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General Robert Wood
Inducted 1996
Posthumous
General Robert E Wood will always be remembered as the builder of
Sears retail store system, as a merchant whose career was marked by
innovation, as a businessman who led his firm to merchandising
greatness, and as a man of statesmanlike character.
But his reputation as a builder and a leader was well established
before he ever joined Sears. He began his career in the United
States Army. At age 17 he won a competitive appointment to West
Point and graduated 13th in his class in 1900. In 1915 he retired
from the Army as a Major, but when World War One began he
volunteered once more. He went to France with the famous 42nd
Rainbow Division under the command of General Douglas MacArthur. In
1918 he was recalled to Washington, DC and promoted to Brigadier
General at age 39, and put in charge of the Army’s new plan to
centralize all buying and distribution for the four million man
force.
At war’s end, General Wood joined Montgomery Ward as a vice
president with an idea. He saw that the automobile was changing the
face of the nation and people were moving from farms to cities. He
correctly predicted that these changes would inevitably mean a
change in the way mail order companies did business. His plan was to
build retail stores long the new highways and in the path of the
shifting population.
But he was unable to sell his idea to Montgomery Ward’s so he left
and moved to Sears. In 1925 he opened the first Sears retail store
and it was a success from the beginning. In 1928 he was elected
President of Sears and immediately invested 35 million dollars to
open 300 more stores.
In 1930 he startled the company’s board of directors with a proposal
to sell automobile insurance by mail. On April 17, 1931, Allstate
Insurance Company was ready to write its first policy.
General Robert E. Wood died in 1969 and in its obituary, the New
York Times recalled one of his comments which says as much about the
man as anything.
“Money and power are desirable if they can be obtained without the
sacrifice of principle. The greatest success comes not from money,
power or fame, but from a happy marriage, a happy family and a happy
home.”
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