Tuesday, August 24, 2021

H. Stanley Korshak, One of Chicago's First Luxury Women's Apparel Merchants.

Hyman Stanley Korshak (1884-1963), a leading arbiter of American female fashions, opened his first shop, the "Blackstone Shop" at 628-630 South Michigan Avenue on April 6, 1910, in the newly built Blackstone Hotel [1]. The Blackstone Shop made some clothing items in their own 'workroom,' as stated in the advertisement below.
A June 1920 Blackstone Shop Sale Ad. — In 1920, a $175 garment would cost $2,400 today. Makes me wonder what the regular price for these sale items was.




Early on, Stanley Korshak lived at the opulent Shoreland Apartment Hotel in Hyde Park [2].

The shop, which catered exclusively to the carriage trade, was moved to north 912 North Michigan Avenue at Walton Street in 1929. The move was credited with being one of the significant events in making upper Michigan Avenue one of the world's most fashionable shopping districts and popularizing the nickname, "The Magnificant Mile," [3] in Chicago's Gold Coast Neighborhood. 

Mr. Korshak pioneered in making top fashions available to the ready-made trade. He persuaded Paris fashion makers to make garments in basic sizes. He brought the ready-to-wear clothes back to his shop for immediate sale. 
Label
Stanley Korshak specialized in selling one-of-a-kind and haute couture designer merchandise. The store operated as a collection of leased-space boutiques (as many antique/collectible malls do). 
Looking South on Michigan Avenue from Oak Street. In mid-picture, the ten-story building on the northwest corner at Walton Street, from closest to farthest, were the businesses of Blum's Vogue, 920 N. Michigan; Stanley Korshak, 912 N. Michigan; and Jacques French Restaurant, 900 N. Michigan Avenue.


A niece of Stanley Korshak commented that he lived at the Drake Hotel (across the street from his store at 140 East Walton Place) and just walked to his shop. He often ate lunch at Jaques French Restaurant next door.

Stanley Korshak, president and founder of the woman's specialty shop bearing his name at 912 North Michigan Avenue, died on Friday, August 16, 1963, in Deauville, France at 79 years old. Associates said that Mr. Korshak, who was vacationing after attending the fashion shows in Paris, died in his sleep at about 3 a.m. Chicago time. For 55 years, Mr. Korshak traveled to Europe to attend fashion showings twice a year. Stanley was a bachelor and had no offspring. Stanley Korshak II, Mr. Korshak's nephew, who has been associated with the company for 25 years, took over operations of the firm. 

Stanley Korshak II opened a store in the Northbrook Court Mall in Northbrook, Illinois. The rumor was that the Korshak store wasn't upscale enough for the premier shopping mall to make it. They also had problems collecting customer accounts receivable from the two stores.

In 1985, the controlling interest of R.V. Limited, the Chicago-based specialty retailing holding company, has been acquired by an investment group led by a well-known name in the Chicago retailing community—Lawrence S. Gore. R.V. owns 13 specialty stores, including Stanley Korshak, with stores in Chicago and Northbrook and Polo/Ralph Lauren. It recently acquired Brittany Ltd., a Chicago retailer offering traditional men`s and women`s wear. Gore resigned from his post as vice president and general manager of Neiman Marcus on Michigan Avenue to take on his new duties as president and chief executive officer of R.V. Limited. Gore said, ''Korshak has a great name and has great customer service, but it could be better,'' saying he would initially concentrate on repositioning the store as a ''fashion leader.''

Korshak's suffered financial problems for the better part of the 1980s. Dallas heiress and developer Caroline Hunt purchased the rights to the name.

The Michigan Avenue store closed in July 1990. No date was available for the Northbrook Court Mall store closing.

NOTE: I emailed Martha Leonard, Senior Vice President (mleonard@stanleykorshak.com), three times and left phone messages for Ms. Leonard at 214-871-3600 (transferred to her office) to verify some data about Stanley Korshak. Nobody from the Dallas, Texas, store responded to my inquiries. It's a shame that today's Stanley Korshak store doesn't care enough about their own history to return an email reply!

Compiled by Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D. 

ON A PERSONAL NOTE: My Mom shopped at Marshall Field's 28 Shop, Neiman Marcus, Lord & Taylor, I. Magnin & Co., and Korshak's Michigan Avenue stores. She apparently liked nice clothes but was a bargin-hunter and usually bought things that were on sale. Some stores, like the 28 Shop, would call her a day before they put something she lie on sale. That.. is customer service! She lived at 1000 N. Lake Shore Drive at Oak Street, Catty-corner from the Drake Hotel, and across the street from Oak Street Beach.
  


[1] Hyman Stanley Korshak’s Blackstone Shop was in the newly built Blackstone Hotel, which opened in 1908 at 624-636 South Michigan Avenue. Tenants in the building in the 1920s included Augustus Eugene Bournique’s dancing schools and two select women’s clothiers, H. Stanley Korshak’s Blackstone Shop and Blum’s Vogue.

[2] The Shoreland Apartment Hotel in Hyde Park, at 5454 South Shore Drive in Chicago (opened in 1926). Amelia Earhart was honored in the building’s Crystal Ballroom in 1928. Al Capone infamously took up residence for a while. In the 1950s, Jimmy Hoffa kept a room in the hotel and often held raucous union meetings there, and it’s rumored, one of his underlings strangled a hotel worker in the lobby for having the audacity to ask Hoffa to pay his bill. . Elvis Presley also spent several nights at the Shoreland. Designated a Chicago Landmark on September 8, 2010.

[3] The Magnificent Mile Association, formerly the Greater North Michigan Avenue Association (GNMAA) and originally the North Central Business District Association, was founded in 1912 to plan and promote the development and beautification of upper Michigan Avenue.

Monday, August 23, 2021

The History of the Marshall Field Mansion and Family.

Marshall Field's house was located at 1905 South Prairie Avenue in Chicago. The architect, Richard Morris Hunt, designed the Breakers and the Biltmore estates for the Vanderbilts.

The cost came to about $2,000,000 ($45,500,000 today). It was the first house in Chicago to feature electricity and lighting. The 3-story plus basement house was red brick with stone trim and a mansard roof.
The Marshall Field Sr. Mansion, 1905 South Prairie Avenue, Chicago, Illinois.


The Marshall Field Sr. Mansion, 1905 South Prairie Avenue, Chicago, Illinois.
In 1862, when Marshall was 28, he met a visiting Ohio girl, 23-year-old Nannie Douglas Scott, at a party. Nannie was the daughter of a prosperous Ohio iron master. When he learned she was leaving town the next day, he went to the train station to see her off. As Nannie boarded the train back to Ohio, the normally reticent Field, who approached every aspect of his life with succinct trepidation, impetuously jumped aboard the train car. As the train puffed, lurched, and chugged into life, Field burst forth with a marriage proposal to Nannie. Although shocked by her admirer’s impulsive act, she immediately accepted, particularly in front of the other passengers. His courage then extinguished, Field got off the train at the next stop and went back to work.
The Marshall Field Sr. Mansion Hallway, 1905 South Prairie Avenue, Chicago, Illinois.
The Marshall Field Sr. Mansion Library, 1905 South Prairie Avenue, Chicago, Illinois.


Marshall and Nannie were married in Ironton, Ohio, in 1863. The couple had planned to marry the year before, but the death of Nannie’s sister, Jennie, caused the wedding to be postponed.
Nannie Douglas Scott Field with the Field children, Marshall Field, Jr. and Ethel Beatty Field. Louis Field died in 1866 as an infant.
Nannie led Marshall Field into "hell-on-earth life.” Their dinner table arguments were loud, excruciatingly shrill battling scenes (even before the servants), and the talk of Prairie Avenue children, who were sometimes present at mealtimes with little Ethel and Marshall II. Eventually, Marshall and Nannie separated; he was alone in his mansion, and she was in France and England.

Marshall Field II (or Jr.) built an 8,000-square-foot house at 1919 South Prairie Avenue, next door to his father, in 1884. 

They were divorced in the 1890s. Nannie moved to France permanently, where rumors floated that she had become addicted to drugs. On Sunday, February 23, 1896, she died in Nice at 56 years old from peritonitis disease (an inflammation of the tissue that lines your abdomen and can be serious and deadly). She is buried in the Field plot at Graceland Cemetery, Chicago.

Delia Spencer Caton, a longtime friend and romantic interest of Marshall lived in the house behind Field at 1900 South Calumet Avenue.
Delia Spencer Caton Field




After Delia Caton's husband Arthur died in 1904, Field and Delia decided to marry.

Delia was 46 years old, 24 years younger than her 70-year-old fiancé. They were married at St. Margaret’s Church in Westminster Abbey in London, England, in 1905. The ceremony was quiet and attended only by a few friends. 

There were plenty of rumors thrown around. One was that Marshall and Delia were romantically involved before the death of her husband. A second rumor was about a tunnel connecting the Field and Caton houses.


Marshall Field, the richest merchant in the world, died at 4 o'clock on Tuesday, January 16, 1906, at 4 o'clock in the afternoon at the Holland House in New York City of exhaustion following a bout of pneumonia. He had amassed a fortune of $150 million ($4.5 billion today).

After Marshall Field died, his wife, Delia, inherited the property. She chose to live in Washington, D.C. and deeded the mansion to Marshall Field III in 1906. 

Field III donated the property to the Association of Arts and Industries with the stipulation to use it as an industrial art school. László Moholy-Nagy and Walter Gropius founded the "New Bauhaus" in 1937, a graduate school teaching systemic, human-centered design. Today it is the IIT Institute of Design at the Illinois Institute of Technology.  

The house was ultimately razed in 1955.


By Dr. Neil Gale, Ph.D.