Casual Corner Explained

Casual Corner
Fate:Liquidation
Location City:West Hartford, Connecticut
Location Country:United States
Locations:(formerly) 500+
Area Served:U.S.
Founders:Stanley W. Vogel
Charles E. Carples
Industry:Retail
Products:Apparel
Owner:Luxottica
Subsid:Petite Sophisticate
August Max Woman

Casual Corner was an American retail clothing chain founded in 1950. It operated stores under the names Casual Corner, Petite Sophisticate and August Max Woman brands, among others, with more than 525 stores at its peak.

History

In 1950, childhood friends Charles E. Carples, a Sage-Allen manager, and Brown-Thomson buyer Stanley W. Vogel[1] each borrowed $5,000 (~$ in) to co-found Casual Corner, opening its first retail store that April Fools Day[2] in West Hartford, Connecticut.[3] The first shop was 750 square feet and used poles, beams, and nets from old tobacco barns, and employed the founders' spouses as staff.[2]

Casual Corner broke tradition with retail conventions of the day, allowing women to physically browse clothing and try on items in fitting rooms, rather than encasing apparel behind glass. The store's name was chosen, in part, to reflect a more casual shopping experience than was typical of the era.[2]

Throughout the 1950s. each store displayed the following poem near its front door:[2]

Come in and browse and tarry and chat

Casual Corner is meant just for that

Come in and leisurely look awhile

And find here what’s good and fine in style

And if you wish your business we’ll tend

Come in as a stranger—leave as a friend.

Early Casual Corner logos and icons featured a cartoon-like rendition of a Dalmation dog.

In the late 1950's, brothers William "Bill" Miller and Irving Kent Miller acquired the rights to open Casual Corner stores in cities throughout the state of Texas, including Houston, Dallas, San Antonio, Waco, Midland, Abilene, Lubbock, and McAllen. These stores were all designed around a traditional upscale country theme, featuring fine early American furnishings, fixtures and trim, a fireplace, coffee station, New Yorker magazines, and dress forms as mannequins. The Texas chain remained intact until the late 1960's, once shopping plaza/center retailers began migrating to the newer supermalls.

In its first year, company sales were $45,000; a decade later, annual revenue had increased to $2 million. In 1969, annual sales were reported as $14 million. Casual Corner was sold to United States Shoe Corporation (U.S. Shoe) in 1970, when the chain included 20 stores.[4] Cofounder Vogel became president of the company's specialty retail division, retiring a decade later.

A year after acquisition by U.S. Shoe, the chain opened its twenty-fifth store[5] and continued to grow rapidly after that. Many of the original stores were constructed by George Zunner III of West Hartford,[6] including those in Warwick and Providence, Rhode Island; Boston and Springfield, Massachusetts; Buffalo, New York; and at least one store in Ohio.

Under U.S. Shoe's ownership, Casual Corner became the foundation of a larger holding company, Women's Specialty Retailing Group. During its market height, in 1989, US Specialty Retailing included over 1,500 stores nationwide.[1]

In April 1995, Luxottica purchased U.S. Shoe for $1.4 billion with the goal of acquiring its LensCrafters division;[7] losses of US$22 million were reported that second quarter. In October 1995, Luxottica spun off the Women's Specialty Retailing Group, renamed Casual Corner Group, to Italian-controlled pLa Leonardo Finanziaria S.r.l., a Delaware company operated by Luxottica founder Leonardo Del Vecchio and his family.[8] With 525 stores operating in 2000, Casual Corner closed its remaining locations in late 2005, after selling them to a liquidator,[9] [10] due to increased competition.[11]

Brands and market

The chain's original merchandise was women's sportswear.[12] In the early 1960's, the stores primarily featured high quality clothing and accessories from the following manufacturers: The Villager, Ladybug (Juniors division of The Villager), Glen of Michigan, Cole of California (swimwear), Bernardo (sandals), Collins of Texas (handbags), and Vera (scarves). These lines collectively reflected Casual Corner's distinctive look of the early 1960's; tailored cotton shirtdresses, Peter Pan collars, pin-tucked blouses, fine cotton and died-to-match woven and knit wool separates, jute-and-leather belts, and trendy hand-jeweled wooden purses.

By the 1990s, Casual Corner pivoted to target working women.[13] Under the Women's Specialty Retailing Group, the company owned and operated Casual Corner, Casual Corner Annex, August Max, Sophisticated Woman (subsequently merged and rebranded as August Max Woman), Petite Sophisticate, Ups & Downs, Caren Charles, and J. Riggings, a menswear store, which it sold in 1987.[9]

Notes and References

  1. News: Co-Founder of Casual Corner Stores Dies. 25 September 1989. Associated Press. 2022-09-25.
  2. Web site: Casual Corner Group, Inc.. Encyclopedia.com. 29 January 2011.
  3. Web site: Casual Corner Group closing includes 7 Triad location. 2 December 2005. The Business Journal. 29 January 2011.
  4. News: Casual Corner Sale Planned. 30 October 1969. The Milwaukee Sentinel. 29 January 2011.
  5. News: Casual Corner Plans To Open 25th Store. 18 April 1971. The Hartford Courant. 14B. 29 January 2011.
  6. News: ZUNNER, GEORGE III. . 2005-07-02 . 2022-09-25.
  7. News: Luxottica to Acquire U.S. Shoe for $1.4 Billion . . April 18, 1995 . January 3, 2018.
  8. News: Luxottica Sells Apparel Group In Enfield To Casual Corner . . October 4, 1995 . January 3, 2018.
  9. News: Casual Corner closing all 525 stores. 23 October 2005. USA Today. 29 January 2011.
  10. Web site: Petite Sophisticate, Casual Corner in retail limbo. https://web.archive.org/web/20121105101637/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-1419403.html. dead. 5 November 2012. 8 August 2005. Chicago Sun-Times. 29 January 2011.
  11. News: Women's apparel chain shuts down. https://archive.today/20120712060955/http://news.google.com/newspapers?id=buMjAAAAIBAJ&sjid=PkUEAAAAIBAJ&pg=6385,1938397&dq=casual-corner&hl=en. dead. July 12, 2012. Hajewski. Doris. November 24, 2005. The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel. 25 July 2011.
  12. News: Small stores look to majors for traffic. Hagerty. Thomas J.. 1 August 1972. The Milwaukee Journal. 29 January 2011.
  13. News: FRESHING UP SOME SURPRISES ARE IN STORE AMONG THE CLASSICS ON THESE RACKS. https://archive.today/20120714134115/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/chicagotribune/access/37922116.html?dids=37922116:37922116&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Jan+10,+1999&author=Ellen+Rooney+Martin.+Special+to+the+Tribune.&pub=Chicago+Tribune&desc=FRESHING+UP+SOME+SURPRISES+ARE+IN+STORE+AMONG+THE+CLASSICS+ON+THESE+RACKS&pqatl=google. dead. July 14, 2012. Martin. Ellen Rooney. 10 January 1999. Chicago Tribune. 29 January 2011.