Online since 1997
Home » Leisure Venues » Department Stores » Gilmore's
Gilmore's
Lake Street & Oak Park Avenue, Oak Park
Founded 1917, closed 1976

In the years prior to the opening of branch stores by leading Chicago retailers, the top department store in Oak Park was Gilmore's.

Masonic Block Building, March 2004
Masonic Block Building (formerly Gilmore's), March 2004
The store was founded in 1917 by William Gilmore and was initially known as the Avenue Dry Goods store. Gilmore changed the name of the store to William Y. Gilmore and Sons when his two sons graduated college and joined the business. During its early years, the store occupied the northern part of the Masonic Block building, a large Prairie School-style commercial structure built in 1908 on the southeast corner of Lake Street and Oak Park Avenue. Over the years, the store expanded to occupy the entire building, not only due to the rapid growth of Oak Park and surrounding communities during the 1940s and 1950s, but also in an effort to withstand increased competition from rival department stores such as Marshall Field's and The Fair, both of which opened branch stores in Oak Park in 1929.

Gilmore's closed in 1976. The Masonic Block building, in which the family-owned department store operated for nearly sixty years, was restored to its original appearance in 1984.




Suggested Reading
· David M. Sokol, Oak Park, Illinois: Continuity and Change, Images of America Series (Arcadia, 2000)


Page authored: 24 November 2000


Site Menu
Home
Introduction
Bright-Light Districts
Leisure Venues
Notable Events
Research Links
Bookstore
Table of Contents
About this Site
Copyrights/Citations
Newest Entries
Century of Progress
Lord's
The Hub
Lakeside Theater
Uptown Hotels
"Voice of the Movie Fan"

Updated Entries
Pantheon Theater
The Fair
Mandel Brothers

New Books

· Davarian L. Baldwin, Chicago's New Negroes: Modernity, the Great Migration, and Black Urban Life (Univ. of North Carolina Press, 2007)

· Georg Leidenberger, Chicago's Progressive Alliance: Labor And the Bid for Public Streetcars (Northern Illinois Univ. Press, 2006)

· Jeffery S. Adler, First in Violence, Deepest in Dirt: Homicide in Chicago, 1875-1920 (Harvard Univ. Press, 2006)

· Suellen Hoy, Good Hearts: Catholic Sisters in Chicago's Past (Univ. of Illinois Press, 2006)

· Ann Durkin Keating, Chicagoland: City and Suburbs in the Railroad Age (Univ. of Chicago Press, 2005)

· Timothy B. Spears, Chicago Dreaming: Midwesterners and the City, 1871-1919 (Univ. of Chicago Press, 2005)

· James R. Grossman, ed., The Encyclopedia of Chicago (Univ. of Chicago Press, 2004)

Search Now: