Puneet Varma (Editor)

Hancock Fabrics

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Former type
  
Public

Parent organization
  
Hancock Fabrics

Ceased operations
  
July 27, 2016

Hancock Fabrics wwwhancockfabricscomondemandwarestaticSites

Traded as
  
OTC Pink Limited: HKFIQ

Fate
  
Filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy; Assets liquidated

Founded
  
1957; 60 years ago (1957) (Tupelo, Mississippi, U.S.)

Defunct
  
July 27, 2016; 7 months ago (July 27, 2016)

Number of locations
  
185 (at the time of closure)

Headquarters
  
Baldwyn, Mississippi, United States

Stock price
  
HKFIQ (OTCMKTS) US$ 0.00 0.00 (+37.65%)10 Mar, 4:00 PM GMT-5 - Disclaimer

CEO
  
Steven R Morgan (17 Oct 2011–)

Hancock Fabrics was a specialty retailer of crafts and fabrics based in Baldwyn, Mississippi, United States. Hancock Fabrics operated as many as 266 stores in 37 states under the Hancock Fabrics name. Hancok Fabrics was established by the late Lawrence D. Hancock. All stores are in bankruptcy liquidation. As of 2016 all of the stores have closed, marking the end of the chain.

Contents

Hancock fabrics is going out of business


History

The company, founded in 1957 in Tupelo, Mississippi by Elaine and Lawrence Doyce (L.D.) Hancock, started out as a cost-efficient retail store and offered a greater selection of merchandise to its customers at lower prices. By 1971, when Lucky Stores bought Hancock Fabrics, the chain owned 81 stores and had 265 additional franchise stores in 19 states.

In 1985, it acquired Minnesota Fabrics based in Charlotte, North Carolina, which operated over one hundred stores under the names Minnesota Fabrics and Fabric Warehouse.

Lucky Stores demerged Hancock in 1987, floating it as a public company.

By 1992, the company was one of seven major retail piece-goods chains operating 482 stores in the United States.

On March 21, 2007, Hancock Fabrics announced it would file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The company closed 104 stores and emerged from bankruptcy in August 2008. In 2014, Hancock announced plans to take the company private, then withdrew the proposal.

On April 1st, 2016, the U. S. Bankruptcy Court approved the sale of the remaining assets to Great American Group, who announced that the remaining 185 stores will be closed and their assets liquidated.

In August 2016, Michaels Stores, Inc. announced its intent to acquire Hancock Fabrics' intellectual property and customer database.

References

Hancock Fabrics Wikipedia