Recently I posted about Chick's Sporting Goods on my new Facebook page and the "I Grew Up in Covina" FB group. Both were pretty well received, so I thought I'd put together a more detailed version of those posts in my blog here: specifically a timeline of Chick's various locations in and around Covina.
I knew from past experience that there's plenty of disagreement about where the "original" Chick's was located. To illustrate that, I conducted a poll on the Covina group.

Just on the basis of personal memory, I would have said without hesitation that the original Chick's was on Citrus up by San Bernardino Road. But, from the Covina FB group, I learned of an even earlier location: at College and Second, where the Baskin-Robbins ice cream parlor has been for the last 70 years.1
However, even that was wrong! Just the other day, doing a newspaper search, I discovered that the actual birthplace of Chick's was in a little hole-in-the-wall retail spot at 112 Italia Street in Covina. And moreover, that James Chick was not the original owner. That was a gentleman named Edwin Girdham Henman.

Chick's started out here at 112 Italia Street, Covina, in 1947. Source: Google Maps.
So, without further ado, here is my timeline of Chick's Sporting Goods in Covina:
October, 1945—E. G. Henman opens Henman's Bicycle Shop at 112 Italia Street in Covina.2


Covina Argus-Citizen, September 21, 1945. Clippings from Newspapers.com.
August 18, 1947—James Elmo Chick buys Henman's store;3 new dba is James Chick Sporting Goods.4


Covina Argus-Citizen, September 5, 1947. Clippings from Newspapers.com.
April, 1950—James Chick Sporting Goods moves to 177 East College Street, Covina. That July,5 Chick sponsors a youth basketball team called "Chick's Sporting Goods," then adopts that name for his business in December.6

Ad for James Chick Sporting Goods on College Street in the Covina Union High School Cardinal yearbook, June, 1950. Source: Covina Valley Historical Society.
This was a great location because it was right across from the post office. However, it didn't take long before Chick's outgrew that little corner shop, as well.
1953-1954—Chick's expands and briefly operates a second location in West Covina Center at 1212 East Garvey Boulevard.7
September, 1954—Chick's Sporting Goods opens at 309 North Citrus Avenue,8 consolidating both stores under one roof.

Covina Argus-Citizen, September 30, 1954. Clipping from Newspapers.com.
October 9, 1965—Death of founder James E. Chick.9
1968—Son James Merrill Chick assumes ownership of Chick's.10
September, 1978—Chick's moves to 626 South Citrus Avenue just south of Rowland Avenue: the former Alpha Beta market adjacent to Shoppers Lane.11 After this Chick's goes bigtime, opening new locations all over the Southland.

Los Angeles Times, September 16, 1978. Clipping from Newspapers.com.
February, 1997—Appearance of the last newspaper ad showing Chick's at the Citrus location;12 presumably this was the year Chick's moved to Eastland Center.
2007—Chick's is bought out by Dick's Sporting Goods for $72 million.10
February, 2009—Chick's 15 stores close,13 reopen as Dick's in May.
March 7, 2023—Death of James Merrill Chick.10

Another retail giant was also born in little old Covina: the Cornet dime store chain in 1922. Hopefully someday I can write something about that, too, though info about Cornet is strangely hard to come by. Odd that a regional department store chain recording tens of millions of dollars in sales annually in the middle of the 20th century then all but disappears from history by early in the next. Yet another mystery I need to solve!

References:
1 Los Angeles Times, August 11, 1957, p.202.
2 Covina Argus-Citizen, September 21, 1945, p.1.
3 Covina Argus-Citizen, August 15, 1947, p.13.
4 Covina Argus-Citizen, October 17, 1947, p.15.
5 Covina Argus-Citizen, July 28, 1950, p.8.
6 Covina Argus-Citizen, December 1, 1950, p.17.
7 Covina Argus-Citizen, November 5, 1953, p.23.
8 Covina Argus-Citizen, September 30, 1954, p.10.
9 Certificate of Death, James E. Chick, State of Oregon, Board of Health, received Oct. 15, 1965.
10 "James M. Chick, owner of Chick's Sporting Goods, dies at 76," San Gabriel Valley Tribune, March 24, 2023.
11 Los Angeles Times, September 16, 1978, p.50.
12 Los Angeles Times, February 6, 1997, p.195.
13 Los Angeles Times, February 15, 2009, p.45.

The court case that set the stage for Covina's birth.

