News

What: This is no ordinary century-old colonial home: It was built in 1923 from a kit ordered through a Sears, Roebuck & Co. catalog. Where: The two-story is at 424 19th St. NW in Canton's historic ...
A commercial landmark on Tucson’s eastside is making a comeback—but in a different form. The Sears store at Park Place, closed since 2018, is evolving to something new.
The catalogs of Sears, Roebuck, and Co., and Montgomery Ward were icons of Americana, beloved and eagerly anticipated. More than just a collection of necessities and Christmas wishes, the items within ...
Sears offers car insurance for the first time, borrowing the name of a set of tires the company sold in its catalog. Sears retained complete ownership of the Allstate brand until 1993, when it ...
An estimated 75,000 to 100,000 Sears homes were built between 1908 and 1942, but high shipping costs meant few were built on the West Coast.
Today, AD is welcomed by Jennifer Garner to tour her farm-style home in Los Angeles. When designing Garner’s home, there was no Pinterest board or pictures from a magazine; it was simply an in ...
The man behind the castle was Albert Loeb, acting president of Sears, Roebuck and Company. He had an affinity for the architecture of Renaissance castles and the stone farms of Normandy, France. The ...
The century-old building in Regina's Warehouse District area, which dates back to 1918, has recently been deemed not up to safety codes by Regina Fire and Protective Services.
Many people are familiar with the homes that were shown in old Sears/Roebuck catalogs and shipped in pieces, but as far as I know, none of these homes exist in Santa Barbara. We do, however, have more ...
We started racing in Wisconsin at the county fairs with the Schroeders, and the name Gold Star Farm came to be from Tom’s job [because he wore a gold star].” Not long thereafter, Marianne and Tom ...
The old Sears building next to the mall is once again for sale. Plans for a new food hall concept in College Station have changed, KBTX has confirmed. (KBTX) By Rusty Surette.