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==Acquisition of Merribee and RadioShack== In 1961, the company name was changed to Tandy Corporation. The corporate headquarters were also moved to Fort Worth, Texas, where Charles D. Tandy became the president and chairman of the board. Tandy Leather was operating 125 stores in 105 cities of the United States and Canada and expanding significantly. Tandy acquired the assets of Merribee Art Embroidery Co., manufacturer and retailer of [[needlecraft]] items, as well as five other companies, including Cleveland Crafts Inc. and brought on the owner, Werner Magnus, to help run the newly acquired Merribee division.{{sfn|Farman|1992|p=[https://archive.org/details/Tandys_Money_Machine_1992_Mobium_Press/page/n103 88]}} The first Tandy Mart had twenty-eight different shops all devoted to craft and hobby merchandise and included American Handicraft, Tandy Leather, Electronics Crafts and Merribee in an area of about 40,000 square feet. Charles Tandy became intrigued with the potential for rapid growth that he saw in the electronics retail industry during 1962. He found [[RadioShack]] in Boston, a [[mail order]] company that had started in the 1920s selling to [[Amateur radio operator|amateur radio operators]] and electronics buffs. By April 1963, the Tandy Corporation acquired management control of RadioShack Corporation and within two years, RadioShack's $4 million (~${{Format price|{{Inflation|index=US-GDP|value=4000000|start_year=1963}}}} in {{Inflation/year|US-GDP}}) loss was turned into a profit under the leadership of Charles Tandy. Sales were going well for Tandy during this time. Under the leadership of Lloyd Redd (president) and Al Patten (VP of Operations), the company prospered. The number of Tandy store-fronts skyrocketed over the next five to six years by growing from 132 sites in 1969 to 269 sites in 1975. Ground broke in downtown Fort Worth for the construction of the [[City Place|Tandy Towers]] in 1975. The 18-story office building was initiated as phase I of a massive downtown development with plans to cover eight city blocks and become the new headquarters of the Tandy Corp. It contained an upscale retail shopping center with an indoor ice skating rink and had its own privately owned [[Tandy Center Subway|subway system]]. The company's board of directors then announced a plan to separate Tandy's businesses into three distinct publicly held companies. The two new companies were named Tandycrafts, Inc. and Tex Tan-Hickok, Inc. This plan was publicized as a strategy to provide intensive leadership and tailored management of the three distinct and diverse businesses of the company, each of which recently had reached a substantial size. With this transition, RadioShack and Tandy Leather Company were no longer under the same corporate umbrella.{{sfn|Farman|1992|page=[https://archive.org/details/Tandys_Money_Machine_1992_Mobium_Press/page/n395 372]}} Wray Thompson was promoted to president of Tandy Leather Company in 1976 and Dave Ferrill was promoted to the position of National Sales Manager; they oversaw 288 stores. Although they opened their 300th store that year, the popularity of Nature-Tand's products had begun to slide. Charles Tandy died on November 4, 1978, at the age of 60. Concurrently, key stakeholders began to question the direction of the company. Wray Thompson subsequently resigned from his position as president and later started [[The Leather Factory]] with Ron Morgan, which eventually purchased Tandy Leather Corporation in 2000.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Williams|first1=Jeff|title=Wholly Cow Too|date=2009}}</ref>
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