Skip to content
Date updated: 23/11/2022

"In the decades following the Second World War, the British press was profligate in its use of metaphors for redundancy when discussing the subject of London department stores. Shipwrecks, lumbering giants, ostriches and dinosaurs were all evoked, suggesting their vulnerability, conservatism and scale."

Sonia Ashmore, Extinction and Evolution: Department Stores in London's West End, 1945–1982, The London Journal Trust, 2006

"The UK has lost 83% of its main department stores in the five years since the collapse of the BHS chain"

BBC News headline (27 August 2021)

Introduction

Department Stores have perhaps made an impression on us all in some way. Whether your first memory is of being taken to Littlewoods to get your school uniform or browsing the luxury items at Harrods. The department store has been a theatre of experience with a vast number of products laid out in a grand setting.

Now their iconic status is at stake following a change in societal behaviour with a move towards shopping online. The coronavirus pandemic inevitably saw some store casualties that were already in decline, such was the fate of Debenhams, aged 242 years at closure.

LMA holds Building Act case files within the archives of the London County Council (1889-1965) and Greater London Council (1965-1986) which include plans, builders account books, photographs and ephemera relating to department stores across London and the suburbs. Some aspects of these collections will be explored in this article. Images that are on the London Picture Archive are indicated by ‘LPA’.

Where did it all begin?

The earliest model for a department store in London was the Pall Mall draper Harding, Howell and Company who opened their store in 1796 at no.89. It was divided into different areas: furs and fans, fabric for dresses, haberdashery, jewellery and clocks, and perfume and millinery.

Interior view of Harding, Howell and Company Drapers in 1809
Harding, Howell and Company Drapers: Interior view, 1809. LPA ref: 310477

Ackermann's Repository of Arts described the premises in 1809:

'It is fitted up with great taste, and is divided by glazed partitions into four departments…Immediately at the entrance is the first department, which is exclusively appropriated to the sale of furs and fans. The second contains articles of haberdashery of every description, silks, muslins, lace, gloves, &etc. In the third shop…you meet with a rich assortment of jewelry, ornamental articles in ormolu, French clocks, &etc.; and on the left, with all the different kinds of perfumery necessary for the toilette. The fourth is set apart for millinery and dresses; so that there is no article of female attire or decoration, but what may be here procured in the first style of elegance and fashion.'

This Sun Fire Insurance document shows the policy taken out by Anthony Harding, John Shorland, Richard Adams and John Howell on the Pall Mall Haberdashers in 1798, which was valued at £1750.

Sun Fire Insurance Policy, for Anthony Harding, John Shorland, Richard Adams and John Howell on the Pall Mall Haberdashers in 1798
Sun Fire Insurance Policy, 20 Jan 1798. Ref: CLC/B/192/F/001/MS11936/410/675212, © Tracey Fisher

Other early stores, that later established a department store model, included Fortnum and Mason which was originally founded as a grocery store in 1707 on Piccadilly (LPA 138280). Debenhams had its beginnings in 1778 at 44 Wigmore Street as a draper’s store run by William Clark, with William Debenham joining him as a partner in 1813. Before the flagship store was established on Oxford Street another partnership emerged in Debenham and Freebody at 27-37 Wigmore Street. This was completed in 1908 and built by Trollope & Colls Limited.

Front elevation of Debenham and Freebody, Wigmore Street in 1974
Debenham and Freebody, 17-37 Wigmore Street, Westminster, 1974. LPA ref: 106033

Builders

LMA hold the records of Trollope & Colls Limited including the prime cost books for the Welbeck Street address of Debenham and Freebody (B/TRL/028). They finely detail material used in the construction and the extensive employment of labour involved, such as bricklayer, carpenter, joiner, plasterer, tiler, mason, slater, painter, plumber, and founder.

Also held at LMA are the records of the builders Higgs and Hill Limited (B/HIG/HH) which includes a photograph album (B/HIG/HH/10/03) with various department stores that they had contracts to work on. The album has images of: Bourne and Hollingsworth, Barker’s of Kensington, Peter Robinson, Liberty, Gamages, Swan and Edgar, Dickins and Jones. Another album in this collection (B/HIG/HH/10/01/337) shows the exterior of Warwickshire House, Gower Street which could house up to 600 unmarried female workers from Bourne and Hollingsworth. In the album are views of the indoor swimming pool which dates from the 1930s.

The Theatre of Shopping and Consumerism

The Pantheon on Oxford Street by James Wyatt opened in 1772 and was the site of a popular entertainment venue where people came to ‘see and be seen’ parading the latest fashions and indulging in masquerades. This building burnt down in 1792, was later restructured and in 1833-4 was rebuilt to the plans of Sydney Smirke as a bazaar. Smirke’s building provided two levels for people to explore and various counters at ground level, with lots of natural light coming through the glass roof. The site was demolished in the late 1930s and then occupied by Marks and Spencer.

Interior of the Pantheon, Oxford Street, 1834
Pantheon, Oxford Street, 1834. LPA ref: 26601

This Benjamin Read print (below) reflects equally the grand nature of the design at the Pantheon and the clothing of its fashionably dressed patrons. To the right behind the arch colonnade, a female customer with a fan points to an item at the counter. The whole scene has an atmosphere of luxury and desirability.

View of figures wearing winter fashions in the Pantheon, on Oxford Street, 1834
The Pantheon, Oxford Street, Winter Fashions 1834, by Benjamin Read. LPA ref: 22937

In the nineteenth century, the rise of the middle-classes led to the growth of department stores, with an increasing desire for ‘self-creation’ through consumption. Women were beginning to take up space in the male dominated city with products aimed exclusively at them:

'Women’s active participation in consumption activities…challenged the notion that their proper place was confined to the home and meant that women would need access to typically masculine spaces of the city in order to fulfil their roles as consumers.' Leslie Kern, Feminist City: Claiming Space in a Man-Made World

Oxford Street became a central hub of department stores as a result of its geographical proximity to the theatre district and its good transport connections. Rohan McWilliam’s study London's West End: Creating the Pleasure District, 1800-1914’ speaks of the theatrical approach in the use of spectacle in the window displays in the West End to draw people in. The illumination of the streets enabled people to window shop into the evening:

'The new West End department stores allowed customers to simply just look...The focus on just looking meant that they built on the kind of visual attractions that had been built up in the theatre but also in fairgrounds, magic lantern shows, and optical extravaganzas. Customers developed a loyalty to particular shops just as they had a loyalty to certain theatres which they associated with a particular kind of show. Department stores were also sustained through a strong relationship with the popular press which was used for advertising purposes.'

London County Council Tramways poster showing a night-time scene in London's West End, 1923.
London Tramways connected people to the theatre district as shown in this poster designed in 1923 by F.W. Farleigh. LPA ref: 36882

Window Shopping

The mechanisation of glassmaking in the nineteenth century meant that larger sheets of glass could be produced. The windows were expansive to entice the shopper in with displays of visual merchandising reaching new heights and flaunting the brand of the department store. Window shopping became a popular form of entertainment and made such stores a destination for tourists.

Window display at John Lewis department store in Oxford Street with mannequins in nightwear, 1957
John Lewis department store in Oxford Street with mannequins in nightwear, 1957. LPA ref: 103738

Whiteley’s: the purpose-built department store

Whiteley’s developed from a drapery store at 31 Westbourne Grove in 1863. By the 1890s the company had over 6,000 staff and live-in accommodation was supplied. 1907 saw the relocation of Whiteley’s to Bayswater with the new store built in 1908-11 by Belcher and Joass. The building was further extended between 1925 to 1927 when it was bought by Gordon Selfridge. Later it was transformed into a shopping centre and foodhall and in 2022 was being developed as a luxury hotel to plans by Norman Foster.

View of Whiteley's department store in Westbourne Grove, with horse and carriages, 1890
Whiteley's in Westbourne Grove 1890. LPA ref: 97710
Whiteley’s grand sweeping ground floor staircase, 1967
Whiteley’s ground floor staircase, 1967. LPA ref: 341118

Selfridges: an engaged experience

Harry Gordon Selfridge opened the store that bears his name in 1909 and introduced a library and reading room, restaurants, reception rooms for customers to be entertained in their own language and exhibits about innovations. Selfridge wanted the customer to have an engaged experience to keep them at the store for the maximum time.

Selfridges department store in Oxford Street, corner of Orchard Street, 1971
Selfridges, Oxford Street, 1971. LPA ref: 103758

Seduction is an important part of consumerism. One shops in the belief of being transformed by the purchased object: both the enchantment and deception are co-dependent. A giddiness often ensues in navigating the maze of floors and levels in the department store. This is conveyed in a passage about the experience of the Yayoi Kusama window display at Selfridges in 2012:

'We want to be seduced. Yet we also feel suffocated by this honey, whose only intention is to entrap. The excess of luxury induces an almost nauseous sense of panic in its sensory overload. Beguiling. Intoxicating. Making me lose my head.' Jacki Willson, The Paradoxical Body: Fashion and Art in Being Gorgeous

Selfridges, Oxford Street, 2021 © Charlotte Hopkins
Selfridges, Oxford Street, © Charlotte Hopkins 2021
Newspaper article for Bomb damage to Selfridges, Oxford Street in December 1944
Bomb damage to Selfridges, Oxford Street in December 1944. Ref: CLC/521/MS21599

Percy John Home compiled a scrapbook in the 1940s whilst living at 11 Onslow Gardens during the air raids and flying bomb attacks on London. It consists of newspaper cuttings, photographs, and some sketches, and includes this entry recording damage to the side frontage of Selfridges department store. The damage occurred when a V1 flying bomb fell on a public house, the Red Lion at the corner of Barratt Street, as shown in the LCC map below.

Close up of Selfridges on the London County Council Bomb Damage Map, 1945
London County Council Bomb Damage Map, sheet 61 covering Mayfair, Soho, 1945. LPA ref: 346240
Poem in Selfridge's lift, by children at Gateforth Primary School,  1964
'In Selfridge's Lift'. This poem was displayed as part of an exhibition of written work by school children at Gateforth Primary School. It conveys the busyness of the store in the 1960s including a drawing of a packed lift. LPA ref: 187826.

Swan and Edgar 'the leading West End Drapers'

This store was located at 45-51 Piccadilly and 49-63 Regent Street, spanning the corner of Piccadilly Circus. It was remodelled between 1910-1920 by the architect Sir Reginald Blomfield with the Higgs and Hill building firm contracted to work on the site.

Suffragettes damaged the window of the store in a campaign initiated by the Women’s Social and Political Union in November 1911 and again in March 1912:

'The premises of Messrs. Swan & Edgar seemed to have fared the worst of any.' (The Scotsman, Saturday 2 March 1912)

In popular culture, Swan and Edgar was referenced in the 1970s-1980s television show, Are You Being Served? It also had an appearance in the Ealing comedy, Laughter in Paradise (1951), with Alastair Sim trying to get arrested for shoplifting at the store.

Debenhams took over in the 1970s until the doors closed in 1982.

Premises of Swan and Edgar, Piccadilly Circus, 1920
Swan and Edgar, Piccadilly Circus, 1920. LPA ref: 135449

Peter Robinson: ‘birthplace of the blouse’

Peter Robinson advertised its store as ‘the birthplace of the blouse’ with ladies’ wear being a specialism. It started out in 1833 at 103 Oxford Street as a small linen draper’s shop and growing to a department store with 2000 employees.

Later situated at 214-234 Oxford Street at the corner with 252-260 Regent Street it is now a Grade II Listed building. The original building was designed in 1912 by Sir Henry Tanner. The eastern extension was completed for Peter Robinson in 1924 by H. A. Hall and Clarkson.

Window cleaners on ladders, cleaning at Peter Robinson's department store
Cleaning Peter Robinson’s windows. LPA ref: 280562
Topshop at 214-234 Oxford Street, Oxford Circus, 1975.
Topshop at 214-234 Oxford Street, Oxford Circus, 1975. LPA ref: 103812

The Topshop clothing brand was situated in the basement of this branch from 1964 in a bid to attract the younger shopper. By the end of the 1970s the Peter Robinson brand was disappearing. Topshop operated on the site independently until its closure in 2021 and in 2022 plans were underway for IKEA to occupy the building.

Top Shop in Oxford Circus 2021
Top Shop, Oxford Circus, 2021. © Charlotte Hopkins 2021

Harrods: embracing new technology

Harrods on Brompton Road in Knightsbridge is probably one of the most famous stores and many tourists make it a destination stop when visiting London. Founded in 1849, it is the largest department store in Europe.

In 1908, The Daily Telegraph & Courier asserted, 'Harrods comprises more than 80 magnificent departments under one roof, forming the most pleasant, complete, and up-to-date shopping resort in the world.'

The following advert describes the increasing availability of modern wireless technology in the 1920s which was being sold in their store and which can be observed in the image below.

'Now that Wireless Telephony is within the reach of all and so wide a public is taking up this fascinating science, the simplified wireless instruments that Harrods offer are meeting with a wide appreciation.' (Illustrated London News, 17 June 1922)

Wireless Department at Harrods, showing Anson, HMV and Phillips products, c.1930
Wireless Department at Harrods c.1930. LPA ref: 340927

Barkers to Biba of Kensington: a new era

Barkers of Kensington on Kensington Church Street was founded by John Barker and James Whitehead, later Lord Mayor of London, in 1870. The new site was later developed as Derry & Toms in 1930s and after it closed in 1973 became home to fashionable Biba until 1975.

Decorative panel depicting beauty products from the front of Barkers of Kensington, 1985
Decorative panel depicting beauty products from the front of Barkers of Kensington, 1985. LPA ref: 340795

Biba was begun by Barbara Hulanicki, who had a store in Abingdon Road, Kensington in 1964 before establishing at the old Derry and Toms store. This signalled the era of the luxury boutique. The 1970s interior encompassed decorative elements from 1930s Art Deco and the use of swirling motifs from the earlier Art Nouveau era. The original logo was inspired by 1890s lettering from this period and gives a nod to Liberty’s designs. Later it was redesigned in an Art Deco sunburst style.

In Hulanicki’s autobiography, ‘From A to Biba’, she describes how she felt about the old-world colliding with the new:

 

"Each day I walked from the Church Street shop to the new site in Kensington High Street, I had examined the Derry and Toms department store building close by. It was so beautiful and so unappreciated. No one there had any respect for the building or its superb detail. It had been a star in its heyday but now as it grew old and dusty no one even gave it a glance. I began to daydream that one day we would bring it back to its original splendour."

Excerpt from Barbara Hulanicki’s autobiography, ‘From A to Biba’

The store bathed the visitor in an immersive experience of pure glamour akin to being on a Hollywood movie-set. Everywhere was clad in black and gold with peach-toned mirrors. The floors were arranged as follows: Below Stairs – Foodhall, Ground Floor - Accessories (Shoes), First Floor - Clothes & Accessories, Second Floor - Children’s Wear, Third Floor - Men’s & Boys Clothes, Fourth Floor - Household, Fifth Floor - The Rainbow Room (Restaurant and Rooftop Garden with flamingos which were introduced in the 1950s).

Large glass & mirror makeup counter, on the ground floor at Biba, 1975.
Makeup Counter, ground floor at Biba, 1975. LPA ref: 340827
The Sarah Bernhardt Area, Biba, 1975
The Sarah Bernhardt Area, Biba, 1975. LPA ref: 340826

On the first floor was a bed clad in seductive leopard-skin on a raised platform with fringing around the frame, an art nouveau-inspired mirror and carpet on a raised platform which sutured the shopper into the glamour. This was known as the Sarah Bernhardt area, after the French actress of the late nineteenth century. This area housed the lingerie department with items typically scattered on the bed and on the side drawers.

Biba interior lounge on ground floor, 1975
Biba interior lounge on ground floor, 1975. LPA ref: 340838

Biba did not do display windows and instead supplied sofas where people could observe the outside and perhaps for them to be observed in this space. The ethos was to supply the customer with an atmosphere that they felt comfortable in and not pressured to buy.

Speaker designed by Whitmore-Thomas for the in-house sound system
Speaker designed by Whitmore-Thomas for the in-house sound system. LPA ref: 340835

Freeman’s: from mail order catalogue to digital department store

Freeman and Co were founded in 1905 from a terraced house in Clapham and specialised in clothing by mail. By the late 1930s the company had around 1000 staff and moved to larger premises at 139 Clapham Road. They had become the largest mail order company in the UK by this stage and distributed their catalogue each month. The Clapham offices were bombed in the Second World War and as a result all of the company records were destroyed.

Front elevation of Freemans Mail Order Warehouse, 139 Clapham Road, Lambeth in 1980
Freemans Warehouse, 139 Clapham Road, Lambeth, 1980. LPA ref: 86987

The arrival of out-of-town shopping centres from the 1960s onwards assisted in the demise of department store culture. The centre itself may be anchored by a department store with other shops around it. But, as there were other choices of brands all under one centre, the competition increased.

The beginnings of the mail order catalogue set the scene for the ability to shop remotely without a physical store being necessary. There is no longer a catalogue, but Freeman’s have modelled themselves online as a 'vibrant digital department store'.

Post-Lockdown Landscape

Boarded up Debenhams, Oxford Street in May 2021
Debenhams, Oxford Street, May 2021. The store did not reopen after the COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns. © Charlotte Hopkins, 2021

The department store was a place to imagine and construct a new identity, to dream and to be tempted by numerous delights under one roof. It had a performative role in its theatrical staging of brands to entice consumption. But can tangibility be replicated in the online world and what about those moments of serendipity on the shop floor? A romantic nostalgia is indeed embedded in the fabric of these buildings which embody a sense of community and history.

On the web:

Further Reading in LMA’s Reference Library:

  • Shopping for Pleasure by Erika Diane Rappaport (Princeton University Press, 2000) 40.0 RAP
  • The Department Store: A Social History by Bill Lancaster (Leicester University Press, 1995) 35.42 LAN
Explore the London Department Store gallery on LPA