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Charles David Tandy

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Charles David Tandy Famous memorial Veteran

Birth
Brownsville, Cameron County, Texas, USA
Death
4 Nov 1978 (aged 60)
Westover Hills, Tarrant County, Texas, USA
Burial
Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas, USA GPS-Latitude: 32.7647649, Longitude: -97.3672862
Plot
Tandy Mausoleum, Meditation Section, Lot 57, Space PM6
Memorial ID
View Source
Businessman. Founder of the Tandy Corporation, which includes Radio Shack and Tandy Leather. Charles David Tandy was born in Brownsville, Texas to David Lewis 'Dave' Tandy and Carmen McLain. His father Dave ran the Hinckley-Tandy Leather Company with his friend Norton Hinckley. He was educated at the R. L. Paschal High School and Texas Christian University, both in Fort Worth, Texas. Tandy began working in his father's business at the age of 12. In 1940 he graduated from Texas Christian University. He then spent some time at the Harvard Business School before joining the US Navy for the remainder of World War II. While in the Navy he set a record for selling war bonds. While a supply officer in the Navy, he noticed sailors being taught knitting and needlepoint as part of recuperative therapy. Thinking that men would prefer leatherwork to needlework, he established a system of craft work for hospitalized service personnel. Its success led him, on leaving the Navy, to set up a mail order business, Tandycraft, that became a major part of his father's business. Tandy developed his small family leather business into an international corporation. He first turned it into a leather craft company when shoe rationing in World War II almost killed the business, and later expanded into selling leather and tools to make such products as wallets. After a struggle over the company, which saw the Hinckley name dropped, the company was renamed to Tandy Corporation. In 1963, Tandy acquired the ailing RadioShack, a chain of nine retail stores in the Boston area; the chain grew to more than 400 across the country. At its peak in 1999, it operated stores under either the name RadioShack or Tandy in the United States, Mexico, United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada. While outside of those listed areas, the company had sold licenses to other companies to be able to use the RadioShack brand name in other parts of the world that had included parts of Asia, North Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. Tandy said "We're not looking for the guy who wants to spend his entire paycheck on a sound system," rather RadioShack sought customers "looking to save money by buying cheaper goods and improving them through modifications and accessorizing," making it common among "nerds" and "kids aiming to excel at their science fairs." In Tandy's last years his major project was the revitalization of downtown Fort Worth, his hometown e.g. the construction of the eight‐block Tandy Center. Tandy died of a heart attack in his sleep, on 4 November 1978 and was buried at Greenwood Memorial Park in Fort Worth, Texas.
Businessman. Founder of the Tandy Corporation, which includes Radio Shack and Tandy Leather. Charles David Tandy was born in Brownsville, Texas to David Lewis 'Dave' Tandy and Carmen McLain. His father Dave ran the Hinckley-Tandy Leather Company with his friend Norton Hinckley. He was educated at the R. L. Paschal High School and Texas Christian University, both in Fort Worth, Texas. Tandy began working in his father's business at the age of 12. In 1940 he graduated from Texas Christian University. He then spent some time at the Harvard Business School before joining the US Navy for the remainder of World War II. While in the Navy he set a record for selling war bonds. While a supply officer in the Navy, he noticed sailors being taught knitting and needlepoint as part of recuperative therapy. Thinking that men would prefer leatherwork to needlework, he established a system of craft work for hospitalized service personnel. Its success led him, on leaving the Navy, to set up a mail order business, Tandycraft, that became a major part of his father's business. Tandy developed his small family leather business into an international corporation. He first turned it into a leather craft company when shoe rationing in World War II almost killed the business, and later expanded into selling leather and tools to make such products as wallets. After a struggle over the company, which saw the Hinckley name dropped, the company was renamed to Tandy Corporation. In 1963, Tandy acquired the ailing RadioShack, a chain of nine retail stores in the Boston area; the chain grew to more than 400 across the country. At its peak in 1999, it operated stores under either the name RadioShack or Tandy in the United States, Mexico, United Kingdom, Australia, and Canada. While outside of those listed areas, the company had sold licenses to other companies to be able to use the RadioShack brand name in other parts of the world that had included parts of Asia, North Africa, Latin America, and the Caribbean. Tandy said "We're not looking for the guy who wants to spend his entire paycheck on a sound system," rather RadioShack sought customers "looking to save money by buying cheaper goods and improving them through modifications and accessorizing," making it common among "nerds" and "kids aiming to excel at their science fairs." In Tandy's last years his major project was the revitalization of downtown Fort Worth, his hometown e.g. the construction of the eight‐block Tandy Center. Tandy died of a heart attack in his sleep, on 4 November 1978 and was buried at Greenwood Memorial Park in Fort Worth, Texas.

Bio by: David P. Purifoy



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: May 5, 1999
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/5380/charles_david-tandy: accessed ), memorial page for Charles David Tandy (15 May 1918–4 Nov 1978), Find a Grave Memorial ID 5380, citing Greenwood Memorial Park and Mausoleum, Fort Worth, Tarrant County, Texas, USA; Maintained by Find a Grave.