OLDEST US RETAILER LORD & TAYLOR FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY
- By The Financial District

- Aug 5, 2020
- 1 min read
Lord & Taylor, America’s oldest retailer, is seeking bankruptcy protection, as is the owner of Men’s Wearhouse and Jos. A. Bank, lengthening the list of major retail chains that have faltered in the pandemic, the Associated Press (AP) reported on August 4, 2020.

Household names, many longtime anchors in malls nationwide, were already struggling to keep up with a radical reformation in what people buy, and where they buy it. Much of that activity has moved online. Thousands of store closures forced by the arrival of COVID-19 have proved too much.
Lord & Taylor, which began as a Manhattan dry goods store in 1824, was sold to the French rental clothing company Le Tote Inc. last year. Both filed for bankruptcy protection, separately, in the Eastern Court of Virginia on Sunday. Lord & Taylor says it’s looking for a buyer. The company last year sold its 11-story flagship building on New York’s Fifth Avenue which it’s owned for more than a century.
Tailored Brands, which owns Men’s Wearhouse and Jos. A. Bank stores, was struggling even before shelter-in-place orders smothered any demand for suits or ties. It wasn’t alone. Last month, Brooks Brothers, the 200-year-old company that dressed nearly every US president, filed for bankruptcy protection. Its rival, Barneys New York, is being dismantled after filing for bankruptcy last year. Tailored Brands filed for Chapter 11 protection Sunday in the Southern District of Texas.
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