears is not why they failed, in fact up until the very end it was the only part of Sears that made money. I’ve read a good deal about Lampert and was following Sears demise long before the actual bankruptcy. It’s interesting to say the least.
While that may be true, wouldn’t they be buying the disposable items from Sears?
The tool division of Sears is not why they failed, in fact up until the very end it was the only part of Sears that made money. I’ve read a good deal about Lampert and was following Sears demise long before the actual bankruptcy. It’s interesting to say the least.
Woodfield mall's still seems decent.
There's also supposed to be a Sears store in North Riverside. The site used to be a Montgomery Ward store.
The "store closing" sales they have at Sears are a joke, a disgrace, and epitomize everything that went wrong with Sears.
Wait until they figure out some people would pay more to avoid the crowds.

The Fort Wayne Sears was the largest in the state, now a dirt lot.
Three years ago, while on the clock with time to kill, I swung by the store, during early "black Friday", where they had a greatly stocked Cman (with very good BF deals) tool department and other merchandise, with good price markdowns, throughout the store.
The only thing they were missing were customers. The mall was packed, but not Sears.
Can't blame "fast Eddie" for that.
Maybe customers shopping elsewhere, is the main reason, Sears is on the rocks.
I'm no friend of hedge funds, but it goes beyond that. There simply not enough middle class shopper anymore. High end and Wal-Mart.
Truth. When I was growing up, and my father needed to go out and buy something, he didn't "go to the store", he went to "Sears." I confess that I followed this tradition, going to Sears first whenever I needed something, then only going to another store if they didn't have what I was looking for. Now when I need something, (my local Sears and Kmarts closed awhile ago), I find myself wondering where I'm going to go since I can't go to Sears. It's weird. I'm still sad and angry over this.My cousin worked at the Sears that closed last year for 20 years. One of the reasons he said that Sears closed was people like our parents bought everything at Sears or from the Sears catalog, and by now, they all have died off.

It's obviously too late now, but Sears should have downsized to be specialty tool (Creaftsman) and appliance (Kenmoore) stores and forgot about being a department store. Focus on what people actually bought and wanted along with offering the once great warranty. 10 years ago...need a tool, don't think twice, drive over to Sears and pick it up. Today, not so much.
I agree with that, if they focused more in the tool/appliance/parts area they may have made it a little longer,at least until they figured out something more long term.
I was thinking my local store could have stayed open a little longer if the rented bounce houses out of the car service area and sold pinatas, oh well.