A L O H A !
" The evening sings
in a voice of amber,
the dawn
is surely coming. "
Al Stewart
" Every generation laughs
at the old fashions,
but follows religiously
the new. "
Henry David Thoreau
" The love we have
in our youth
is superficial compared
to the love that
an old man has
for his old wife. "
Will Durant
><}}(°> ~
Sears came to Hawaii back in Territorial
" The evening sings
in a voice of amber,
the dawn
is surely coming. "
Al Stewart
" Every generation laughs
at the old fashions,
but follows religiously
the new. "
Henry David Thoreau
" The love we have
in our youth
is superficial compared
to the love that
an old man has
for his old wife. "
Will Durant
><}}(°> ~
(pre-statehood) days,
installing the islands' first escalator
(in the 1930's)
in the building I knew
as Honolulu Police Headquarters
where I obtained my
taxi driving license.
(late 1980's)
taxi driving license.
(late 1980's)
Sears had left that building
in 1959
in 1959
to move into the exciting
New Shopping Center
(Mall was not a concept yet)
whose opening coincided with
S T A T E H O O D!
It was a booming hopeful time
for Hawaii, for Honolulu,
and for "Hawaii's Center"
Ala Moana Shopping Center.
As in most other cities
people stopped shopping
Downtown (Fort St; King St)
and drove to the
exciting new big center.
Sears and Ala Moana flourished
together, creating jobs
and memories
for generations of
Island folks, and
our visitors.
Your childhood presents,
school clothes,
prom-wear, homegoods,
all from Sears.
And your Auntie or Uncle
probably worked there.
Ala Moana
'World's Largest Open Air Center'
has always been great
for people watching,
for people watching,
and has grown in phases.
But lately locals are grumbling
that the old standards,
Like Slipper House (sandals)
that opened AMSC have
disappeared one by one.
Now there is new development.
Sears has left AMSC!
(Stores remain in two other
Oahu locations FAR from town)
No more quick appliance parts,
car brakes, or car battery installed,
no eyeglass shop,
no watch repair
(world class, alas!).
no watch repair
(world class, alas!).
We're all nostalgic for Sears.
That wing of the mall will become
a Bloomingdales
and lots of other
"Cool New Shops"
But right now
that Mall Wing
feels haunted.
"Sad, yeah?" local faces
reaching "The Wall"
seem to express.
Oh well.
Things that seemed
permanent when we were kids
are revealed to be changing,
passing.
People too.
Us too.
There are so many choices
on Oahu today!
But something laments
the passing of familiar things.
"Aloha, Sears;
Now we going drive
Windward or Pearl City
for buy tools!"
Thanks for Walking the Mall
With Us Today!
Warmly, cloudia
Thanks for Walking the Mall
With Us Today!
Warmly, cloudia
I enjoyed your quotes, pictures, and reminiscencs this morning. Happy day! Aloha!
ReplyDeleteah i rather like hte maturity of love....it is different than that of our youth for sure...but i think better....
ReplyDeletealoha from va
Oh Cloudia, how sad to see an era passing! I am one of those who grew up with Sears anchoring Ala Moana (and Liberty House the other end...and now that's just generic Macy's, sigh). Thank you for posting this today.
ReplyDeleteWe got a lot of our clothes from J. C. Penny's when I was a kid. But also some from Sears.
ReplyDeleteI love the comment about love in old age Cloudia - so true.
ReplyDeleteSears has changed a lot over the decades
ReplyDeleteIt is sad, Bloomingdales didn't last at our "state of the art in shopping" Mall of America. The store 21 Forever took over their old spot, and more! Silly me, I only shop the stores when I need/must buy something! Ha! Ha! But as a child I also grew up on Sears, and actually got my first driver's license by going to Sear's Driving school in St. Louis, Mo! Seriously.
ReplyDeletesears represents a simpler, more secure time, for sure. and it has all but disappeared.
ReplyDelete" Every generation laughs
ReplyDeleteat the old fashions,
but follows religiously
the new. "
Henry David Thoreau
That is so true!
Thanks Each :-)
ReplyDeleteLondon- Ah Liberty House! Hawaii's own department store!
Beautiful and elegiac. . . 'All that (seems) solid melts into air.'
ReplyDeleteAnd: 'In Search of Lost Time.'
I also miss the lunch counters in stores, they were fun and some lasted well in the 1980s.
I sure hope my husband loves hsi old wife.
ReplyDeleteI think Sears is going out of business in many places. Ours is shrinking. Know what you mean about change. Something we just have to accept.
So fine to see both of YOU!
ReplyDeleteThanks
Winds of change ... always seems to be the nature of things.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing CLoudia :)
Time to move on
ReplyDeleteNamaste /\ from Mumbai
ALoha!!
So true about fashion :-)
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed that trip down memory lane so much Cloudia..you are so right, favourite shops disappear and new ones emerge..me I'm not a big shopper so I tend to stick to the same old spots..but I do like a nice big department store :)
ReplyDeleteBummer. I find it sacreligious that Sears sells other brands of appliances these days, along with Kenmore. They even had a good assortment of aloha shirts!
ReplyDeleteBut an old hamburger drive-in called Charcoal Oven amazingly still exists from pre-1960s, in my home town and in spite of the chains! DrumMajor