Sears Roebuck Catalog, 1898 |
The Sears Catalog, Our Ancestors - America's History
1972 Sears Fall Winter Catalog, pg7 |
The catalog closed generational gaps.
Oh yeah, supposed to be talking about ancestors! Nothing else to talk about with the grandparents? We'd just ask them about the catalog. Grandma, with a spoon in one hand stirring slop in her hot-in-December, Lyons, KS kitchen, would tell us, by memory the page number of what she had saved for. I called it her seasonal "bragging rights." Grandpa, well the new coat which he only wore when he went to the "cities." Yep that usually meant Great Bend or Hutchinson. That's as far as you go in the Kansas winters.
Wars, Great Depression. and Disasters, Presidential Elections
How this catalog recorded and included the current events was quite creative, but all included! Even the 1899 Alaskan Goldrush via the Klondike shoes and the San Francisco 1906 earthquake.
Fall 1908, pg770 |
Where to Find Catalogs Digitized?
- ancestry.com: U. S. Historic Catalogs of Sears, Roebuck and Co., 1896-1993.Need to review early copies, try ancestry.com. Yes, they know the importance of the Sears Catalogs!
- for earlier editions, check out Internet Archive. Wonder if their large coverage of tombstones and "memorial art" was thematic in 1906, thanks to the SF fire.
- Catalogs and Wishbooks, holds a free accessible collections of the catalogs from 1940-2017.
1908, pg560 |
Article: The Modesto Bee, 1 Mar 1977, pg 65; newspaperscom |
Note from Author:
Please know that we are aware Sears' [had a]complicated history with black customers. I have posted this link should others wish to have more information on the topic.
Please know that we are aware Sears' [had a]complicated history with black customers. I have posted this link should others wish to have more information on the topic.
Sears, Roebuck catalog did allow African Americans to shop circumventing Jim Crow racists practices and laws. However, the catalog and stores' inventories and practices created had a rather rocky relationship with black-America. Sears was active in the consumerization of stereotypes (i.e. Chicken Snatcher, Jockey man, Minstrel figures, etc.) and treated employees and shoppers with the same segregation practices as other stores.
Still, this mail order catalog brought cheer to the season for many, and connects us once again to our ancestors.
Kathleen Brandt
Be Historically Correcta3genealogy.com
Accurate Accessible Answers
a3genealogy@gmail.com
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