Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. In January 2000, Dayton-Hudson Corporation changed its name to Target Corporation and its ticker symbol to TGT; by then, between 75 percent and 80 percent of the corporation's total sales and earnings came from Target Stores, while the other four chains—Dayton's, Hudson's, Marshall Field's, and Mervyn's—were used to fuel the growth of the ...

  2. The merger resulted in Dayton Hudson Corporation, the 14th-largest retailer in the United States. Dayton Hudson stock was listed on the New York Stock Exchange. With the merger, the Dayton Foundation changed its name to the Dayton Hudson Foundation.

  3. People also ask

  4. May 23, 2018 · A merger of Dayton Department Store, Lipmans, and Diamond's occurred in 1968, and in 1969 the Dayton Hudson Corporation was formed when Dayton Corporation and J.L. Hudson Company merged. Dayton Hudson continued to acquire companies including Lechmere, a hardgoods retailer out of Boston, and J.E. Caldwell, a jewelry chain based in Philadelphia.

  5. 1967: Company changes its name to Dayton Corporation and makes its first public stock offering. 1969: Dayton merges with the Detroit-based J.L. Hudson Company department store chain, forming Dayton Hudson Corporation. 1978: Dayton Hudson acquires the California-based Mervyn's chain of moderate-priced department stores.

  6. 5 days ago · On May 1, 1962, Dayton Company opened its first Target store, designed as a discount version of Dayton’s department stores. In 1969 Dayton expanded its department store operations and merged with the J.L. Hudson Company to become the Dayton-Hudson Corporation.

  7. Aug 12, 2021 · In 2000, no longer under direct management of the Dayton family, but continuing these strong traditions, Dayton-Hudson was renamed Target Corporation after its primary business. In 2004, the company effectively sold off its own parentage, selling the large department store operations to the May Department Stores Company.

  8. May 9, 2018 · In the spring of 1902 the store was known as the Goodfellow Dry Goods store; in 1903 the corporate name was changed to Dayton Dry Goods Company, then seven years later simply Dayton Company, the forerunner of Dayton Hudson Corporation and, ultimately, Target Corporation.

  1. People also search for