House of Fraser: Difference between revisions
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From Christmas 2008, House of Fraser decided to expand its horizons by entering the exclusive kitchen market. Co-operating with Regency Kitchens, is supplying kitchens of the Sheraton range. They are currently involved with a “trial” within their Birmingham branch selling kitchens which "perpetuate the finest traditions of English craftsmanship" <ref>[http://www.sheraton-kitchens.co.uk/kitchengallery.php?p=kitchengallery Sheraton Kitchen range]</ref> |
From Christmas 2008, House of Fraser decided to expand its horizons by entering the exclusive kitchen market. Co-operating with Regency Kitchens, is supplying kitchens of the Sheraton range. They are currently involved with a “trial” within their Birmingham branch selling kitchens which "perpetuate the finest traditions of English craftsmanship" <ref>[http://www.sheraton-kitchens.co.uk/kitchengallery.php?p=kitchengallery Sheraton Kitchen range]</ref> |
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The [[Beatties]] store in [[Dudley]] closed January 2010. |
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== Operations == |
== Operations == |
Revision as of 11:07, 27 January 2010
This article's lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points. (September 2009) |
File:Houseoffraser.PNG | |
Company type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Retail |
Founded | Glasgow, Scotland (1749) |
Headquarters | London, England |
Key people | Don McCarthy, Chairman John King, CEO Stefan Cassar, Executive Finance Director |
Products | Clothing, cosmetics, housewares |
Revenue | £596.0 million (2008) |
£36.8 million (2008) | |
£8.2 million (2008) | |
Number of employees | 4,951 (2008) |
Parent | Frasers Group |
Website | www.houseoffraser.co.uk |
House of Fraser is a British department store group with 72 stores across the United Kingdom and Ireland. The flagship London store is House of Fraser on Oxford Street in London whilst the retailer has recently undertaken its largest new store opening in Belfast.
Over the years House of Fraser has purchased a number of famous stores, such as Jenners of Edinburgh, Howells of Cardiff, David Evans of Swansea, Rackhams of Birmingham, the Beatties department stores, and Harrods of Knightsbridge (which is now owned privately by Mohamed Al Fayed). It has a long term strategy of re-branding its stores under the 'House of Fraser' name. Former well known names such as Dickins & Jones (Regent Street, London), D H Evans (Oxford Street, London), Army & Navy (Victoria, London), and Kendals in Manchester have all disappeared or been rebranded.
The Company was once a constituent of the FTSE 100 Index before it was acquired by Baugur.
History
The early years
The Company was founded by Hugh Fraser and James Arthur in 1849 as a small drapery shop on the corner of Argyle Street and Buchanan Street in Glasgow, Scotland trading as Arthur and Fraser.[1]
Hugh Fraser had been apprenticed to Stewart & McDonald Ltd, a Glasgow drapery warehouse where he rose to the position of warehouse manager and from where he brought many of initial customers.[1]
James Arthur also owned a retail drapery business in Paisley, near Glasgow: he appointed a manager to oversee the Paisley business while he focused on his new business.[1]
The Company established a wholesale trade in adjoining premises in Argyle Street. In 1856 the wholesale business moved to a larger site in Miller Street, Glasgow and started to trade under the name Arthur & Co. The retail side of the business expanded into the vacant buildings left by the wholesale side.[1]
During the late 1850s and early 1860s the retail business was run by a professional manager - first Thomas Kirkpatrick and then Alexander McLaren.[1] In 1865 the partnership between the partners was dissolved and Fraser assumed control of the retail business leaving Arthur with the wholesale business. In 1865 Alexander McLaren joined the retail business and the name was changed to Fraser & McLaren.[1]
Fraser & Sons
When the first Hugh Fraser died in 1873, his three eldest sons, James, John and Hugh, acquired stakes in the business. James and John Fraser were initially directors in the business and employed Alexander McLaren and later John Towers to manage it for them. In 1891 Hugh also joined the partnership which by then was called Fraser & Sons.[1]
In 1879 the current flagship store on Oxford Street in London was opened by Dan Harries Evans, a 23 year old from Merthyr Tydfil, Wales, who had previously been apprenticed to a draper near his home town. He moved to London in 1878 to set up his own business in Westminster Bridge Road. The store traded under the D H Evans name until 2001.[1]
By 1900 Hugh Fraser II was in charge: he incorporated the business as Fraser & Sons Ltd in 1909 and introduced the famous stag’s head.[1]
Growth and expansion
After Hugh Fraser II died in 1927, his son Hugh Fraser III, an accountant, became Chairman of the business.[1] He opened new departments, enlarged the tearoom, opened a restaurant and also began to look at possible acquisitions.[1]
In 1936 Fraser purchased Arnott & Co Ltd and its neighbour Robert Simpson & Sons Ltd in nearby Argyle Street, merging the companies to help improve trade.[1] Between 1936 and 1985 over seventy companies, not including their subsidiaries, were acquired.[1]
1950s to 1970s
In 1948 the Company, now named House of Fraser, was first listed on the London Stock Exchange.[1] Then in 1951, the Company purchased McDonalds Ltd, and with it a branch in Harrogate. Fraser then purchased the Scottish Drapery Corporation in 1952, followed by the Sunderland based Binns group of stores in 1953.[1]
Fraser sold the property sites to insurance companies, leasing them back for long terms at advantageous rates. This enabled the release of capital for the purchase of new premises and the modernisation of existing stores. In 1957 the Kensington store group of John Barker & Co Ltd was acquired and in 1959 Harrods also joined the Group.[1]
Sir Hugh Fraser succeeded his father as Chairman of the company when his father died in 1966.[1] Sir Hugh resumed the expansion of the company in 1969 with the takeover of J. J. Allen Ltd, a Bournemouth based group.[1]
During the 1970s the House of Fraser Group acquired more companies including: T. Baird & Sons Ltd of Scotland, Switzer & Co. Ltd, Dublin, Erie and E. Dingle & Co. Ltd, Chiesmans Ltd, Hide & Co and the Army & Navy Stores in southern England, as well as a number of independent stores.[1] During the decade over fifty stores joined the group.[1]
1980s
In 1981 Prof. Roland Smith succeeded Sir Hugh Fraser as chairman. A takeover bid by Lonrho was referred to the Monopolies and Mergers Commission and declared to be contrary to the public interest.[1] Four new stores opened between 1980 and 1984.[1]
The Company, by then House of Fraser plc, diversified into sports goods under the name of Astral sports and into funerals with Wylie & Lochhead. It also launched the YOU range of cosmetics and jewellery shops and in 1985 acquired Turnbull & Asser Holdings Ltd, shirt makers of Jermyn Street, London and Kurt Geiger Holdings Ltd, shoe retailers.[1]
Other developments during the 1980s included the introduction of "Lifestyle" merchandise ranges and a huge investment in store refurbishment nationwide. In 1983 the Company introduced the Frasercard, valid at all stores and administered from a central computing facility in Swindon.[1]
Late 1980s and 1990s
In 1985 the Al Fayed family bought the business for £615 million. The Al Fayeds supported the continuing expansion of the company and replaced the stag's head logo with a stag leaping from a triangle.[1]
In 1994, before House of Fraser plc was relisted on the London Stock Exchange, Harrods was moved out of the group so that it could remain under the private ownership of the Al Fayed family.[1] John Coleman, who was appointed Chief executive of the House of Fraser Group in 1996, launched the Linea brand in 1997 and Platinum and Fraser the following year.[1]
House of Fraser set up BL Fraser, a 50-50 joint venture with the British Land Company, in 1999 to buy 15 House of Fraser stores that would continue to be operated by House of Fraser. The company added to its private-label brands in 2000 with House of Fraser womenswear, The Collection menswear, and a Linea Home line.[1]
2000s
The Company opened stores in Croydon's new Centrale shopping centre in 2004 and in the Chapelfield Shopping Centre, Norwich in September 2005 as well as its first store outside the UK in Dundrum Town Centre, Dublin, Ireland also in 2005.[2]
The 135-year-old Barkers business in Kensington High Street closed for the last time on 2 January 2006.[3] Then on 14 January 2006, the company closed its Dickins & Jones store in London's Regent Street, which traces its history back more than 200 years,[4] as well as its Beatties store in Birmingham.[5]
In February 2006 the group announced that it had received a preliminary bid approach valuing it at £300 million,[6] but the bidder, private equity firm Apax, later withdrew.[7]
In May 2006 House of Fraser confirmed a takeover approach from the Icelandic investor Baugur: they acquired the Company for £351.4 million in August 2006.[8]
In September 2007 House of Fraser launched a new website, along with an online store.[9]
In March 2008 House of Fraser opened its first store in Northern Ireland in the newly built Victoria Square Centre in Belfast. This new store at 200,000 sq ft (19,000 m2) will make it the largest store that House of Fraser has opened (as opposed to taken over) in the UK.[10]
On 25 September 2008 the Company opened a store in the Cabot Circus development in Bristol.[11]
House of Fraser Westfield, a new 70,000 sq ft (6,500 m2) department store, opened at Westfield London on 30 October 2008.[12]
From Christmas 2008, House of Fraser decided to expand its horizons by entering the exclusive kitchen market. Co-operating with Regency Kitchens, is supplying kitchens of the Sheraton range. They are currently involved with a “trial” within their Birmingham branch selling kitchens which "perpetuate the finest traditions of English craftsmanship" [13]
The Beatties store in Dudley closed January 2010.
Operations
As of November 2008 the company operates 63 department stores (including their webstore www.houseoffraser.co.uk). Most of these trade as House of Fraser, but some continue to trade under other names such as Army & Navy, Binns, Dingles, David Evans and Rackhams. The stores are in a mixture of town and city centre and regional shopping centre locations. They are generally the largest or second largest department store in their local market. As part of the Bauger takeover all brand names for their stores, including the Beatties branches, will be replaced with the House of Fraser name with the exception of Jenners.[14] Three town centre stores, in Doncaster, Swindon and Leicester now trade as House of Fraser Outlet Stores, offering reduced price items similar to discount department store chain TJ Hughes.
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab House of Fraser archive project
- ^ House of Fraser opens its first Irish department store
- ^ After 135 years closure of Barkers marks death of department stores
- ^ Historic Dickens & Jones to close
- ^ Fears for future of Beatties store
- ^ House of Fraser reveals £300m bid approach (Times Online)
- ^ House of Fraser profits flattered by acquisitions (The Independent)
- ^ House of Fraser agrees Baugur bid
- ^ House of Fraser is to launch an online shop (Accessed 16-August-2007)
- ^ House of Fraser opens biggest ever store in Belfast
- ^ House of Fraser to anchor Bristol Broadmead scheme
- ^ Organic grocer replaces Barkers (Times Online)
- ^ Sheraton Kitchen range
- ^ Baugur plans to sharpen HoF image (Times Online)