Jewel Food Stores (Australia)

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Jewel Food Stores Pty Ltd
FormerlyWarmans (1920-1970)
Company type Subsidiary
Industry Retail
Founded1970;55 years ago (1970)
FounderJim Fleming Jr.
Defunct2008;17 years ago (2008)
FateRebranded to IGA
Number of locations
130 stores (1998)
Brands No Name
Parent Metcash

Jewel Food Stores was an Australian discount supermarket. It operated from 1960 to 1998 with the final stores being absorbed into the Metcash owned IGA branding. The chain was originally owned and operated by the Fleming family. It was not related to the Jewel supermarket chain in the United States.

Contents

History

The Fleming family sold their Sydney-based Flemings supermarkets chain to Woolworths Limited in June 1960. They continued operating that chain through Woolworths for the next 10 years. In 1970 they acquired the 42-store Warmans grocery chain and relaunched it as a discount supermarket under the "Jewel Food Stores" name.

In 1995, Jewel Food Stores Pty Ltd was acquired by Davids Holdings that later became Metcash Trading Ltd. In 1998 Davids sold 130 Jewel supermarkets to Independent Retailers for about $100 million. A number of stores closed. The Jewel name disappeared almost entirely when the Independent Retailers rationalised their 29 different grocery banners to form one, Independent Grocers of Australia (IGA). A handful of stores retained the branding beyond the rationalisation. These included a Jewel branded store in Sunshine, Victoria until 2000, and one in Lalor Park which retained the Jewel branding until 2008.

Operations

Defunct store formats

Jewel Country Fresh

In the early 1990s, Jewel launched Jewel Country Fresh in response to Franklins and Bi-Lo launching market-style full-line discount supermarkets. These formats carried not only dry groceries and frozen foods, but also fresh foods in a market-style environment.

Jewel Country Fresh advertisement from Wagga Wagga, New South Wales in 1998 Jewel Country Fresh.jpg
Jewel Country Fresh advertisement from Wagga Wagga, New South Wales in 1998

Jewel Food Barn

Jewel was credited with bringing the food barn concept to Australia through the Jewel Food Barn format, which sold dry groceries and frozen foods only. The stores had a downmarket look similar to its major rival Franklins, another discount supermarket chain based and established in Sydney. To a lesser extent, it also competed with the Newcastle-based Shoeys discount supermarkets, later to be taken over by BI-LO from South Australia.

A former Jewel Food Barn store Jewel Food Barn.jpg
A former Jewel Food Barn store

Jewel Food Stores

Jewel was pitched as a low-price supermarket chain similar to Flemings. While Jewel found limited success in New South Wales against long-time incumbent Franklins, new stores in Victoria opened before Franklins and found success there.

Rainbow

Jewel acquired the Rainbow supermarket in Doonside, Western Sydney.

Warmans

Warmans
IndustryRetail
Defunct1970;55 years ago (1970)
FateRebranded to Jewel Food Stores
Headquarters,
Number of locations
42 stores (1970)

Warmans was an Australian grocery chain founded in Concord, New South Wales in 1920s.

The chain operated 42 stores in 1970 when Jim Fleming Jr. acquired the chain, subsequently rebranding it as a discount supermarket under the "Jewel Food Stores" name.

Warmans advertisement in 1968 Warmans advertisement in 1968.jpg
Warmans advertisement in 1968

Private label brands

The generic product range was called "No Name".

Advertising

As it was a discount supermarket, Jewel usually only advertised specials in-store, rather than advertise the specials everywhere. However, in 1995, Jewel did have an advertising campaign, emphasising on its low-price positioning. This was in the same year that the Fleming family sold the 130 Jewel supermarkets to what is now Metcash (then Davids).

See also

References