Monday, Feb. 24, 1930

Marshall Field

Seventy-five years ago Marshall Field founded in Chicago the store that bears his name. Now, in Seattle, the $12,000,000-a-year Frederick A. Nelson store is owned by Marshall Field & Co. The new $25,000,000 Merchandise Mart building in Chicago is Marshall Field owned, as is Chicago's Davis Department Store. Marshall Field has retail branches around Chicago, a wholesale branch in Manhattan, 25 mills and many factories scattered throughout the country. Yet it is none of these things that has been Chicago's pride, but rather the claim to being the world's largest retail business under one roof--only a claim because Manhattan's R. H. Macy & Co. has at various times hinted it possesses the same distinction.

Because Marshall Field & Co. has always been a closed corporation, its retail business has largely been a matter of estimate, but gross sales (wholesale and retail) amounted last year to slightly more than $175,000,000. But last week Marshall Field & Co., following the lead of many another closed corporation, decided to let a portion of its stock pass to the public. Of 2,000,000 shares authorized, 1,400,000 are to be outstanding of which 540,000 were offered at $50 last week by Field, Glore & Co. and Lee, Higginson & Co. The remainder will be exchanged for present Marshall Field & Co. shares while 200,000 of the unissued will be reserved for sale to employes at a later date.

The total assets of the company are $134,595,922 against Macy's $51,177,545. Net profits for 1929, after deducting preferred dividend requirements, came to $7,201,000--slightly less than the average for the past five years and slightly less than Macy's $7,566,194.

Interesting as were these disclosures to Chicagoans, even more interesting was the connection of Marshall Field III, grandson of The Founder, to the deal. Born in 1893, Field III has been a soldier, newspaper reporter, bondsalesman, but aside from being a trustee of the estate, has had no hand in the management of the store. Nine years ago he took part in the formation of Marshall Field, Glore, Ward & Co., now Field, Glore & Co., potent Chicago banking house, with an office also in New York. Educated at Eton and Cambridge, he spends most of his time far from Chicago. A great love of horses made him join the cavalry during the War, and enabled him to become a director of the Saratoga Association, over whose track many of his horses have raced. At Lloyd's Neck, Huntington, L. I., he has a great estate, "Caumsett," as well as a house in Manhattan. There he lives with his wife, when she is not big-game chasing with expeditions sent out by the Field Museum of Chicago.

At the same time as the financing, changes were announced in the Marshall Field officers. The most important of these were the elevation of James Simpson from the presidency to the board chairmanship, the elevation of John McKinlay from the vice presidency to the presidency.

Curiously enough, both Mr. Simpson and Mr. McKinlay were born in Scotland in 1874, Mr. Simpson at Glasgow, Mr. McKinlay some 20 miles away, at Greenock. But Scot McKinlay did not meet Scot Simpson until, in 1891, the latter came to work as an office boy for Founder Field in the then small Chicago store, where the other had already been working for three years. Since 1917 Scot McKinlay has followed close on the heels of his brother Scotsman: he was made second vice president when Mr. Simpson was made first vice president; he was made first vice president when Mr. Simpson was made president (1923). Scot McKinlay, true to tradition, likes to play golf. He lives in the southwestern part of Chicago, keeps remarkably young-looking for a man who is no longer young in years, has a married son, a married daughter. Scot Simpson lives not south but north of Chicago, in the fashionable and rich suburb of Glencoe where he has an estate on which his favorite diversion, un-traditionally, is tennis. He is by far the largest individual stockholder in Marshall Field & Co.

This file is automatically generated by a robot program, so reader's discretion is required.