Colonel Fletcher Building
The Colonel Fletcher Building at 602–632 Broadway, in Downtown San Diego was the site of some of the retail history of San Diego. The building is at the northeast corner of 6th and Broadway; Broadway was originally named D Street.
It was built by "Colonel" Ed Fletcher around 1906–1908[1] along with Frank Salmans, and designed by architect Edward Quayle of the Quayle Brothers (who would later do the 1935 renovation of the Walker Scott Building). It was remodeled around 2005 by Champion Development Group.[2]
Originally it was a two-story building housing the Barnett-Stine Co. department store.[3] Two more stories were added.
Barnett-Stine went out of business in 1911 and Holzwasser's department store, opened in the building.[4] In 1919, Holzwasser's moved to a new, larger building, now known as the Walker Scott Building. (Holzwasser's would go out of business in 1933 and the first Walker Scott store would open there.)
The Owl Drug Company was then located in the building.[1]
The building was renovated in 2008.
References
- ^ a b "History", Colonel Fletcher Building website, accessed August 5, 2020
- ^ CurtCo/SDM LLC (October 2005). San Diego Magazine. CurtCo/SDM LLC. p. 142. ISSN 0036-4045. Retrieved 2014-09-14.
- ^ Photo of Barnett-Stine building, circa 1910. University of California, San Diego
- ^ Advertisement for Holzwasser's Department Store, San Diego Union, May 30, 1911
- v
- t
- e
with origins in
Central Los Angeles |
|
---|---|
L.A. neighborhoods |
|
Long Beach |
|
Pasadena | |
Rest of L.A. Co. |
|
Bakersfield | |
Inland Empire |
|
Orange Co. |
|
San Diego–Tijuana |
|
Elsewhere |
- Bond's
- Brooks Clothing
- C. H. Baker shoes
- C&R Clothiers
- Hartfield's
- Judy's
- Leed's shoes
- Mandel's (shoes)
- Miller's Outpost/Anchor Blue
- Victor Clothing
- Weatherby-Kayser shoes
- Zachary All
membership stores
- The Akron
- Curacao
- Fedco
- Fedmart
- Gemco
- Pic 'N' Save
- Unimart
- White Front
- Zody's
- Disco Drug and Discount Centers
- Sav-on
- Schwab's Pharmacy
- Thrifty
home furnishings
- Alpha Beta
- Boys Markets
- Chaffee
- Food Giant
- Giant
- Haas, Baruch & Co./Hellman, Haas & Co.
- Hughes Markets
- Market Basket
- Pantry Food Stores
- Pavilions
- Ralphs
- Shopping Bag
- Stater Bros.
- Smart & Final
- Thriftimart
- Tianguis
- Vons
tainment, appliances
- Adray's
- Cal Stereo
- Federated Group
- Golden Bear Home and Sport Centers
- Ken Crane's
- Leo's Stereo
- Pacific Stereo
- Rogersound Labs
- University Stereo
- Builders Emporium
- National Lumber
- Ole's Home Centers
- Licorice Pizza
- Music Plus
- Peaches Records and Tapes
- The Wherehouse
- Wallichs Music City
- Los Angeles:
- Plaza
- 1880s-90s CBD
- Broadway (CBD)
- Broadway & 87th, South L.A.*
- Seventh St.
- Flower St.
- Hollywood Blvd.
- Lankershim, North Hollywood
- Miracle Mile, Wilshire Blvd.
- Westwood Village (near UCLA)
- Other cities:
- Beverly Hills: Rodeo Drive
- Burbank: Golden Mall
- Huntington Park: Pacific Blvd.
- Long Beach: Pine St.
- Palm Springs: La Plaza/Palm Canyon Dr. - See also History of retail in Palm Springs
- Pasadena: Lake Ave.
- Pasadena: Old Pasadena
- Santa Ana: 4th St.
- Santa Monica: Main St. - 3rd St. Promenade
shopping center
"firsts"
- Oldest origins of a major L.A. chain: Harris & Frank (1876) - 1st dept. store on Broadway: A. Fusenot Co./Ville de Paris - 1st dept. store on 7th off Broadway: J. W. Robinson's (1915) - 1st planned shopping district: Westwood Village (1929) - 1st suburban dept. store branch: B. H. Dyas/Broadway Hollywood (1927) - 1st center with multiple supermarkets: Broadway & 87th Street shopping center (1936) - 1st center with department store anchor: Broadway-Crenshaw Center (1947) - 1st enclosed mall: Lakewood Center (1951) - 1st mall in Orange County: Anaheim Plaza (1955) - 1st center with 4 dept. stores: Panorama City Shopping Center (1964)
32°42′57″N 117°9′32″W / 32.71583°N 117.15889°W / 32.71583; -117.15889