Quigley's

Quigley's (also Quigley's Department Stores, Quigley's Variety Stores) was a chain of variety stores and junior department stores in Los Angeles County, California, from 1936 through 1990.

Roger Bemis (R. B.) Quigley retired from Woolworth's and opened the first Quigley's in 1936, near the corner of Sunset and Fairfax, just north of what is the border of West Hollywood today. At the time, there was little competition from supermarkets for the types of products that variety stores (or "five and dimes") sold. His slogan was "basic merchandise at a reasonable price" was his slogan.

In 1948 Quigley's was owned and operated by R. B. Quigley, J. H. (James Harold) Quigley, and W. S. Manning.

Expansion
Stores were opened as follows:

The last store, Sherman Oaks, closed in 1990. Despite Quigley's calling itself a department store over the years, the Los Angeles Times put Quigley's squarely in the category of variety store. The newspaper reported that the staff prided itself on the slogan, "if you can’t find it any place else, Quigley’s has it."

Quigley's Belmont Shore and Plaza were voted in the top 100 of most missed things in Long Beach, according to a poll by columnist Tim Grobaty in the Long Beach Press-Telegram.