Friday, October 25, 2019
Richard Warren Sears And Sears, Roebuck, & Company :: essays research papers
 Richard Warren Sears and Sears, Roebuck, & Company      Richard Warren Sears was born on December 7, 1863, in Stewartville,  Minnesota. He was the son of James Warren and Eliza A. Sears, both of English  ancestory. His father led anything but a happy life. He had failed in his quest  for gold during the California Gold Rush of 1849 and was a bitter soldier in the  Civil War, which he blamed on politicians. He had earned a sizable sum of money  working as a blacksmith and a wagonmaker, but he lost it all in a stock-farm  venture. Richard's father gave up soon afterwards, leaving Richard to be the  family breadwinner at the age of 16.  Richard worked in the general offices of the Minneapolis and St. Louis  Railway in Minneapolis to support his family. He then decided to move Redwood  Falls, Minnesota, where he thought that he could earn more money because of the  small town setting. There he worked as a station attendant, doing chores for his  board and sleeping in the loft of the railroad station. In his spare time, he  learned how the mail-order business worked.  Richard got his opportunity to get into the mail-order business in 1886  when a shipment of watches from a Chicago wholesaler was refused by a town  jeweler. Therefore, the shipment sat in the railroad station until Richard  contacted the wholesaler, who offered him the watches for twelve dollars each.  He bought the watches and sold them by sending letters to other station  attendants describing the watches and offering them at the discount price of  fourteen dollars each. He sold those watches and ordered more to sell. To sell  these he advertised in a small way in St. Paul newspapers. He made a large  profit from this operation.  In a few months Richard made such a profit that he abandoned the railroad  business entirely and started his own mail-order business under the name of the  R.W. Sears Watch Company. In one year he made so much money that he was able to  begin advertising in magazines with a national circulation and move the business  to Chicago.  On March 1, 1887, he set up a shop on Dearborn Street in Chicago with a  staff of three people, one to handle bookkeeping and correspondence and two  stenographers. Soon after the opening of his new shop, he found a need for a  watchmaker to repair watches returned by customers. This watchmaker was a young  man by the name of Alvah Curtis Roebuck from Hammond, Indiana.  Richard Sears became even more successful by opening up the huge rural  market.  					    
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