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Years Ago, You Could Order a House in the Mail

Nostalgia for Sears catalog mail-order homes as the last Sears department store leaves Illinois, the state where it all began

By Jennifer GeerPublished 2 years ago 3 min read
Top Story - December 2021
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Image by: Sears, Roebuck & Co. (Public Domain) via Wikimedia Commons

Sears, the former retail giant that got its start in Chicago, Illinois, recently vacated its last department store in the state.

Sears, Roebuck and Co. was founded in Chicago as a mail-order catalog in 1893 and eventually became the largest retailer in the nation.

The store grew to sell almost anything and everything you could think of, including clothing, watches, jewelry, washing machines, toasters, exercise equipment, and toys.

If you live in America and you’re around a certain age, you surely must remember the thrill of that beautiful and thick Sears Toy Catalog showing up in your house, where you happily circled your wishes at Christmas time.

1966 Sears Christmas Catalog. Image by: Mike Mozart (CC BY 2.0) via Flickr.com

But the former retail giant has fallen a long way from its former heyday. In 2018, Sears Holdings, also the owner of Kmart, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

And now, the very last Sears store has closed in Illinois. Sears held one of the anchor stores when the Woodfield Mall in the Chicago suburb of Schaumburg first opened 50 years ago. But today, it’s closed, with no Sears department stores left in the state.

Sears sold ready-to-assemble home kits

For a little over 30 years, from 1908 to 1940, Sears even offered ready-to-assemble kit homes from its catalog.

Sears Home Catalog. Image by: Sears, Roebuck and Company (Public Domain) via Wikimedia Commons

For only $5,000 or less, if you had a plot of land and some DIY skills, you could have your own cozy home.

The kits were an affordable option that was popular among immigrants and minority workers who could get a mortgage from Sears without having to put down their ethnicity, race, or gender in the application.

The buyer would choose a model and have everything they needed to be shipped to them to assemble their home, including windows and flooring.

These were not shabby kits. These do-it-yourself houses turned out to be sturdy, long-lasting homes, many of which are still standing in the Chicago area today and sell for hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Image by: Sears. Roebuck and Co (Public Domain) via Wikimedia Commons

The houses have stood the test of time. You can find many of them around neighborhoods in the Chicago suburbs such as Downers Grove, Geneva, and Lombard.

These are not the tiny prefab houses you can buy today, but small to mid-sized homes big enough for a family. There were 447 different models to choose from, giving neighborhoods of the past much more character than the suburban sea of sameness we have these days.

Image by: Sears Homes: http://searsarchives.com/homes/index.htm (Public Domain) via Wikimedia Commons

How can you recognize a Sears home?

Image by: Nyttend (Public Domain) via Wikimedia Commons

If you’re interested in learning more about Sears homes, you could start with this blog. If you live in an older home in the Midwest, it’s possible you’re living in a Sears home. Here are nine ways to tell if a house is a Sears home.

Or if you’re in the Chicago area and you’d like to see the homes in person, the suburb of Downers Grove has published a driving/walking tour map where you can view the 21 Sears homes that have been identified in the village.

It was a simpler time when you could order a well-built, long-lasting house filled with character from a mail-order catalog. If only we could bring back the Sears homes today.

Are 3D printed houses the 'Sears Homes' of today?

Habitat for Humanity, a global nonprofit organization that helps families by building affordable homes has announced its first-ever 3D printed house in the U.S.

It's a three-bedroom house with two full baths in the subdivision of Williamsburg, Virginia.

According to the news release, "the construction crew printed the 1,200 square foot home in 12 hours — reducing the standard construction schedule by at least four weeks."

What's more, the homeowners get their own 3D printer installed in the kitchen allowing them to print household items such as light switches and doorknobs.

Perhaps 3D printed houses, like Sears homes of the past, can help families by providing high quality and affordable places to live.

***

Note: a previous version of this story was originally published on Medium.

Historical
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About the Creator

Jennifer Geer

Writing my life away. Runner/mama/wife/eternal optimist/coffee enthusiast. Masters degree in Psychology.

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