
JCPenney Store / Home
The year was 1902 and a 27 year old man arrived by train in Kemmerer, Wyoming
to start a new business. He couldn't afford the train fare twice, so he made a
committment in dollars before seeing the town. A scattered mining community,
Kemmerer had about one thousand residents, a company store that operated on
credit and 21 saloons where a good deal of spare cash was spent.
Two revolutionary ideas - cash only and do unto others as you would have them
do unto you - were the basis for James Cash Penney's new business venture. (The
middle name is a family name, not chosen to express his retail philosophy). He
named the store the Golden Rule.
"When the sun rose over Kemmerer, Wyoming, April 14, 1902, it gilded a sign
reading "GOLDEN RULE STORE, and I was in business as a full partner. The firm
name was Johnson, Callahan and Penney, but it was used only for bookkeeping
purposes. In setting up a business under the name and meaning of Golden Rule, I
was publicly binding myself, in my business relations, to a principle which had
been a real intimate part of my family upbringing. To me the sign on the store
was much more than a trade name. We took our slogan "Golden Rule Store" with
strict literalness. Our idea was to make money and build business through
serving the community with fair dealing and honest value, and did business
cash-and-carry."
"When we locked the store at midnight and went upstairs to our attic room
after the first day's business to figure out how we stood, there wasn't a great
deal of paper money or. for that matter, so many silver dollars; but there was
an astonishing - to us - wealth in pennies, nickels, dimes, quarters, and
half-dollars. Our first day's sales amounted actually to only $33.41 shy of the
$500 savings we had put with the note for $1500 to pay for the partnership."
"Having made the point of a new store by opening up at sunrise on the first
day, we then settled on an opening of 7 a.m. Closing time was when no more
people in the streets seemed to be heading for the store. Saturday nights, that
meant at least midnight. We couldn't make perpetual-motion machines of ourselves
and on Sunday opened the store at 9 a.m."
During 1911 and 1912 twenty stores were added, bringing the total number of
Golden Rule Stores to thirty-four. So it was Kemmerer, Wyoming, that gave Mr.
James Cash Penney his start in business, and in 1913 the decision was made to
change the Golden Rule Store to the J.C. Penney Company. The mother store is
still a thriving business in Kemmerer.
Restored Penney home open to public
The Penney's first home was restored in 1982 and moved to Penney Avenue on
the Triangle, where it is now a museum operated by the J.C. Penney Foundation.
The six room cottage is a National Historic Landmark. It is open during the
spring and summer. Mr. Penney's home and the "mother store" are "must"
photographs for thousands of tourists each year.
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