Saturday, December 9, 2023

West Dearborn's Muirhead's Department Store

Mrs. Alberta Muirhead


If you grew up in Downriver Detroit in the 1950s or 1960s, after the Hudson's Thanksgiving Day parade on Woodward Avenue, you had your heart set on a visit to Santa's igloo at Muirhead's on Michigan Avenue in West Dearborn. Baby Boomers have precious memories of riding the rails in Santa's sleigh with their parents and siblings to get their photo taken with Santa Claus. Over the years, several men have donned the red suit and white beard. Early on, Mr. Muirhead played the role, but succeeding Santas were Bob Oxley and Tim Pryce. There may have been others.

In 1946, John Muirhead married Alberta Jamieson, and they opened a neighborhood department store featuring women's clothing and a toy department. Dearborn resident Jon Jahr explained that his father drew up the blueprints for the original Muirhead's building which was on three levels.

"The basement was the storeroom, shopping was on the street level, and the Muirheads lived on the second level. As their business grew, they expanded the footprint of the building, and in the early sixties, they built a new building around the old building, replacing the street facade for a modern, upscale look." By then, John and Alberta lived in their own home, creating more sales space on the second level.

Mrs. Muirhead - 1971


Lynn Richards Tobin worked at Muirhead's in 1961 and 1962. She remembers, "Mr. Muirhead was in his early sixties. Mrs. Muirhead was younger, maybe in her forties.... She always wore the cash register key around her neck. She took care of their customers and oversaw sales on the main floor. Mr. Muirhead spent most of his time on the second floor in the stockroom and oversaw employees to make sure everyone was working and not goofing off.
 

"The main floor was girls and teen clothing in front and children's clothing in the back. A customer service center was in the middle of the sales floor where shoppers would take returns and ask questions. There was a cash register station near the front door and one near the parking lot exit in back. An elevator and a stairwell led to the second floor where the stockroom and business offices were. Dolls were sold upstairs including the exclusive Madame Alexander dolls. Another stairwell on the ground floor led to the toy department in the basement which featured bicycles."

My family in 1957. I'm sitting next to my mother.


During the Christmas season, Santa's igloo sleigh ride in the basement was the big attraction. As far as I have been able to determine, the sleigh was manually pushed back and forth on a rail track. Jon Jahr remembers seeing the sleigh in the Muirhead's warehouse in the early 1970s. Jahr asked Mr. Muirhead if he might bring the sleigh out just for Christmas photos, but he was done with it by then. I wonder if the sleigh is somewhere in Dearborn waiting to be rediscovered.

John died in 1983 at the age of eighty-three. Alberta operated the store by herself with the help of a dedicated band of loyal employees for seven more years. Then, she closed the popular store after forty-three years in business. Competition from shopping malls and Crowley's on Michigan Avenue off Outer Drive in particular cut into her business.

Alberta's story did not end with the closing of her boutique department store. Mrs. Muirhead--as most people called her--became a model for philanthrophy. She believed in giving back to the Dearborn community who had supported her and her husband John, making their business a success. Alberta devoted her later life to Dearborn and its people.

Alberta Muirhead parlayed her charismatic personality and charitable spirit to become Dearborn's biggest benefactor and philantropist since the Ford family. For starters, she donated her three-level building to the Oakwood Health Care Foundation for their data-processing center.

An avid believer in public education, Alberta became the namesake for Dearborn's Teacher of the Year award established in 1997. She supported both Henry Ford Community College and Rochester College giving generously to their scholarship funds to help needy and struggling students. Dearborn Public Schools awards an annual scholarship in her name.

In 2007, Alberta Muirhead established the Oakwood Healthcare Foundation with a $500,000 gift to support nursing education and advanced nursing degrees for Oakwood Healthcare employees. Many a nurse owes a debt of gratitude to the generosity of Mrs. Muirhead. Her support was not limited to people. Alberta was a supporter of the Dearborn Animal Shelter and received their Big Heart Award in 2006.

After the death of her husband, Alberta and Russ Gibb--of Grande Ballroom fame and Dearborn High School teacher--became friends. How and when they met is unclear, but Gibb was a deejay at WKNR-FM which was next door to the department store. They became lifelong friends and companions for nearly thirty years until Alberta's death on January 14, 2011 at the age of ninety-one. "Alberta put so many people through college," Gibb said. "She was a great, generous lady and I loved her dearly."

Ford Rotunda Christmas Memories

15 comments:

  1. Wonderful article! Mrs. Muirhead sounds like a wonderful person. I love how much she gave back to Dearborn.

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  2. Thanks for this great story. Muirhead's was a favorite place of mine as a child, and I loved shopping there as an adult. I could always find the perfect baby gifts.

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  3. Mrs. Muirhead was a shrewd business woman. A real "mover and shaker".

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  4. Do you happen to have a photo of the exterior of the department store?

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  5. Do you happen to have a photo of the exterior of the department store?

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  6. WKNR was not next to Murirhead’s, it was east Greenfield rd in East Dearborn.
    I too have fond memories of mr and misses M.
    I think the basement became the toy shop, a favorite place to visit growing up in Derburn,LOL

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    1. Robin Seymour ran a radio station just East of Meredith for many years in the 50s

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  7. . Before they opened the store on Michigan ave., they operated a toy store above a gas station at the corner of Monroe and Outer Drive. I had several Madam Alexander dolls from there, and remember my mother discussing Mrs. Muirhead plans to open the new store on Mich. Ave. which would include clothing.


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  8. I have alot of beautiful memories as a child shopping with my mother for school clothes at Muirheads department store. The clothes were always top of the line. The store was very personable. Thank you for your Beautiful contribution to the Dearborn area. I still drive by the building just for wonderful memories as a child shopping with my mother. Thank you for sharing.

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  9. Mrs. Muirhead graceously opened her beautiful house to many of her friends (and Russ G. was there) and me the year I ran for Dearborn School Board. I had met her prior and she wanted her friends to meet me and hear my position on education in Dearborn. Although I lost by a mere 400 votes that election, she assured me she supported my ideals and ideas, and was in my "corner", and wished me well. She was a very nice woman and friend to many.
    R.I.P. to both Mrs. Muirhead and Russ Gibb - two of Dearborn's great icons.

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  10. My sister and Betsy til she was 10 and I was 8, would spend as long as we could on weekdays at the outdoor equipment area to the immediate east of the store. Mt. Muirhead was always friendly because he felt buyers would see kids enjoying the swings, etc. Mrs M always gave us the stink eye!

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  11. My dad was Santa also during the 70’s. He filled in occasionally. The Muirheads were wonderful folks that did so much for Michigan Christian College/Rochester College/Rochester University.

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  12. Mr Muirhead always wore tennis shoes (Converse) and had green onions in his pocket! Anyone remember that?!

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  13. Found you. I couldn't remember the stores name. I have 3 photos from 3 different years starting with 1952 of my brother and I and our parents. The last photo has another baby brother in it too. It is a precious memory

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  14. I worked there in the summer of 1975. It was a great store!

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