The Hecht Company, last of DC's department stores

When Hecht's finally ceased to exist in 2006, it was more than just the end of one of Washington's oldest and most successful businesses. It was the end of large-scale, locally-owned retail as an industry. Other local department store giants, some of which we have previously chronicled, had already fallen: Lansburgh's in 1972, Kann's in 1975; Garfinkel's in 1990; and Woodies in 1995. For a long time, Hecht's bucked this trend. When the company built a brand-new, freestanding store downtown in 1985, it seemed to breathe new life into a tired enterprise and bolster the resurgence of downtown as a shopping destination. But nothing lasts forever.

The former Hecht Company store at 13th and G Street NW (photo by the author).

Hecht's was not a native Washington company; it began in Baltimore after the arrival in 1844 of Simeon Hecht, a native of the small Bavarian town of Langenschwarz. Simeon began the first of several Hecht family enterprises when he opened Hecht's Red Post Store in Baltimore in 1848. His financial success allowed him to bring other family members over to America, including his brother Samuel (1830-1907), who arrived in 1847 and opened a separate furniture business. It was Samuel's son Moses (1873-1954) who set his sights on Washington, opening his "dream store" at 515 7th Street NW in 1896.

This was the golden era of department stores, prime inventors of modern consumer culture. Offering a vast assortment of stylish goods to make modern life comfortable proved enormously profitable, and the new Hecht's enterprise faced competition from several established D.C. firms. Lansburgh's had been around since 1860 and was located just a block south of Hecht's on 7th Street. On Pennsylvania Avenue, the Palais Royal started in 1877, followed by Woodies (as the Boston Dry Goods Store) in 1880. Kann's had opened as a low-cost alternative in 1893.

A newspaper advertisement from 1899 (Source: The Washington Post, Nov. 7, 1899).
Despite this competition, Hecht's thrived. A notice in The Washington Post in 1897 claimed that the store's fall opening gala that year drew a remarkable 10,000 patrons. The following year, the store took over the adjoining building at 513 7th Street, doubling its floor space. A second, six-story addition was built at 517 7th Street in 1903, further expanding the store. Twenty new departments filled the space, including a large furniture department on the top floor. In 1912, Hecht's tacked on another addition, four stories tall, at 511 7th Street.

The red brick and brownstone structure seen here is a double storefront that includes 513 and 515 7th Street. Hecht's began in 515 (to the left) and added 513 after Rudden's furniture store moved out in 1898. The company built 517 (with the large green bays) in 1903, and added the beige-brick 511 in 1912 (photo by the author).
That Hecht's customers could make their purchases on credit (not just by paying in installments) was touted in the newspapers as key to the store's early success. "It is one of Washington's best-known business houses," the Post proclaimed in 1908, "catering to a large and important portion of the citizenship...the highest official and the daily wage worker sharing the advantages made possible by the unique system of 'buy now—pay later' that has become so famous." Special discreetly-enclosed booths for applying for credit were installed, "into which the customer enters, is waited on by a bookkeeper, and passes out unobserved by the shoppers," according to a 1903 Post article. Once approved, delighted customers snapped up the fancy goods displayed in the gleaming plate-glass and mahogany cases.

As historian Richard Longstreth has explained, the department store business surged after World War I. With the sacrifices of the war over and the economy booming, consumers began spending money on items they had never know they needed. Department stores expanded to meet the growing demand and implemented modern managerial efficiencies to streamline their massive operations and offer even better prices.

In 1919, Hecht's purchased the Federal Building at the corner of 7th and F, adjacent to its existing store, as well as the Shubert-Garrick Theater adjoining it on F Street, to make room for a large new addition. The theater and the Federal Building's tenants were allowed to run out their leases; then both structures were demolished. In July 1924, groundbreaking took place for a lavish new building, completed the following year. Designed by Chicago architect Jarvis Hunt (1859-1941), the new eight-story store was a forceful statement of the company's success and future aspirations. The glazed terracotta façade, intricate ironwork decoration, and large clock over the intersection of 7th and F Streets, created in a style called "American Gothic" at the time, contributed to the "new conception of shopping convenience and beauty" that the company conveyed. The $3 million building tripled the store's floor space and led to a doubling of its staff, from around 500 to more than 1,000 employees.

Workers put finishing touches on the new Hecht's store in 1925 (Source: Library of Congress).
Hecht's boasted that enough electricity for a small town was used to power all the lights and equipment in the new store. The massive plate glass windows at street level, like those at other department stores, enticed customers with fetching and often whimsical displays of the latest fashions and household gadgets.

The Hecht's building as it appears today (photo by the author).
The clock at 7th and F Streets (photo by the author).
Hecht's never managed to gain the prestige of Woodies or Garfinkel's, but aimed squarely to satisfy the common man. As a 1925 advertisement explained, the store's ambition was "to be one of your best stores. Not your most exclusive store, or your most expensive store, or your ritziest store, but simply one of your best stores—to take our place in the sun with the other splendid department stores in Washington." When Woodies put elaborate displays in its windows at Christmastime, Hecht's didn't try to compete. "Woodies was solid middle class, with an air of gentility but no arrogance. Hecht's was blue collar," wrote Post reporter Roxanne Roberts in 1995, when Woodies closed.

One problem for a multi-story retail establishment like Hecht's was moving customers from one floor to another. Elevators were slow and cumbersome. The answer was escalators. In 1934, Hecht's installed the city's first escalators in its 7th Street store. It held an elaborate dedication ceremony in September, with the chairman of the Depression-era Reconstruction Finance Corporation on hand to cut the ribbon and take the first ride, implicitly assuring onlookers that Hecht's modern escalators were an emblem of better times ahead.

Sketch of the store from a Hecht's pocket directory (author's collection).
The company continued to add to its department store complex, endlessly fighting to match or outdo its competitors. The company gradually took over most of the block where the main store was located. In December 1935, Hecht's purchased the historic home of Chief Justice Salmon P. Chase (1808-1873) at 6th and E Streets NW on the far side of the block. The handsome Greek Revival mansion, built in 1851, had hosted many an elegant fete during the Civil War years, but Hecht's had no interest in preserving such history. The company wanted the site for automobile parking—a crucial amenity needed to keep customers coming downtown. The Chase house was torn down and replaced initially with a parking lot. In 1937, a modern, utilitarian parking garage was constructed on the site. Hecht's was the first downtown department store to build such a garage. This was followed in 1941 by a new six-story annex on E Street to house Hecht's "bargain store."

This sketch, from a 1940s matchbook, shows the parking garage to the rear and bargain store on E Street, to the right. The size and placement of these additions has been exaggerated, and other buildings are not shown (author's collection).
As it expanded, Hecht's, like Woodies, sought to transfer much of its service operations outside of the downtown area. The solution was a new, beautifully-streamlined Art Deco warehouse along New York Avenue NE in Ivy City, which opened in 1937. The building remains one of the city's finest examples of Art Deco styling. The Washington Herald noted that the building was "symbolic of an arresting type of architecture that is destined to precipitate a revolutionary transformation in the appearance and utility of the buildings..." Expanded several times, the structure was used by Hecht's as a warehouse until 2006. It was converted to apartments in 2015.

The Hecht Company warehouse around the time it was completed (Source: Library of Congress).
The glass-block lantern on the roof of the Hecht warehouse (photo by the author).
After World War II, it became clear that branch stores would be essential for any department store that wanted to thrive in the automobile age. A huge base of customers lived in the suburbs, and fewer and fewer of them wanted to come downtown to do their shopping. In 1947, Hecht's opened its first full-service suburban branch in a hulking structure at the corner of Fenton Street and Ellsworth Drive in Silver Spring, Maryland (now part of the Ellsworth Place shopping center). By the 1960s, suburban stores had redefined the retail business. Hecht's opened some 20 more outlets in the Baltimore/Washington area between 1947 and 2005.

The company logo in the 1960s.
As suburban shopping expanded, downtown business withered. Hecht's location in the "old" part of downtown, which declined precipitously after the 1968 riots, became a liability. By 1980, the company was losing as much as $1 million per year on the downtown store, and company officials began searching for a better location. Partnering with developers Oliver Carr and Theodore Hagans, the company decided to build a new store on a site adjacent to the Metro Center subway stop, where downtown redevelopment was beginning to take hold. The proposed site, owned by the city's Redevelopment Land Agency, was on G Street between 12th and 13th Streets, within a few blocks of the Woodies and Garfinkel's stores.

Construction on the block-long store began in 1984. Seven small businesses were evicted from their vintage storefront buildings, which were razed. The vast, new Hecht's structure, the first new department store downtown since before World War II, rose in their place and opened in 1985. Designed by the firm of Skidmore, Owings, and Merrill, the postmodern structure was solidly sheathed in precast concrete, trimmed with pink granite. Like many a suburban department store, the Hecht's building lacked windows, focusing shoppers' experience on the interior displays. At a height of five stories, it was designed so that office space could be built on top at a later date (the One Metro Center offices were added in 2003).

Hecht's sought to win over affluent shoppers with the new store's luxurious marble floors, mahogany paneling, and brass fixtures, which contrasted dramatically with what had become the tired, bargain-basement look of the old building. None of the merchandise from the old store was brought over to the new. No thrift shop or bargain department, in the basement or elsewhere, was to be found. Upscale brands like Anne Klein, Christian Dior, and Ralph Lauren, never seen before in a Hecht's store, graced the new shelves. Prices were substantially higher too, and the strategy worked. Sales increased, and the store became a lasting element of the downtown retail landscape.

The old Hecht's store was redeveloped as office space, now called Terrell Place in honor of civil rights leader Mary Church Terrell (photo by the author).
But Hecht's, as a brand, is gone. The original, independent Hecht Company had come to an end in 1959, when it merged with the May Department Stores conglomerate. Individual stores had retained the Hecht's brand name but became part of a vast national network of many different labels. In 2006, the May Company merged with Federated Department Stores, which owned the Macy's and Bloomingdale's brands, among others. Wanting to turn Macy's into a national brand, Federated closed some Hecht's stores and rebranded the rest as Macy's (or in one case, Bloomingdale's). Suddenly Hecht's was gone, after 110 years in Washington. Although perhaps not as fondly remembered as Woodies, Hecht's had many followers, and its loss was widely lamented. Post columnist Marc Fisher called it "the last big goodbye in a long series of losses of local retail names."

Macy's remains open in the big box on G Street, still sporting "The Hecht Company" in huge letters chiseled across its façade. In the age of Amazon, who knows how long that store will survive.

* * * * *

Sources for this article included James M. Goode, Capital Losses 2nd ed. (2003); Robert Hendrickson, Grand Emporiums: The Illustrated History of America's Great Department Stores (1981); Michael J. Lisicky, Baltimore's Bygone Department Stores: Many Happy Returns (2012); William Leach, Land of Desire: Merchants, Power, and the Rise of a New American Culture (1993); Richard Longstreth, The American Department Store Transformed 1920-1960 (2010); G. Martin Moeller, Jr., AIA Guide to the Architecture of Washington, D.C. 5th ed. (2012); Jan Whitaker, The World of Department Stores (2011) and Service and Style: How the American Department Store Fashioned the Middle Class (2006); Hanz Wirz and Richard Striner, Washington Deco: Art Deco in the Nation's Capital (1984); Henry F. and Elsie Rathburn Withey, Biographical Dictionary of American Architects (1956); and numerous newspaper articles.

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Comments

  1. I was the store detective manager of Silver Spring and P.G. Plaza Hecht's after 6 years in the Marine Corps and Vietnam. I started in the late 60's and ended up at the downtown store before I went into law enforcement. At one time I worked at other companies as a detective manager and remember them all to this day. Had some great detectives working with me. The era of dept stores will be a distant memory.

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    1. I fondly remember Hecht's and enjoyed many years shopping at locations that ranged from D.C. to Salisbury, Md. I was saddened when their logo was no more. In an interesting twist of fate, the Hecht Company Warehouse on NY Avenue in now the City Winery. I have been to events there several times. It is so wonderful that many of the building's great features like the block glass windows and wooden floors have been saved.

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  2. It's interesting that they remained committed to having a downtown store. Most other companies at that time, faced with declining business of a downtown location, instead chose to close the store, rather than to relocate and/or rebuild.

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    1. My father started working at Hecht's ( then called The Hecht Company) when he was 16., probably around early 1940's. He worked in the shoe dept. in the basement ( called "The Downstairs Store)" safety- pining pairs of shoes together to throw on a heap on big tables. He stayed with Hecht's, working at the F St. store for close to 30 years, eventually becoming the head shoe buyer and then merchandise manager for the Down Stairs Store.

      I remember, as a child, attending the opening of the Landmark Store, the addition to the Silver Spring store on Fenton St. in Silver Spring where they set up a small fishing pond as a promo and my brother and I fished.

      Beginning when I was three years old, I appeared in many of Hecht's ads in the Washington Post, modeling clothes. My mother would take me to F street for the photo shoots and as payment I was given the clothes I modeled. Sadly, the only ad that I have is of me modeling a zip-front snowsuit that cost $3.59 with a matching hat for $.39.

      I never shopped in Woodies, Lansburgh or Lord and Taylor until I was married and my father left Hechts in 1967.

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  3. Remember getting my Hecht's credit card back in the mid-1970s. Loved shopping at the Washington DC store. Sales staff were so nice. 🙂👍💜

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