Scottish Drapery Corporation

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Scottish Drapery Corporation was a holding company for a group of Scottish department stores and drapers.

History

In 1926 the Scottish Drapery Corporation was created to take over the share capital of several Scottish businesses. They were Pettigrew & Stephens a department store in Glasgow; Patrick Thomson Ltd a department store in Edinburgh; D M Brown Ltd a drapers in Dundee and Watt & Grant Ltd a drapers in Aberdeen. [1] The idea was to increase the buying power and financial resources of the businesses, and were run by John Campbell, who had worked his way up through Pettigrew & Stephens. [2]

The business continued to grow by purchasing a raft of businesses between 1928 and 1950. These were:

In 1952, House of Fraser purchased the Scottish Drapery Corporation (which two-thirds of the shares were then held by Debenhams, through its subsidiary the Drapery Trust) [4] merging the individually run businesses into the House of Fraser group. To fund the purchase of the Corporation, House of Fraser sold all bar the two department stores property to Legal & General and leased them back at favourable rates. [5]

After the House of Fraser takeover, D M Brown continued to trade under this name until 1972 when it became Arnotts. This closed in 2002 [6] and Reid & Pearson closed in 1960s. [7] J & R Allen was converted into an Arnots during the 1970s but subsequently closed.

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References

  1. "House of Fraser Archive : Company:Scottish Drapery Corporation" . Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  2. "John Campbell - Pollokshields Heritage Website" . Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  3. "House of Fraser Archive:Reid and Pearson". University of Glasgow. Retrieved 30 April 2021.
  4. Marwick, William H. (16 December 2013). Scotland in Modern Times by William H Marwick. ISBN   9781136935572 . Retrieved 18 November 2014.
  5. "House of Fraser Archive : Company:Scottish Drapery Corporation" . Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  6. "Dundee Shops Lost but Not Forgotten - Grumpy Mans Gripe Blogspot". 8 October 2012. Retrieved 14 November 2014.
  7. "St Nicholas Street - The Doric Columns Website" . Retrieved 14 November 2014.