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Sears says 'so long' to Chicago

7/16/2018
Sears, the retail chain with deep roots in Chicago, has shuttered its last store in the city.

Known as the Six Corners store, the location opened in the Irving Park neighborhood 80 years ago, during the Great Depression. On Sunday, the store marked its last day of business and closed for good.

More than 100 employees were released in the latest closure from struggling Sears Holdings. When Kmart and Sears united in 2005, the combined company had about 3,500 locations. The company now has less than 1,000.

Since 2010, the last year the company was profitable, it has reported more than $11 billion in losses while closing stores by the hundreds.

After its founding as a catalog retailer, Sears moved its headquarters to Chicago in 1887. The company also opened its first two retail locations in the city.

Sears moved its headquarters to the former Sears Tower, the tallest building in the world when it opened in 1973 and a record it held until 1997. The company eventually moved its base of operations outside of Chicago's city limits to Hoffman Estates, Ill.

 
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