50 years ago, downtown icon Denholm & McKay closed. Here's why it will never be forgotten

Shopping at Denholm & McKay in 1965.

WORCESTER ā€” When Petula Clark sang about forgetting about all her troubles and cares on her 1965 smash hit ā€œDowntown,ā€ she easily could have been singing about shopping at Denholm & McKay.

Traditionally during the Christmas shopping season, the six-story fa?ade of Denholm & McKay at 484 Main St. would be adorned with an 80-foot-tall ā€œtree of lightsā€ made up of 2,500 sparkling 10-watt bulbs and complete with a 12-foot-tall star on top and 70-foot-long base.

For those of us old enough to remember those days, the memories linger on and shine the brightest during the holiday season.

In the age before shopping online or waiting in checkout lines at crowded box stores for Black Friday specials, Denholms was the place for all home and holiday shopping needs.

Customers carrying gold and white shopping bags marked Denholms in black script were once commonplace in downtown Worcester.

For many decades the holiday shopping experience was not complete without a visit to Denholms, where the decorations alone were once the talk of the town.

Inside and out, Denholms was a winter wonderland of holiday displays, keepsake Santa photo ops and elaborate window displays that would attract crowds even during the bitterest cold.

This month marks the 50th anniversary of the store closing its doors.

PHOTOS Denholm Building over the years

Modest origins, rapid growth

On Nov. 26, 1870, Denholm & McKay began as a dry goods store at Main and Mechanic streets. The store was a charter member of the ā€œScotch Syndicate,ā€ a group of eight houses that collectively became one of the largest buyers of dry goods in the world.

The original Denholm & McKay location was built by William C. Clark and was known as the Clark Block. In its time, it was considered one of Worcesterā€™s finest locations and stores.

Founded by William Alexander Denholm and William C. McKay, the store was often referred to as "The Boston Store" because of its modern conveniences and was the largest retailer in Massachusetts outside Boston.

Advertising men's suits for $5 and ā€œextra good onesā€ for $20, Denholm & McKay was staffed by 18 employees when it first opened, an opening which was advertised in the Worcester Daily Spy newspaper, boasting ā€œNew stock, small profits, one price.ā€

During the Christmas shopping season, the six-story fa?ade of Denholm & McKay at 484 Main St. would be adorned with an 80-foot tall ā€œtree of lightsā€ made up of 2,500 10-watt bulbs and complete with a 12-foot star on top and 70-foot-long base.

Business grew by leaps and bounds, requiring the store to have larger quarters.

On Sept. 21, 1882, the retail juggernaut took over the Jonas G. Clark block at 480-500 Main St. and increased its workforce to more than 100.

The store originally occupied only the street floor of the new location. But as the business continued to grow, expansion became necessary until the entire building, with its five floors and basement, was occupied.