Do you miss shopping at Neusteter's?
You may remember the last Neusteter's store closing in 1986, but do you know how the company (which served the Denver area for nearly 75 years) began?
A transcript of a 1949 episode of the radio program Enterprise Unlimited (available in the Western History and Genealogy Department) provided us with details of the store's early days.
Max David Neusteter was the oldest son in a family of five boys and three girls. By age 13, Max was selling newspapers to help support his family. When the Neusteter family moved from Cincinnati to St. Louis in 1892, Max took a job at the Stix, Baer & Fuller Department Store as a stock boy. Over the course of six years, he worked his way up to becoming the assistant coat and suit buyer.
While working as the general manager of women's departments for Stix, Baer & Fuller, Max opened his own women's specialty store in St. Louis. Max's brother, Meyer, assisted him with the store's operations, and soon they established a second store in Lincoln, Nebraska.
Around this time, Max's health began to decline, and he was advised to move to Colorado to regain his vigor. Max stayed in Estes Park for two years to convalesce. While on a visit to Denver in 1911, Max caught wind of a clothing store set to close on 16th Street called Phillipsborn & Co. The retiring owners sold the store to Max in July 1911.
In the span of two years, the original 3,000-foot floor space had to be increased to 9,000 feet. Max and Meyer closed their Lincoln and St. Louis stores in 1914 to focus on the Denver business that was rapidly expanding. The basic principle behind the brothers' business was that good fashion was good fashion, be it a high-priced gown or a moderately priced dress. This variety of price points at Neusteter's helped to build a wide customer base for the store.
The Neusteter Co. opened a "new and enlarged establishment" at 720 16th Street on September 6, 1924.
Max Neusteter died in 1925 at the age of 51. Well-known in the community for his retail business as well as his dedication to charities such as the Jewish Consumptive Relief Society and the Denver Sheltering Home for Jewish Children, a local newspaper article reported that hundreds of friends and employees paid tribute to Mr. Neusteter at his funeral. The Neusteter store closed for the day in his honor.
The Neusteter Company continued to be family-owned and operated after Max's death. The Cherry Creek Neusteter's, the last of the Neusteter's stores, closed its doors on May 26, 1986.
Do you miss other Denver stores of old? Check out the Western History and Genealogy department's blogs about Fashion Bar and Daniels & Fisher!
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Comments
I went to Neusteters downtown
I went to Neusteters downtown and in Cherry Creek as a child...lots of memories. It was a chi chi place to go and we had to dress nice. My mother shopped there in the 50s and 60s and my grandparents shopped there in the 20s and 30s.
A family tradition! Thanks
A family tradition! Thanks for commenting!
I asked my mom how she could
I asked my mom how she could afford all the clothes for me while I attended Clarke School for the Deaf in Northampton, Massachusetts, and she said she got 50% off on everything. I know why, Myron’s grandson is also deaf, so the Neusteter family has a heart for deaf/hard of hearing children. Thank you.
What a wonderful story of
What a wonderful story of kindness! Thank you for sharing, Mary Pat.
They didn't close in May of
They didn't close in May of 1986, that is when Rothchilds came in and began the liquidation of Neusteters. Neusteters remained opened for 90 days after May 26, 1986. I know I was the last employee to walk out of Neusteters.
Thanks for your comment,
Thanks for your comment, Elizabeth. I will be updating the article. I reviewed the May 29, 1986, Rocky Mountain article entitled "Neusteters Closes Creek Store, Its Last" and the article mentions the following:
I worked at Neusteters from
I worked at Neusteters from July 1974 to June of 1977. I managed the “Bargain Bazaar” in the basement of the Colorado Springs store. I eventually moved on as gm of several departments. I loved working there. My husband was military but was accepted to medical school in NY so we moved. I’ve always wondered where the “kids” Bob and Dave (hope I got the names right) ended up.
Thanks for sharing your
Thanks for sharing your Neusteters story, Meg!
I’m retired from the AF. In
I’m retired from the AF. In 1976, I was stationed at Lowry. I bought the prettiest dresses for my then 6 year old daughter. Loved your children’s department. I did love shopping for myself, too. Beautiful stores.
My mother drew the ladies
My mother drew the ladies fashion advertisement for the Denver Post in the 1950’s
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