Hyman Capin and the Capin Mercantile Corporation
Hyman Capin, 1895
Hyman Capin, the son of a tailor, was born in Ponevezh, Kovno, Lithuania,
to Mose and Chiatsilla Kapinski. Although apprenticed to his father, he
learned much of his craft in London after his family emigrated to England
when he was twelve. When he was eighteen his family came to the United
States and their name was changed to Capin. Living first in New York City,
Hyman and his brothers [28K] found their way
to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Here Hyman met another young Russian emmigrant,
Dora Dobra Loon. They were married in 1896.
In 1899 Hyman became a United States citizen.
In 1905 due to Dora's health, the couple and five children moved to
Yuma, Arizona. From Yuma, which they found to be too hot, they moved to
Los Angeles, California, which they found too humid. So they came to
Tucson, Arizona. Initially the family lived in "Tent City," located on
Park Avenue about three blocks north of Speedway, which was an area
designated for newcomers with various repiratory problems. Dora's health
improved. In 1908, when their son Jake was born, the family lived at 599
North 3rd Avenue and the children began attending Holladay School.
After son Hilliard was born in 1910, Hyman took a job as tailor for the
Army at Fort Bliss in El Paso, Texas. Here their eighth child and youngest
son, Zellie, was born. They followed the Army to Columbus, New Mexico,
where they lived from 1914-1919, and where Hyman opened his
own tailor shop
[54K]. He and his family kept
the original sign
[12K] for the business.
When the Army withdrew from Columbus after the capture of Pancho Villa,
the family [57K]
moved to Nogales,
Arizona. Hyman tailored for Camp Steven D. Little and again opened his own
shop where he would train as many as forty tailors. It was here that he
designed a basic pattern that could be adjusted to fit all sizes. In 1922
he bought the first of what would become a series of retail stores, the S.
Leeker Dry Goods, at 127 Morely Avenue. It was called the El Paso Store. A
second store, La Ville de Paris, was bought in 1924. As he entered the
retail trade, he adopted a
business motto that always hung
in the company offices. By 1930, the family
incorporated its holdings as Capin's Department Store listing as assets
the S. Leeker Dry Goods Company (Nogales, Arizona) the Charles Dumazert
Dry Goods Company (Nogales, Arizona), and
the Boston Store, Inc. [40K] ( El Paso, Texas).
Hyman Capin died in 1935 in Tucson where he had moved after retiring
and leaving the operation of the stores in the hands of his sons and
sons-in-law. The family expanded their business holdings
as the Capin Mercantile Corporation (1949)
contributing to a wide variety of charitable and
civic causes [66K]. A July 23,
1997, interview with Zellie Capin, Hyman and Dora
Capin's youngest child, provides information about the family and its life
in Nogales, Arizona.
Newpaper articles about Hyman Capin, the founder of the Capin
Mercantile Company
Family tree charts
Materials included in this exhibit are
from the Capin Family Business
Collection, Bloom Southwest Jewish Archives and
the University of Arizona Library Special Collections.
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