Building |
Image |
Location |
Built |
Note |
Hanniger-Johnson Building |
 |
Bisbee, Arizona 31°26′30″N 109°54′58″W |
1907 |
Not built for Woolworth, but best known as the local outlet of the retailer. Owned by the same owner since 1994, houses a nostalgia store and suite rentals |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Broadway, Los Angeles) |
 |
Broadway, Los Angeles, California 34.0450°N 118.2543°W / 34.0450; -118.2543 (F. W. Woolworth Building (Broadway, Los Angeles)) |
1920 |
Contributing property in the NRHP-listed Broadway Theater and Commercial District[1] |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Hollywood, Los Angeles) |
 |
Hollywood, Los Angeles, California 34.101°N 118.330°W / 34.101; -118.330 (Woolworth Building) |
1910 |
Restored in 2001 |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Oxnard, California) |
|
Oxnard, California 34°11′56″N 119°10′45″W |
1950 |
Later a museum, now Xielo Artisan Desserts (Woolworth name still on building) |
F. W. Woolworth Building (San Diego) |
 |
San Diego, California 32°42′55″N 117°09′36″W |
1922 |
Part of the Gaslamp Quarter Historic District |
Flood Building |
 |
San Francisco, California 37°47′06″N 122°24′27″W |
1904 |
Largest store in the chain |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Wilmington, Delaware) |
 |
Wilmington, Delaware 39°45′03″N 75°33′06″W |
1940 |
Now a Walgreens |
2nd F. W. Woolworth Building (Wilmington, Delaware) |
 |
Wilmington, Delaware 39°44′34″N 75°33′01″W |
1941 |
Now the Delaware History Museum |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Evansville, Indiana) |
|
Evansville, Indiana 37°58′41″N 87°34′09″W |
1921 |
Burned down in 1990, NRHP-delisted in 1993 |
F. W. Woolworth Building (New Albany, Indiana) |
 |
New Albany, Indiana |
1910 |
A contributing building to the New Albany Downtown Historic District |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Lexington, Kentucky) |
 |
Lexington, Kentucky 38°02′47″N 84°29′51″W |
1946 |
Site of sit-in during the Civil Rights Movement |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Calumet, Michigan) |
 |
Calumet, Michigan |
1948 |
A contributing building in the Calumet Historic District within the Keweenaw National Historical Park.
Now the Keweenaw Storytelling Center |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Clarksdale, Mississippi) |
|
Clarksdale, Mississippi 34°20′34″N 90°57′37″W |
1924 |
NRHP listed in 2009 |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Kansas City, Missouri) |
 |
Kansas City, Missouri 39°04′16″N 94°34′18″W |
1928 |
Now an art gallery |
F. W. Woolworth Building (St. Louis, Missouri) |
 |
St. Louis, Missouri 38°38′22″N 90°14′05″W |
1899 |
Now the Saint Louis University Museum of Art |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Lebanon, New Hampshire) |
 |
Lebanon, New Hampshire 43°38′33″N 72°15′11″W |
|
Now Lebanon College located next door to Dartmouth-Hitchcock Women's Health Resource Center |
Shadow Lawn (New Jersey) |
 |
West Long Branch, New Jersey 40°14′46″N 74°00′19″W |
1927 |
Estate of Woolworth president, now Woodrow Wilson Hall at Monmouth University |
Winfield Hall |
 |
Glen Cove, New York 40°52′31″N 73°38′38″W |
1930s |
Estate of F. W. Woolworth |
Woolworth Building |
 |
New York, New York 40°42′44″N 74°00′29″W |
1913 |
Headquarters and World's tallest building, 1913–1930 |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Watertown, New York) |
 |
Watertown, New York 43°58′29″N 75°54′34″W |
1921 |
Currently vacant, redevelopment in planning stages |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Asheville, North Carolina) |
 |
Asheville, North Carolina 35°35′43″N 82°33′16″W |
1938 |
Now a local-artist art gallery/old-fashioned soda fountain called Woolworth Walk[2] |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Greensboro, North Carolina) |
 |
Greensboro, North Carolina 36.0717°N 79.7904°W / 36.0717; -79.7904 |
1929 |
Site of Greensboro sit-ins |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Columbus, Ohio) |
 |
Columbus, Ohio 39.9597°N 83.0006°W / 39.9597; -83.0006 (109-111 South High Street) |
1938 |
Currently vacant; held a CVS from 2003 to 2022 |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Fort Worth, Texas) |
 |
Fort Worth, Texas 32°45′14″N 97°19′54″W |
1926 |
NRHP listed in 1994 |
F. W. Woolworth Building (San Antonio) |
 |
San Antonio, Texas |
1921[3] |
Famous for having peacefully desegregated its lunch counter alongside six others local stores of San Antonio on march 16 1960.[3] Will become part of the Alamo Mission historic site.[4] |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Renton, Washington) |
 |
Renton, Washington 47°28′47.49″N 122°12′25.21″W |
1954 |
Now a Western Wear store |
F. W. Woolworth Building (Toronto) |
 |
Toronto 43°39′09″N 79°22′47″W |
1895 |
Later a Tower Records |
Winfield House |
 |
London 51°31′51″N 0°09′52″W |
1930s |
Ambassador's residence |