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Brooks Brothers files for bankruptcy as the pandemic keeps customers home

The company dressed presidents including Abraham Lincoln. One of its four local stores has permanently closed and the others haven't reopened yet.

Brooks Brothers filed for bankruptcy, felled by the pandemic’s impact on clothing sales and its own heavy debt load.

The two-century-old apparel company is the latest to succumb as a nationwide lockdown during the coronavirus outbreak added to the woes afflicting old-line retailers. Neiman Marcus, J. Crew, J.C. Penney and John Varvatos Enterprises each filed for bankruptcy since the virus took hold.

The Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing in Delaware allows Brooks Brothers to keep operating while it works out a plan to turn the business around and pay its debts. The company listed assets and liabilities of at least $500 million each in court papers, and a spokesperson said via email it had lined up a $75 million bankruptcy loan.

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Recently, the retailer permanently closed its store in Grand Prairie Premium Outlets. Other local stores are in the West Village in Uptown Dallas, Southlake Town Square and the Shops at Willow Bend in Plano. Those stores remain closed since closing for the coronavirus.

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The pandemic has hit Brooks Brothers hard, shuttering office buildings and hurting demand for business wear as people worked from home. The retailer has been trying to sell itself since last year as many of its roughly 250 U.S. locations struggled with declining sales, Bloomberg reported earlier. It’s continuing to seek a buyer, according to the spokesperson.

With its first store in 1818 on the corner of Cherry and Catherine streets in lower Manhattan, the company’s simple, classic suits became a staple on Wall Street. Brooks Brothers, which calls itself the oldest U.S. clothing retailer, has dressed U.S. presidents including Abraham Lincoln and now sells men’s, women’s and children’s clothing.

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The store began its international expansion with a Tokyo flagship in 1979 and now has more than 250 locations outside the U.S. Its many stores have become a burden amid changing consumer habits and a shift toward more casual work attire.

Rick Clough and Jeremy Hill of Bloomberg. Staff writer Maria Halkias contributed to this report.

Twitter: @MariaHalkias

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