Even if you didn't work for the rail road
this story has an interest for all!
Read to the end!
Train Station Watches Were Just the
Beginning
If you were in the market for a watch in1880,
would you know where to get one? You would go to a store, right? Well, of
course you could do that, but if you wanted one that was cheaper and a bit
better than most of the store watches, you went to the train station! Sound a
bit funny? Well, for about 500 towns across the northern United States, that's
where the best watches were found.
Why were the best watches found at the train
station? The railroad company wasn't selling the watches, not at all. The telegraph
operator was. Most of the time the telegraph operator was located in the
railroad station because the telegraph lines followed the railroad tracks from
town to town. It was usually the shortest distance and the right-of-ways had
already been secured for the rail line.
Most of the station agents were also skilled
telegraph operators and that was the primary way that they communicated with
the railroad. They would know when trains left the previous station and when
they were due at their next station. And it was the telegraph operator who had
the watches. As a matter of fact they sold more of them than almost all the
stores combined for a period of about 9 years.
This was all arranged by "Richard",
who was a telegraph operator himself. He was on duty in the North Redwood,
Minnesota train station one day when a load of watches arrived from the east.
It was a huge crate of pocket watches. No one ever came to claim them.
So Richard sent a telegram to the manufacturer
and asked them what they wanted to do with the watches. The manufacturer didn't
want to pay the freight back, so they wired Richard to see if he could sell
them. So Richard did. He sent a wire to every agent in the system asking them
if they wanted a cheap, but good, pocket watch. He sold the entire case in less
than two days and at a handsome profit.
That started it all. He ordered more watches
from the watch company and encouraged the telegraph operators to set up a
display case in the station offering high quality watches for a cheap price to
all the travelers. It worked! It didn't take long for the word to spread and,
before long, people other than travelers came to the train station to buy
watches.
Richard became so busy that he had to hire a
professional watch maker to help him with the orders. That was Alvah. And the
rest is history as they say.
The business took off and soon expanded to
many other lines of dry goods.
Richard and Alvah left the train station and
moved their company to Chicago -- and it's still there.
IT'S A LITTLE KNOWN FACT
that for a while in the1880's, the biggest watch retailer in the country
was at the train station. It all started with a telegraph operator: Richard
Sears and his partner Alvah Roebuck! Sears -
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