T & T hardware closing after 74 years

2012-03-29 08:00:31
  • Manager Mark McNally is winding down business at T & T Hardware, a fixture at 2114 East Carson St. on the South Side since 1936. Owned by the Tumas family since its founding, the store has found it impossible to compete with big-box retailers. The scale, which has weighed countless nails and screws for sale by the pound, will remain with the Tumas family. Everything else will be marked down 50 percent Monday morning.
    Manager Mark McNally is winding down business at T & T Hardware, a fixture at 2114 East Carson St. on the South Side since 1936. Owned by the Tumas family since its founding, the store has found it impossible to compete with big-box retailers. The scale, which has weighed countless nails and screws for sale by the pound, will remain with the Tumas family. Everything else will be marked down 50 percent Monday morning.

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Pull open the solid wood door with its weathered red paint, walk into T & T Hardware Co. Inc. on the South Side and it's a bit like stepping back in time.

Wooden shelves line the walls, some all the way to the ceiling, along with rows and rows of little wooden drawers full of screws, nuts and bolts behind a wooden counter along the back. Power tools almost seem out of place in their wood and glass displays.

But next week, after fighting off hard times the last few years, the hardware store fixture on Carson Street begins the process to shut its doors for good.

The "mom and pop" store has too much remaining inventory to liquidate or auction off yet, so beginning Monday, everything is 50 percent off the original price, said manager Mark McNally, 55, of Mount Washington.

They are waiting to see how long it takes to sell most of their inventory to set an exact closing date. This week, they're just trying to get everything out on the shelves.

Stanley Tumas opened T & T Hardware in 1936. After he retired in the late 1980s, his son, Michael Tumas, took over ownership of the store.

It has stayed in the same spot for the last 74 years, expanding to the side and to the back as the years went on. It was a work in progress until the '80s, Mr. McNally said.

He says they've always had a reputation as the place to go for "odd stuff that no one else has," like specific plumbing parts, nuts, bolts or screws.

Since he began working at a hardware store in Mount Washington as a teenager and then managing T & T Hardware for the last 15 years, Mr. McNally has seen many changes in the business.

Part of the challenge comes from "big box" stores, like Home Depot. "They're key why these stores are going," he said.

Emily Gibb: egibb@post-gazette.com or 412-263-1985.
First Published November 19, 2010 12:00 am
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