By the end of the 1920's, Houston, as an American city, was showing
signs
of the changes in society that were happening across the United States.
Some
of these broad patterns can be seen in the development along Buffalo
Bayou.
If River Oaks ushered in the surburban residential way of life that was
connected
to the business center by modern roadways, like Buffalo Drive, and a
dependence
on the private automobile, then the suburban retail department
store
concept began with the opening of the Sears, Roebuck and Company store
on
Buffalo Drive (now named Allen Parkway).
By 1920, the population of the United States living in cities
outnumbered
the rural population. At the turn of the twentieth century, the
situation
had been the reverse. Robert E. Wood, president of Sears, Roebuck and
Company
saw this change and recognized the effect on retail merchandising. He
opened
an experimental retail store in Chicago in early 1927, and by the end
of
the year, he had twenty-seven retail outlets to complement the mail
order
catalog operations. By 1929, Sears had 319 retail stores and by the
country's
entry into World War II in 1941, there were more than 600 Sears stores
nationwide.

Houston's Sears, Roebuck and Company store was built in 1929 on a three
acre
site at the present day intersection of Allen Parkway and Montrose
Boulevard.
It was the first suburban department store in Houston.
Designed by the firm of Nimmons, Carr and Wright, the Sears store
building
is an architectural example of the type of high quality development
along
Buffalo Drive as it emerged as the major corridor between downtown and
River
Oaks. The new $1,000,000 retail department store opened for business on
the
corner of Buffalo Drive and Lincoln Street in August, 1929.
Situated in a prominent position on the south bank of Buffalo Bayou,
located
adjacent to the railroad spur from Chaney Junction, and convenient to
residential
neighborhoods that strecthed in a broad arch across the southwest side
of
the city from South Main Street to River Oaks, the Sears, Roebuck store
seemed
to ideally positioned for success. Yet, after only a decade, the store
was
relocated to South Main Street, near its current day intersection with
US
59. The unpredictable nature of the bayou had shown its hand. On
December
9, 1935, Buffalo Bayou rose in flood to its historic high level,
reaching
an estimated flow of 40,000 cfs. The first floor of the Sears store
flooded,
and substantial losses were incurred. The subsequent 'flood' sale, in
which
damaged goods were displayed and sold on the second floor of the
building,
was an event to remember and was well patronized by bargain-seeking
shoppers.
By 1942, the Olympia Arena was operating on the site of the old Sears
store.
Then, in 1943, the building was the temporary, first home of the Baylor
College
of Medicine. Baylor College of Medicine moved from Dallas to Houston
before
the Texas Medical Center could construct the building it had promised,
so
students at Baylor attended classes during the first four years, until
1947,
in the old Sears warehouse.
The building is now the Robinson Public Warehouse. The old store has
been
owned by A. G. Robinson and his family for over 40 years. A large "RPW"
written
on the east-facing wall of the tower section of the structure is its
only
identifying sign. It is for sale and stands there inconspicuously
collecting
the ugly marks of grafitti on the wall near the loading dock.
All material printed on this
page
and this web site is copyrighted. All rights reserved.
Copyright by Louis F. Aulbach,
2003