
Sunday, April 20, 2008



Cotswold Mall, Charlotte, North Carolina
Updated (5/6/08) with vintage aerial view
Cotswold Mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Cover of mailing from early days of the mall. (courtesy Pat Richardson)
Cotswold Mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Aerial view of shopping center, 1966. (courtesy Pat Richardson)
Cotswold Mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Interior mall view, date unknown. (courtesy Pat Richardson)
Cotswold Mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Interior mall view, date unknown. (courtesy Pat Richardson)


Cotswold Mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Moonlight Madness Sale advertisement, February, 28, 1975 (Pat Richardson)
Cotswold Mall wasn't Charlotte's first enclosed mall (that distinction goes to Charlottetown Mall), but it was the first that was truly in the suburbs. Anchored by Harris Teeter, Ivey's, Roses, and The Collins Company, Cotswold Mall opened in the 1960s and featured both interior and exterior entrances for its stores.
Various remodeling schemes and anchor changes would change Cotswold Mall from an enclosed mall to exclusively a open-air center with a neighborhood focus, but it still stands, fully occupied, at the corner of Randolph Road and Sharon Amity Road, not far from SouthPark.






Cotswold Mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Moonlight Madness Sale advertisement, February, 28, 1975 (Pat Richardson)
Cotswold Mall wasn't Charlotte's first enclosed mall (that distinction goes to Charlottetown Mall), but it was the first that was truly in the suburbs. Anchored by Harris Teeter, Ivey's, Roses, and The Collins Company, Cotswold Mall opened in the 1960s and featured both interior and exterior entrances for its stores.
Various remodeling schemes and anchor changes would change Cotswold Mall from an enclosed mall to exclusively a open-air center with a neighborhood focus, but it still stands, fully occupied, at the corner of Randolph Road and Sharon Amity Road, not far from SouthPark.
Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Before & After | Thalhimers / Hecht's; SouthPark, Chalortte, North Carolina
Updated with "real" Hecht's picture and additional text. (4/17/08)
Thalhimers (later Hecht's and Macy's), SouthPark mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Mall entrance, 1991. (courtesy Pat Richardson)
Hecht's (former Thalhimers, later Macy's), SouthPark mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Mall entrance with "photoshopped" Hecht's signage, 1992. (courtesy Pat Richardson)
Hecht's (former Thalhimers, later Macy's), SouthPark mall, Charlotte, North Carolina. Mall entrance, 1994. (scanned from SouthPark directory)
Two of these photos were taken approximately three years apart, and one of them is a placeholder created by SouthPark mall in the interim as a placeholder. Can you spot the fake? Several LiveMalls posters have.
In 1990, Thalhimers, the Richmond, Virginia-based unit of Carter Hawley Hale Stores, was purchased by the May Department Stores Company which operated the chain (which included the above location at SouthPark, opened in 1988) as a separate division until 1992, when it was folded into May's Hecht's division, which was based in Washington, D.C.
Previously on LiveMalls
Macy's (Thalhimers/Hecht's), SouthPark



Two of these photos were taken approximately three years apart, and one of them is a placeholder created by SouthPark mall in the interim as a placeholder. Can you spot the fake? Several LiveMalls posters have.
In 1990, Thalhimers, the Richmond, Virginia-based unit of Carter Hawley Hale Stores, was purchased by the May Department Stores Company which operated the chain (which included the above location at SouthPark, opened in 1988) as a separate division until 1992, when it was folded into May's Hecht's division, which was based in Washington, D.C.
Previously on LiveMalls
Macy's (Thalhimers/Hecht's), SouthPark
Thursday, April 10, 2008
The Collins Company; Charlotte, North Carolina



The Collins Company was a regional chain of specialty department stores.
Monday, April 07, 2008
Miller & Rhoads; Eastland Mall, Charlotte, North Carolina




Although modestly successful, Miller & Rhoads specialty stores began closing shortly after the chain's parent company, Garfinkel, Brooks Brothers, Miller & Rhoads, was acquired by Allied Stores in 1982. By 1986, Allied had exited the North Carolina market except for Raleigh, whose Miller & Rhoads store closed in 1990 when the chain went out of business.
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