Soon after Joseph Horne bought the Eaton Co., the Joseph Horne Company became a leading Pittsburgh department store. The store was initially located on Market Street, then moved to the recently completed Mercantile Library Hall on
Penn Avenue—now the site of the
O'Reilly Theater—in 1871. In 1881, the firm built a new building at Wood Street and
Liberty Avenue for its wholesale division. In 1891, at age 65, Horne sold the wholesale side of his company's operations to the Pittsburgh Dry Goods Company. The flagship Horne's store at Penn Avenue and Stanwix Street in
Downtown Pittsburgh originally opened on July 31, 1893, and was subsequently rebuilt twice after devastating fires in 1897 and 1900. The six-story main building and a seven-story addition dating to 1923 were both designed by Boston-based architects
Peabody and Stearns. The neighboring building on Penn Avenue, originally an office building, also became part of the department store in 1903. The store complex still stands and several Horne's signs remain on the building as they do at the former Pittsburgh rival
Kaufmann's on Smithfield Street. In 1966,
Associated Dry Goods (ADG) acquired Horne's, and ADG expanded operations of Horne's to several stores in suburban
malls throughout the Pittsburgh region as well as in
Erie, Pennsylvania and
Northeast Ohio. In December 1986, Horne's was acquired by a local investor group following ADG's acquisition by
May Department Stores. The local buyout was part of May's divesting of the Horne's chain, since May was already the owner of cross-town rival Kaufmann's. Two years later, the Arkansas-based department store chain
Dillard's and
Edward J. DeBartolo Sr. agreed to acquire Horne's, with plans of combining it with another recent acquisition for Dillard's — the Ohio-based
Higbee's store chain. The deal was canceled abruptly, resulting in several years of litigation. Dillard's eventually agreed to acquire five Ohio Horne's stores as part of a legal settlement in 1992. In 1994,
Federated Department Stores acquired the remaining ten Horne's stores and merged them with its
Lazarus division, completely ceasing all operations of any store under the Horne's name by August 29, 1994. This caused some anger among Pittsburgh shoppers, as Horne's was the oldest store in the city and had been a 145-year-old Pittsburgh tradition. After its closure the company was often praised for surviving 145 years with only a maximum of 15 stores. Several former Horne's locations operating as Lazarus closed in 1998. Those that remained eventually became "Lazarus-Macy's" and in 2006 were joined with Kaufmann's in the nationwide
Macy's consolidation. ==Flagship store==