Bourne & Hollingsworth

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Photograph of Bourne & Hollingsworth, taken in the early 1920s Bourne & Hollingsworth photo.jpg
Photograph of Bourne & Hollingsworth, taken in the early 1920s

Bourne & Hollingsworth, known also in its latter days as Bournes was a large department store on the corner of Oxford Street and Berners Street. It was named after its founders, Walter William Bourne and Howard E Hollingsworth, brothers in law, who started the store in Westbourne Grove as a drapery store in 1894. [1] The store then moved to the Oxford Street site (pictured) in 1902 (built in 1894) [2] due to competition with Whiteleys, [3] and by 1928 the store had been remodelled (by Slater & Moberley) in the Art Deco style.

Bourne & Hollingsworth became renowned for selling the best quality goods and for looking after their staff, providing accommodation at Warwickshire House on Gower Street for up to 600 female workers. Like much of Oxford Street, the store suffered bomb damage in 1940, however today much of the art deco façade still survives. [4]

A customer tries on a new hat in the millinery department of Bourne & Hollingsworth in 1942 A customer tries on a new hat in the millinery department of Bourne and Hollingsworth on London's Oxford Street in 1942. D6596.jpg
A customer tries on a new hat in the millinery department of Bourne & Hollingsworth in 1942

The 1954 comedy-drama film The Crowded Day , directed by John Guillermin, was partially shot inside Bourne & Hollingsworth to provide an authentic setting of a department store, which could not easily be achieved in a studio. [5] The store's exterior was also used for some outside location shots, including the background of the film's opening title credit. [6]

The business expanded opening a further store in Southampton in 1959, [7] which later adopted the name Bournes after it was sold in 1979. [8]

The store finally closed its doors in 1983.

The building was known as The Plaza Oxford Street (opened 1986 closed 2016), but was at one time the planned site for Richard Branson's Virgin Megastore. [9]

In September 2018 the building reopened as the new flagship store of fashion and homewares retailer Next.

The name survives with Bourne & Hollingsworth Group as a basement bar in nearby Rathbone Place, named after the department store as the mother of the bar's owner worked there. [10]

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References

  1. "Are you being served?". 11 June 2013.
  2. "The Blitz: Store Wars". 6 September 2010 via news.bbc.co.uk.
  3. Richardson, John (25 June 2018). The Annals of London: A Year-by-year Record of a Thousand Years of History. University of California Press. ISBN   9780520227958 via Google Books.
  4. "Oxford Street history - In Pictures". Time Out London.
  5. "BFI Screenonline: Crowded Day, The (1954)". www.screenonline.org.uk.
  6. Tunstill, John & Brian; James, Simon; Wilkinson, Phil; Lovejoy, Simon (2015). "Film: Crowded Day, The". ReelStreets.com. Reel Streets – Worldwide Film Locations. p. 1. Retrieved 27 November 2015.
  7. "Department store Bargate-street, Southampton for Bourne and Hollingsworth Ltd; architects, W H Saunders & Son, Department store Bargate-street, Southampton for Bourne and Hollingsworth Ltd; architects, W H Saunders & Son; Builder, 195(6029), 17 October 1958, pp 644-7". www.sopse.org.uk.
  8. "Other Independent department Stores from the 1970s". www.philipsuter.co.uk.
  9. Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 9 November 1985.
  10. "Bourne and Hollingsworth | I know this great little place". Archived from the original on 28 October 2014. Retrieved 28 October 2014.

51°30′57.98″N0°8′10.6″W / 51.5161056°N 0.136278°W / 51.5161056; -0.136278