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  1. Dayton Corporation (1962-1969) Dayton-Hudson Corporation (1969-2000) Target Corporation (2000 - Present) Addeddate 2023-05-02 17:02:19 Identifier 01-target-archive ...

  2. Parent company renamed Dayton Corporation. In 1968, the modern Target bullseye logo is introduced. By 1969 there are 9 Target stores. ‍ 1969 — 14th Largest Retailer in the US. Dayton Company merges with J.L. Hudson Company of Detroit. The combined company is called the Dayton-Hudson Corporation. It is the 14th largest US retailer. ‍ 1970 ...

  3. businessmodelanalyst.com › who-owns-targetWho Owns Target?

    Jul 24, 2023 · In 1969, the Dayton Company merged with the J.L. Hudson Company, another regional department store chain, to form the Dayton-Hudson Corporation. Following this merger, the individual Target store locations continued to operate under the Dayton-Hudson Corporation. In 2000, the Dayton-Hudson Corporation changed its name to Target Corporation.

  4. Under the leadership of Hodder, Target established a distribution center in 1969 in Fridley, Minnesota. As it turned out, this was the first of many to come. Additionally, in 1969, The Dayton Corporation merged with the J.L. Hudson Company to form the Dayton-Hudson Corporation, making way for further growth.

  5. Feb 6, 2008 · 1969: Dayton's acquires J.L. Hudson Co., a Detroit-based retailer founded in 1881. 1990: Dayton Hudson Corp. acquires Chicago-based department store retailer Marshall Field's and its 24 stores for ...

  6. Jan 13, 2000 · "Target Corp. is a more appropriate name for the company and is also a more widely recognized brand name. While the Dayton Hudson name served the company well since we adopted it in 1969, today ...

  7. Jul 6, 2013 · By 2000, Dayton-Hudson was renamed the Target Corp., which in 2004 sold Marshall Fields, then rebranded as Macy’s. Dayton left the company in 1974 and formed a venture capital firm.