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In 1922, the Alaska Commercial Company was sold to a group of employees and named the Northern Commercial Company. It became a major supplier of heavy equipment and machinery in Alaska. In the cities that grew in Alaska, the company opened department stores and tire centers.
By 1974 the Northern Commercial Company was divided into three different companies and sold. The department stores were sold to Nordstrom. The equipment and machinery division was sold to a company from Seattle, Washington and the remaining eleven rural stores were sold to the Community Enterprise Development Corporation of Alaska (CEDC) and were renamed Alaska Commercial Company.
In November, 1992, Alaska Commercial Company was purchased from CEDC by the North West Company, a company separated from the Hudson's Bay Company of Canada to specialize in rural retail stores, to form a the largest operator of rural stores in North America.
Alaska history Retail companies of the United States