For Seminary Street, the sixties exemplified its second class "side street" existence. Many business start-ups were noted, but only one or two enjoyed any longevity. Many of the buildings were beginning to show signs of age and lack of maintenance. The cycle of decline accelerated, bringing lower rents and frequent vacancies. In May of 1968 the Calico Cat celebrated its grand opening at 78 South Seminary Street by selling incense, paper flowers, custom clothing, stretch Pepsi bottles, posters and love beads. No one would have expected the fledgling enterprise to make it through the summer. It was a time of change on Seminary Street, but few anticipated the change that would come to downtown Galesburg within a few years. In the mid-seventies with the opening of a new regional shopping center in the community, the downtown and Seminary Street took a decided turn for the worse. In a period of months, the downtown lost its 100 year old O. T. Johnson department store, as well as Carson Pirie Scott & Company, Sears, Penney's and numerous smaller retailers. As the traditional marketplace shifted to the shopping center and the mass merchandisers, a wake of vacant buildings were left downtown. It was against this backdrop, in 1977, when the owners of the Calico Cat, together with a group of local partners and the backing of a local bank, acquired the majority of buildings on the street. A revitalization plan called for opening new types of specialty businesses and for promoting the area's railroad heritage as a tourism destination. In 1978 Galesburg was selected by the National Trust for Historic Preservation to serve in the original "Main Street" pilot project. The Trust's agenda and the Seminary Street mission would dovetail repeatedly from then on. By 1981 Seminary Street received national attention when the Wall Street Journal mentioned the success of the Packinghouse Dining Company in a feature on downtown revitalization. Another Seminary Street restaurant, the Landmark Cafe & Creperie, grew in reputation and popularity and soon specialty shop development followed. At the close of the eighties, Seminary Street was enjoying a growing reputation with half of the buildings on the street restored.