The Emporium was a department store in Downtown Long Beach, California.
The Emporium's origins go back to Harry Brown and Stephen L. Powers, whose company S. L. Powers & Co. opened The Great Cash Bargain Store on July 28, 1904, at 32 Pine Street (later 332 Pine) in the then-new W. H. Martin Building.
On March 30, 1905, Powers changed the store name to The Emporium. In January 1907, this first "Emporium" closed.
Meanwhile, Henry D. Meyer of Pasadena who owned Meyer's Department Stores (also written Meyer or Meyers) in Pasadena, Holtville, and Hemet, opened a Long Beach branch at 151 Pine around 1905. In March 1908 T. Sundbye of Huntington Beach partnered with Meyer and the store was known as Meyer & Sundbye's.
Under Meyer's ownership, The Emporium would reopen again on July 31, 1909, this time at 151 Pine, which Meyer had operated as "Meyers Department Store".
On March 29, 1912, The Emporium moved to a new building at the northwest corner of Broadway and Locust.
On May 1, 1914, Henry D. Meyer of Pasadena sold the store to Ed. Ahlswede who had operated a large dry goods store in Chicago, and his son Herbert F. Ahlswede (b. July 5, 1878, Chicago).
In December 1932, The Emporium merged with Marti's department store, which as from December 30 operated at the former Emporium store at Broadway and Locust, now branded Marti's, and closed its old location at 4th and Pine. Marti's held a grand re-opening on January 12, 1933. Marti's in its advertising thanked its customers for their support despite the Great Depression, and in an advertisement profiled its new location: "Marti's New Store will be a Good Store Designed for the Masses without Frills and Fanciesâ¦but a Good Store" Nonetheless, Marti's closed for good shortly thereafter.