Commerce and Industry

Montgomery Ward’s First Catalog

Aug 17 2022

August 18 is National Mail Order Catalog Day. This year, the Chicago History Museum is celebrating the 150th anniversary of the company responsible for that designation: Montgomery Ward.

Portrait of Aaron Montgomery Ward.
Portrait of Aaron Montgomery Ward. CHM, ICHi-062410

The well-known company was founded by Aaron Montgomery Ward in 1872, with a mission to make its products more available to the public, especially consumers in rural and farming communities. Ward issued its first mail order catalog on August 18, 1872. It was printed on a single sheet of paper, offering 163 distinct items. What made Ward’s catalog the first of its type was its accessibility. It was the first extensive mail order catalog for the masses. Comparatively, other mail order services up to this point were either industry/trade specific or for an elite customer base.

Front cover of the Montgomery Ward & Company catalog and buyers guide No. 55, Spring and Summer 1894
Front cover of the Montgomery Ward & Company catalog and buyers guide No. 55, Spring and Summer 1894, Chicago. CHM, ICHi-092917

Ward’s catalog would quickly prove to be a success, with the catalog growing to 32 pages by 1874 and to 152, with 3,000 items, in 1876. Its  offerings were popular with Americans at every economic level and were backed by the company slogan, “satisfaction guaranteed or your money back,” an industry first. By the beginning of the 20th century, Ward’s catalog had more than 3 million subscribers to its mailing list. Customers were able to order everything on the catalog from clothing and farming equipment to entire homes.

Advertisement broadside of Montgomery Ward & Co. located at Michigan Avenue. Madison and Washinton Streets. Chicago.
Advertisement broadside of Montgomery Ward & Co. located at Michigan Avenue and Madison and Washington Streets, 1899, Chicago. CHM, ICHi-001622

To satisfy the ever-growing needs of the business operation, Ward built an enormous campus on the north branch of the Chicago River at 618 W. Chicago Avenue comprising an eight-story building, a storefront, and executive offices. Construction on the “mail order house” complex began in 1907, with an estimated cost of $2.5 million (approximately $75 million today). Upon its completion, it was declared one of the largest man-made structures in the world, with its miles of chutes, conveyor paths, and hallways. The building even had a dedicated building courier system, which relied on roller-skating routes across the building for delivering interdepartmental packages and communications. The building still stands today and is a city landmark that has been redeveloped into a mixed-use complex with residences, eateries, and corporate offices for several companies.

Exterior view of the Montgomery Ward Complex building, located along the North Branch of the Chicago River at 618 West Chicago Avenue, Near North Side, Chicago, Illinois, circa 1960s.
Exterior view of the Montgomery Ward complex, located at 618 W. Chicago Avenue, Chicago, c. 1960. CHM, ICHi-173785

Beyond their success in the mail order industry, as many Chicagoans surely remember, Ward expanded into the retail sector in 1926 with the opening of its flagship store in Chicago, located on S. Michigan Avenue. By the start of the 1930s, Ward operated more than 500 stores in the United States, and it was the largest retailer in the country. Most Americans are familiar with perhaps the most notable creation to come from Montgomery Ward in the 1939 holiday season, with company copywriter Robert May’s creation of a certain red-nosed reindeer named Rudolph.


Cover of an original
Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer written for Montgomery Ward & Co. by Robert L. May and illustrated by Denver Gillen, 1939. CHM, ICHi-068483

In the latter half of the 20th century, Ward went through several ownership changes that had a drastic impact on company operations. It issued its final mail-order catalog in 1985, and just over a decade later in 1997 it would file for bankruptcy, closing all its remaining brick-and-mortar stores shortly thereafter. Today, the company remains active primarily in e-commerce, with its rights having been acquired by a holding company.

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Larry K BromagemAugust 30, 2024 at 04:01 pmMy father, a farmer, purchased a Montgomery Ward rubber-tired ‘running gear’ in 1936 that he made into a farm wagon. On it he hauled ear corn, oats and hay in from the fields to the barn. I still have the wagon and use it to haul baled hay and straw. We often pull it with my father’s original John Deere tractor that he purchased locally in 1937. I take my children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren for hayrides on it. The heavy iron hub caps on the wagon state Wards Lo-Load. It was much lower to the ground than the wood-spoke high wheel wagons the neighbors had. In just a few years they all had purchased rubber-tired wagons. They were so much easier to load hay with pitchforks from the windrow on the ground.
AndreaAugust 30, 2024 at 04:01 pmAS A KID GROWING UP IN TH 1950’s, GETTING THE MONTGOMERY WARD CATALOGUE WAS A BIG DEAL — AND ESPECIALLY THE CHRISTMAS CATALOGUE EVEN DECADES LATER. THERE WAS A BIG MONTGOMERY WARD STORE IN AKBANT NY, WHICH I VISITED ONCE AS A CHILD, AND THAT WAS ALSO A THRILL.
RebeccaAugust 30, 2024 at 04:02 pmI remember getting the catalogs. Always looked forward to it!
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