Stroud Mall is a shopping mall located in Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania . It is located in The Poconos region of Pennsylvania , just a few minutes from the New Jersey border adjacent to Pennsylvania Route 611 and Interstate 80 exit 305. It is anchored by J. C. Penney , ShopRite , and EFO Furniture Outlet.
35-537: The mall was first announced in May 1976, to be development by a joint effort of Hess's and the Montgomery Development Company of Plymouth Meeting, Pennsylvania . The mall would feature Hess's and another unnamed department store as anchors, with 40 smaller stores and a twin-screen cinema, with Hess's set to open before the rest of the mall. By October 1976, several tenants had already signed onto
70-429: A large flea market, tattoo parlors, or adult movie theaters. Allentown Mayor William L. Heydt began a campaign for the city to purchase the property and redevelop the building. In October 1998, the city purchased the store from Bon-Ton, Inc. for $ 1.8 million, amounting to {{~$ 3.14 million in 2023. In addition to the department store building, the adjacent H.L. Green property, which had operated for decades as part of
105-479: A local trucking business for many years with his brother, and offered to sell the store. Berman acquired Hess for $ 16 million. Several months later, Hess died at the age of 57. Under Berman, the store name was changed from Hess Brothers to Hess's . Berman also brought in Max Rosey, a New York City and Broadway press agent, to promote the store, and they invited celebrities and notable national politicians to visit
140-748: A new office building that opened in July 2003 at the former Hess's flagship store site. The building includes one floor of leased office space, and the plaza level of the building includes retail storefronts. James A. Michener mentions Hess's flagship store in Allentown his The Novel , published in 1991, in which Hess's serves as the location where a fictional author sells his novels' first printings. Strawbridge's added to division in 1996 Meier & Frank added to division in 2002 ; Zion's Cooperative Mercantile Institution (2001, to Meier & Frank) Center City Allentown Center City Allentown
175-656: A wholly owned subsidiary. Under Crown American's leadership, Hess's enjoyed the booming retail market of the 1980s. In 1982, Hess's purchased department store chains and converted them to the Hess's nameplate, including Penn Traffic , based in Johnstown, Pennsylvania . In 1985, it opened new Hess's stores in State College , Johnstown, and acquired Rices Nachmans in Virginia Beach . In 1987, Hess's acquired
210-531: Is the downtown and central business district of Allentown, Pennsylvania , the third-largest city in the U.S. state of Pennsylvania . It has a dense population and is currently undergoing an urban revitalization process. Allentown's Center City is generally defined as the area centered around Hamilton and 7th Streets, bordered by the Jordan Creek to the east, Martin Luther King Jr. Drive to
245-745: Is the home arena for the Lehigh Valley Phantoms , the primary development team of the Philadelphia Flyers of the National Hockey League . Center City Allentown includes four residential neighborhoods : Seventh Street, Downtown, Old Allentown, Old Fairgrounds District, and North of Tilghman Street (NOTI). Center City is home to the corporate headquarters of PPL Corporation , a New York Stock Exchange -traded company with over 6,500 employees and $ 7.9 billion in annual revenue as of 2022. Center City Allentown
280-514: The Allentown Band was playing in front of the new Hess Brothers store to entertain the shoppers. Hess bought a significant amount of advertising space in the local Allentown newspapers to market the store. Hess Brothers' dry goods business became increasingly popular and in 1901, and Hess expanded the store, taking over the entire Grand Central Hotel. On March 6, 1913, as Hess's continued to grow, neighboring properties were acquired so
315-553: The Knoxville, Tennessee -based Miller's Department Store chain from Allied Stores by hostile takeover. In September 1987, Hess's agreed to acquire Snyder's, Inc., a privately held Louisville, Kentucky -based department store, and five L. S. Ayres stores in Kentucky that Snyder's had agreed to buy L. S. Ayres acquired them from Stewart Dry Goods and Pogue's a few years earlier. This new division operated briefuly under
350-488: The McCrory Stores five and ten store chain and had closed, was acquired by the city. With the purchase by the city, however, a survey of the property revealed that the 9th and Hamilton Street building was in relatively poor condition and considered unsuitable for any other use. The site was considered not worth preserving, and plans were made for its demolition. The seven-story parking deck at 814 Linden Street and
385-604: The Knoxville stores, which they sold to Dillard's , and 18 other stores that they sold to Proffitt's in two transactions in 1992 and 1993. In 1994, the company's remaining 30 stores were sold off, including the main Hamilton Street store in Allentown in 1994, ending the Hess's 97-year enterprise. May Department Stores purchased 10 locations, and The Bon-Ton purchased 20 others. In 1995, Crown American sold
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#1732786995213420-584: The Snyder's name. In November 1987, Hess's announced that it would phase out the Millers and Snyder's names in favor of its own moniker in February 1988. By 1990, Hess's had expanded to 76 stores. A number of cost-cutting measures were made following the transfer of the chain to Crown American, including abandoning most of Hess's flower and fashion shows and celebrity appearances. The store's outside windows in
455-679: The chain's break up. The mall would receive another renovation in 2002. The then 7-screen Loews theater would close in December 2010, and would reopen as a 12-screen Cinemark theater in November 2011. The Bon-Ton closed all stores, including the Stroud Mall location, in 2017. On November 8, 2018, it was announced the Sears store at Stroud Mall would close by February 2019 as part of a plan to close 40 stores nationwide. ShopRite moved into
490-535: The closure of the store, Bon-Ton placed the property for sale, and received inquiries from Mark Mendleson, who had a poor reputation with property management in the city. He was involved in a series of disputes with the City of Allentown with regards to non-payment of taxes, and the properties he owned being permitted to deterioriate to states of disrepair. There also was fear by the city that the property would be left vacant until property values improved, or would be used for
525-558: The employee parking deck at 826 Turner Street, built in 1970, were retained and transferred to the Allentown Parking Authority . A considerable remediation effort began to rid the old building of hazardous materials. In January 2000, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection authorized the Hess's building for demolition. The demolition was completed by October 2000 and the site
560-549: The flagship 9th and Hamilton store in Center City Allentown to Bon-Ton Stores, Inc , a regional department company based in York, Pennsylvania . However, Allentown had been in economic decline since the 1970s, and the store's operations proved unprofitable. On November 9, 1995, Bon-Ton Stores announced that the 9th and Hamilton store would be closed, and, on January 15, 1996, the store was closed permanently. With
595-631: The inside was renovated to look as one large building. Displays such as large crystal chandeliers enabled the Hess brothers to succeed at making their store look like a "big city department store." In 1939, they began renovations of the outside of the store. In 1947, the store's façade was updated in Art Deco style, which was an emerging architectural style in the New York metropolitan area . The store eventually expanded to five floors and over 400,000 square feet (37,000 m ) of retail space. It
630-496: The late 1980s. The chains stores were closed or sold off in a series of deals in the early to mid-1990s. In the summer of 1896, Max Hess Sr., a German - Jewish immigrant from Perth Amboy, New Jersey , visited Allentown , and returned to Perth Amboy, advising his brother Charles that Allentown was a major business opportunity for the company. Hess Brothers was founded on February 19, 1897, by Charles and Max Hess. The brothers moved to Allentown that year, and leased space in what
665-469: The main Allentown store were covered up after their annual holiday window decoration displays were ended, along with the regular store window dressing displays of merchandise. In the early 1990s, Hess's suffered as retail competition increased and the Allentown region was impacted by a national recession. The company responded by selling or shuttering 43 of its stores, especially those in the South , including
700-453: The mall in November 2019 in the former space of The Bon-Ton , replacing the store in downtown Stroudsburg. EFO Furniture Outlet has opened a store in the mall on January 24, 2020, replacing the first floor of Sears. Hess%27s Hess's , originally known as Hess Brothers , was a department store chain based in Allentown, Pennsylvania . The company was founded a single store in 1897, and grew to nearly 80 stores by its commercial peak in
735-413: The mall including Endicott Johnson , DEB Shops , Kay Jewelers , Piercing Pagoda , Kinney Shoes , and B. Dalton Booksellers . J.C. Penney would be announced as the likely second anchor in early 1977, and the mall would continue signing more stores through this time, including Walden Books , Thom McAn , Foxmoor Casuals , and Stewart's . Hess's would hold its grand opening on July 29, 1977, followed by
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#1732786995213770-465: The mall itself on March 2, 1978. J.C. Penney, which had officially signed a lease in September 1977, would open later in 1978. Sears would join the mall with its grand opening on August 3, 1994, as part of $ 12 million expansion project. The store, like J. C. Penney, would replace a location in downtown Stroudsburg. The Sears move had been announced as early as 1990 but did not occur until 1994. Sears
805-814: The nation's second master salesman. Celebrities were brought in on a regular basis to attract customers and enhance the image of the store. As people dined in the restaurants, models would walk the floor wearing the latest fashions. The restaurant lost close to $ 20,000 a year, but it was a success in achieving its primary purpose of retaining customers with the store. Hess also cultivated strong relations with store employees, inviting them to regular company barbecues at his country house on Bausch Road in Lowhill Township , outside Allentown, until World War II made travel too difficult for his workers. With offices in London, Paris, and Rome, Hess Brothers Department Store
840-747: The south, the city line with Whitehall Township to the north, and 15th Street to the west. Center City's population based on a 2007 estimate was 53,548. Center City is defined as 6.271 sq. mi., making the population density 8539/square miles. Center City's tallest building is the PPL Building at 322 ft (98 m). The Allentown Art Museum , Miller Symphony Hall , the former site of Hess's Department Stores' original and flagship store, Baum School of Art , Lehigh County Historical Society and Heritage Museum are Center City landmarks. An 8,500-capacity indoor arena, PPL Center , opened in August 2014, and
875-522: The store and promote Hess's nationally. In 1974, among Hess's retail firsts, the store held an over-the-counter sale of pure gold when bullion sale was legalized, and introduced the Rudi Gernreich topless bathing suit. Hess's was one of only a handful of stores in the entire country to carry the suits, but failed to sell even one. Biannual sales events at Hess's were sometimes semi-disastrous events as shoppers, who often waited outside for
910-425: The store could be expanded again. A soda fountain and restaurant that seated 400 patrons was opened in the store. By 1915, the store had expanded to nearly a city block, maintaining a major Center City Allentown presence at the northeast corner of 9th and Hamilton streets. In 1922, Max Sr. died at the age of 58. For the next several years, the store was run by his brother Charles. In 1927, an eight-story annex
945-541: The store to open in the morning, proceeded to trample each other and store employees to get to purchase discounted merchandise, leaving the shelves and racks completely stripped bare afterwards. Berman began expanding Hess's, opening new stores in suburban Pennsylvania shopping malls, including the new Whitehall Mall in Whitehall Township , an Allentown suburb, which included Sears and Zollinger and Harned department stores. Berman wanted Hess's to be part of
980-555: The wave of mall construction during the 1970s, and to be anchor stores in them. Additional stores were established in Lancaster and Easton in 1971, in Bethlehem in 1973, two in suburban Allentown shopping centers in 1974, and others in eastern and central Pennsylvania by 1979. In October 1979, Crown American , a developer and owner of hotels and shopping malls, purchased the Hess's chain, which then included 17 large stores, as
1015-433: Was added to 9th and Hamilton store that included new departments and a new shipping and delivery area. In 1929, Charles Hess died, as Max Hess, Jr. was beginning studies at Muhlenberg College in Allentown. On his 21st birthday, Max left Muhlenberg to join the family business as part of the management team. Three years later, he was appointed president. While the exterior of the store still appeared as separate buildings,
1050-693: Was always at the forefront in selling the latest fashions. Giant toy soldiers were used as Christmas decorations, and "Pip the Mouse" appeared in a puppet show at the flagship store. The store hosted an annual flower show in May, which was aired regionally on Philadelphia television, and annual imported fashions and toy shows. Hess invited celebrities to visit the store. Johnny Carson , Rosalynn Carter , Zsa Zsa Gabor , Rock Hudson , Gina Lollobrigida , Barbara Walters , Burt Ward , and others made appearances at Hess's primary 9th and Hamilton store in Allentown. In 1968, Hess contacted Philip Berman , who operated
1085-459: Was built to resist wind pressure of forty pounds per square foot (200 kg/m ). The sign was three-sided to make it visible to both eastbound and westbound traffic. The 378 circuits were operated by a clock inside the sign that had eight light cycles timed to spell the name H E S S one letter at a time. The sign was turned on for the first time on December 23, 1947. In his 1953 book, America’s Twelve Master Salesmen , B. C. Forbes listed Hess as
Stroud Mall - Misplaced Pages Continue
1120-419: Was graded with gravel, and a fence erected. During this time, a series of redevelopment options, including the building of PPL Center , a 10,000 capacity indoor arena that hosts the Lehigh Valley Phantoms and various entertainment events and concerts, was reviewed by the city. The former Hess's property was sold to PPL Corporation , which expanded its office complex onto the site with the plaza at PPL Center,
1155-453: Was the first store in the world to have automatic talking elevators, notifying its passengers what items were available on each floor. One of the landmarks of Allentown was the large Hess Brothers sign on the store's corner at 9th and Hamilton Street . The 45-foot-tall (14 m) sign was the biggest of its type outside New York City , weighing eight tons. Its letters, made of porcelain enamel, were each seven feet (2.1 m) high. The sign
1190-540: Was the only two-story anchor in the mall, and featured what at the time was the first escalator to be located in Monroe County. The novelty of the escalator caused quite a stir in local media, and as part of the festivities Sears had reigning Miss Pennsylvania Kirstin Deliz Border on hand for the occasion. The Bon-Ton would take over Hess's at the mall in 1994, as part of the 20 stores they purchased during
1225-632: Was then the Grand Central Hotel at 3rd and Hamilton streets. Hess's first store opened at 9th and Hamilton streets in Center City Allentown . In the store's French Room, Charles Hess filled the store with fashions primarily from France. Hess made frequent trips to Paris, and wrote in an Allentown newspaper about what fashionable women were wearing for social engagements or to the Paris Opera . On February 19, 1897,
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