Bailey Banks & Biddle

Bailey Banks & Biddle was a retailer of jewelry formed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, in 1832.

A print of the presidential seal c.1915, thought to be the one obtained by Woodrow Wilson from Bailey Banks & Biddle

History

Bailey & Kitchen, as it was originally known, was founded at 136 Chestnut Street, Philadelphia, on September 20, 1832, by Joseph Trowbridge Bailey (1806-1854) and Andrew B. Kitchen (died 1850). The partnership was dissolved in November 1846. It was reformed with new partners as Bailey & Co. in 1841, and on March 1, 1878, again re-established as Bailey Banks & Biddle.[1][2][3] From about 1852–1862, the company made its own silver; they were principally supplied by Taylor and Lawrie before 1852, and from about 1862-1870, by George B. Sharp.[4] After 1870, they resold silver from a variety of manufacturers.

At the turn of the century, Bailey Banks & Biddle was commissioned by the U.S. government to update the Great Seal of the United States; its design today remains the official version of the seal. The company also designed and made many of the military medals that are still used today, including the Congressional Medal of Honor, the Silver Star, the Bronze Star and the first 40,000 Purple Hearts awarded, as well as class rings for West Point and Annapolis.[1]

Potomac Mills outlet, one of the company's nine retail stores in 2012

In 1962, Bailey Banks & Biddle became a part of the Zale Corporation. Zale opened many Bailey Banks & Biddle stores in numerous cities. In 2007, Zale Corporation sold the 65-store jewelry chain to Finlay Enterprises.[5] Finlay Enterprises filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in August 2009,[6] and Bailey Banks & Biddle was relaunched as a private company by the current owners in the spring of 2010. The current owners bought the name and 8 original locations. They do not honor any items purchased prior to their ownership as all warranties were voided with the dissolution of Finlay Enterprises.[6] The company utilizing the name Bailey Banks & Biddle declared bankruptcy in November 2019. At the time the company was reduced to one store located in Houston, Texas.[7]

Bailey Building

A building which once contained the Bailey Banks & Biddle flagship store and at which the company was flagship occupant exists as at 1218 Chestnut Street near Philadelphia City Hall. It is now a multi tenant corporate office building owned by the Thylan Associates. It backs onto the adjoining former factory building on Sansom Street.

Biddle Building

The Bailey & Co. factory building stands at 1217 Sansom St., in Center City, Philadelphia. As of 2019, it has been renovated as the Biddle Building, an office building with a variety of creative and technical industry tenants.[8][9]

gollark: Why did ABR crash? Worrying.
gollark: Oh, the bridge, right.
gollark: I guess Google have their magic encoder ASICs and don't care as much as mere mortals.
gollark: Slightly better compression ratios but horrible encoding time.
gollark: I have a few things in the osmarksgiantvideofolder™ in AV1 (YouTube sometimes serves it), which is quite cool.

References

  1. "Bailey, Banks & Biddle records" (June 7, 2013). Prepared for the Hagley Museum and Library: Manuscripts and Archives Department, Wilmington, Delaware.
  2. American Silver Marks - Sterling and Coin Silver, Online Encyclopedia of Silver Marks, Hallmarks, and Makers' Marks.
  3. Silversmiths - B, Sterling Flatware Fashions.
  4. "George Sharp and Bailey & Co.", Spencer Marks, Ltd.
  5. "Finlay Sales Up 13%, Same Store Sales Down". JCK Online. November 10, 2008. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
  6. Nadgir, Santosh (August 6, 2009). "Finlay files for bankruptcy, to sell assets". Reuters. Retrieved June 16, 2011.
  7. JCK Online: November 2019: Bailey Banks & Biddle files bankruptcy
  8. "Digital firms lead office revival in Midtown Village". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved May 13, 2015.
  9. Biddle Building
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