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Lewis's

53°24′18.1″N 2°58′45.2″W / 53.405028°N 2.979222°W / 53.405028; -2.979222

Lewis's
Company typeDepartment store
IndustryRetail
FoundedLiverpool, 1856; 168 years ago (1856)
FounderDavid Lewis
Defunct29 May 2010; 14 years ago (2010-05-29)
FateLease unable to be renewed,
brand name bought,
grotto re-opened
SuccessorLewis's Home Retail
Headquarters
Liverpool
,
England
Key people
David Thompson
Sir Philip Green
David Lewis
Louis Cohen
Rex Cohen
Lord Woolton
ParentLHR Holdings Ltd
Websitelewiss.co.uk
Lewis's Building, Liverpool
Former Lewis's Department Store, Market Street, Manchester (as Primark, in 2008)

Lewis's is an online retailer and homeware brand. It was also a chain of British department stores that operated from 1856 to 2010. The owners of Lewis's went into administration several times, including in 1991. The first store, which opened in Liverpool city centre, became the flagship of the chain. Several stores in the chain were bought in 1991 by the company Owen Owen and continued to operate under the Lewis's brand name for several years, but after the closure of the Manchester store in 2001, only the original Liverpool store continued to trade under the Lewis's name. This store was sold in 2007 to Vergo Retail Ltd and closed in 2010.

Lewis's was briefly a member of the International Association of Department Stores, from 1951 to 1953.

History edit

The first Lewis's was opened in 1856 in Liverpool by entrepreneur David Lewis, as a men's and boys' clothing store, mostly manufacturing his own stock. In 1864, Lewis's branched out into women's clothing. In the 1870s, the store expanded and added departments, including shoes in 1874, and tobacco in 1879. His motto was Friends of the People, and he intended the shopping experience to be inclusive.[1]

The first Lewis's outside Liverpool opened in nearby Manchester in 1877. Another store was opened, at the suggestion of Joseph Chamberlain, on the new Corporation Street in Birmingham in 1885. The Manchester store included a full scale ballroom on the fifth floor, which was also used for exhibitions. Buying offices were also located on the fifth floor until a takeover by Liverpool-based competitor Owen Owen (see below). A fourth store opened in Sheffield in 1884 but proved unprofitable and closed in 1888.[2]

Louis Cohen took over the business after Lewis's death in 1885, and oversaw a period of consolidation. After Cohen's death, control passed to Harold and Rex Cohen, who took the company public in 1924. New stores were once again opened, in Glasgow (1929), Leeds (1932), Hanley in Stoke-on-Trent (1934) and Leicester (1936). Lewis's were generally among the largest department stores in their cities.

Lewis's took over the Royal Welsh Warehouse—the company that started large-scale mail order[3]—in 1938. The company responded to the Anschluss with a total boycott of goods imported from Nazi Germany, despite pressure from the pro-appeasement National Government of Neville Chamberlain.[4]

In 1951, the Lewis's group purchased the famous London department store Selfridges, expanding that brand by adding Moultons of Ilford in 1962 and rebranding it Selfridges.[5] In 1965, Lewis's became part of the Sears Group headed by Charles Clore. In 1966, the group launched Miss Selfridge fashions, which later became a store chain in its own right.

A branch was opened on Blackpool promenade, next to Blackpool Tower, in 1964 on the site of the Alhambra. The building had a distinctive 1960s design, with a turquoise tiled exterior. After it closed in 1993, building work was undertaken to remove some of the upper floors and the redeveloped site housed a Mecca bingo hall, with part of the ground floor space being subsequently occupied by Woolworths Group, and later by Poundland, Harry Ramsden's and a variety of smaller retail units.

The company's Manchester store was one of several targets attacked by the Provisional Irish Republican Army (IRA) on 27 January 1975.[6]

Christmas grotto edit

The world's first Christmas grotto opened in Lewis's in 1879, entitled 'Christmas Fairyland';[7] a concept devised by the store's founder David Lewis, this first is listed in the Guinness Book of Records.[7] A staple of Liverpool's festive season, many generations first visited Father Christmas here, with the final displays covering over 10,000 square feet (930 m2). In 2010, the Lewis's grotto manager, display team and staff moved the Lewis's Christmas Grotto to the fourth floor of Rapid Hardware, in the former George Henry Lee (John Lewis) building.

Decline edit

The company went into administration in 1991 as a result of a combination of problems, including the early 1990s recession and failing to compete effectively. This resulted in Liverpool competitor Owen Owen buying up several branches of Lewis's (but retaining the Lewis's brand name on those purchased stores). Sir Philip Green revived the selling of toys on a large scale, by launching the brand Kids HQ in four Lewis's Owen Owen stores, including those in Liverpool and Manchester. The Leicester branch traded independently for a short while, following a management buyout, as 'Lewis's of Leicester', before eventually closing. Other branches, including the Birmingham store, closed down.

After the 1996 Manchester bombing by the IRA, trading space in Lewis's was rented to Marks & Spencer and other smaller retailers displaced following heavy damage to the Corn Exchange. Marks & Spencer and the small retailers moved into new accommodation in 1999; Lewis's suffered from a smaller footfall thereafter, and attempted to remain in business by reinventing itself as partially a 'discount retailer'. In a final attempt to arrest the decline, the remainder-clothing retailer TK Maxx was invited to trade from the basement floor. In 2001, the Manchester branch ceased trading; the premises are now occupied by a branch of Primark.

The last store to trade as Lewis's was the Liverpool original. This followed the sale of other branches of Lewis's from Owen Owen to other operators, including Debenhams and Allders, during the 1990s.

On 28 February 2007, the Liverpool store went into liquidation.[8] On 23 March 2007, it was sold as a going concern to Vergo Retail Ltd., enabling the store to continue to trade as Lewis's.[9] The store closed permanently on 29 May 2010 as the lease could not be renewed.[10] Until it closed the building retained its original lifts, controlled by a lift operator rather than users.

Rebirth edit

After Vergo Retail went into administration in 2010, the rights to the Lewis's name were bought by Lewis's Home Retail Ltd. They intended to open a home store in Bury later that year, and have since bought out six branches of TJ Hughes, including the Liverpool branch, which was also the first branch of Owen Owen.

Lewis's Home Retail purchased seven Paul Simon Homeware stores in 2014 and relaunched them under the Lewis's brand. This coincided with the launch of TJ Hughes 'Lewis's' branded homeware goods. The items are tagged 'Established 1856', referencing the historic store. Lewis's Home Retail also owns Lewis's related brand names including 'Kids HQ' and 'Owen Owen'.

Former branches edit

  • Ranelagh Street, Liverpool (1856–2010) – now part of the Central Village development, partially occupied by PureGym and Adagio Aparthotel
  • Bold Street, Liverpool (1859-)
  • Bon Marché, Basnett Street, Liverpool (1877-1950s)
  • Manchester (1877–2001) – now Primark
  • Sheffield (1884–1888)
  • Birmingham (1885–1991) – now offices, shops, restaurants and County Court[11]
  • Glasgow (1929–1990s) – became Debenhams, now vacant
  • Leeds (1932–1996) – became an Allders, now Broadgate Office and retail units including Sainsbury's
  • Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent (1934–1998) – became Debenhams in 1998 until Debenhams became defunct.
  • Leicester (1936–1993) – demolished (except the original high tower at the western end of M&S on Humberstone gate, now a city landmark)
  • Bristol (1958–1981) – bought by John Lewis, subsequently occupied by Bentalls, House of Fraser, and then Primark
  • Blackpool (1964–1993) – became Mecca Bingo and Woolworths
  • Weston Favell (Supa-Centre) (1975–1985)
  • Newcastle upon Tyne (1985–87) – replaced by Hamleys, then Mark One and HMV, now JD Sports
  • Preston (1980s-1990s) – former Owen Owen store.
  • Oxford (1989–1996) – originally G R Cooper, bought by Selfridges in 1966. Original store demolished 1973 as part of Westgate development and replaced with new store. Subsequently Allders 1996-2005, later Primark 2006-2016 when they relocated to a larger unit in the extended part of the centre; original store partially demolished in 2016, now smaller units[12]
  • Lakeside Shopping Centre (1989-1991)
  • London (Selfridges)
  • Ellesmere Port (Supa-Centre)
  • Planned store in Cheadle, Greater Manchester[13]

Current branches edit

There are non-original stores owned and operated by Lewis's Home Retail Limited, and are former Paul Simon Stores rebranded under the Lewis's name in Chelmsford and Harlow in Essex.

Lewis's Bank edit

From 1928, Lewis's included a banking department in each store. It was incorporated as a subsidiary limited company in 1934, and was owned by Martins Bank from 1958 to 1967 when it was bought by Lloyds Bank. It continued to operate into the 1980s.[14]

Lewis's Bank under Martins' ownership edit

Details of the nine year ownership 1958 - 1967 of Lewis's Bank by Martins Bank are published within the Martins Bank Archive.[15] Lewis's retained its name and operated as a separate entity to Martins throughout. Martins Bank Archive maintains a Lewis's Bank staff database covering the nine years, and family tree researchers can enquire about new entrants, transferred and/or promoted staff, marriages, retirements and deaths.

Popular culture edit

  • The store gave rise to the well-known phrase "Standing there like one of Lewis's". As a popular meeting place for dating couples, 'standing like one of Lewis's' referred to being 'stood up'. It has also been described as being due to idle staff, the statues by Jacob Epstein (Liverpool Resurgent) at the Liverpool branch, and The Man of Fire at the Hanley branch, or the reputation of the Lewis's Arcade at the Manchester store (as popularised in the 1960 film: Hell is a City)
  • The 1990 claymation of Terry Pratchett's Truckers has short interior scenes shot at the Manchester branch of Lewis's, as appears in the credits.
  • The line "Meet under a statue exceedingly bare" in the chorus of the folk-style song "In my Liverpool Home" is a reference to the naked male statue "Liverpool Resurgent", by Jacob Epstein, on the outside of the Liverpool Lewis's building, standing over the main entrance portico.[16] It referred to the custom of Liverpudlians who were planning to meet in town to agree to 'meet under the man'.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Lewis' the shop that time forgot - Daily Telegraph p.17 Mar 2011". Retrieved 23 December 2014.
  2. ^ Stobart, Jon (2017). "Cathedrals of Consumption? Provincial Department Stores in England, c.1880–1930" (PDF). Enterprise & Society. 18 (4): 810–845. doi:10.1017/eso.2016.91. S2CID 157105045.
  3. ^ Davies, John; Jenkins, Nigel; Menna, Baines; Lynch, Peredur I., eds. (2008). The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales. Cardiff: University of Wales Press. pp. 973–974. ISBN 978-0-7083-1953-6.
  4. ^ Bouverie, Tim (2019). Appeasement: Chamberlain, Hitler, Churchill, and the Road to War (1 ed.). New York: Tim Duggan Books. p. 173-174. ISBN 978-0-451-49984-4. OCLC 1042099346
  5. ^ "Bids and deals". The Guardian pg. 13. 18 September 1962. Retrieved 5 May 2021.
  6. ^ "BOMB INCIDENTS (Hansard, 28 January 1975)". api.parliament.uk.
  7. ^ a b "Liverpool's record breaking Christmas grotto beloved by generations". Liverpool Echo. Retrieved 15 April 2024.
  8. ^ "Lewis's bosses call in receivers". BBC News. 28 February 2007.
  9. ^ "Jobs saved as iconic store sold". BBC News. 22 May 2007.
  10. ^ John Siddle (29 May 2010). "Liverpool department store Lewis's closes its doors today". Liverpool Echo.
  11. ^ "Technology and Construction Court". GOV.UK.
  12. ^ "Selfridges (Oxford) Ltd – a very brief history". UKMade. Retrieved 2 January 2021.
  13. ^ Evans, Karen; Fraser, Penny; Taylor, Ian (1996). A Tale Of Two Cities: Global Change, Local Feeling and Everyday Life in the North of England: a study of Manchester and Sheffield. International Library of Sociology. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-13828-4.
  14. ^ "Lewis's Bank Limited - Lewis's Bank Archive". Martins Bank Archive. 18.5 Web Design. Retrieved 2 June 2016.
  15. ^ "Martins Bank Archive".
  16. ^ Leight, Spencer (7 April 2007). "Obituary Pete McGovern". Independent. Archived from the original on 14 June 2022. Retrieved 4 October 2018.

Further reading edit

  • Briggs, Asa (1956). The Friends of the People: the centenary history of Lewis's.
  • Ferry, John William (1960). A History of the Department Store, pp. 277-291.
  • Lewis's Directory for the Towns of Manchester and Salford for the Year 1788. Manchester: Lewis's, [188-?] (Text of Edmond Holme's original directory republished with map of Old Manchester and Salford. pp. 47–65 contain "A description of Manchester" (written for this edition). pp. 66–72 contain "Lewis's": extract from a letter from Mr. Ike Halky to Mr. Hugh Bett, and the back wrapper advt. for Lewis's and view of the store (at 106-122 Market Street). The map reproduces one showing the two towns ca. 1794. British Library catalogue dates as [1880?] which is perhaps too early: Lewis's Manchester store was established in 1877, having been founded in Liverpool in 1856.)

External links edit

lewis, confused, with, john, lewis, partnership, lewis, 405028, 979222, 405028, 979222, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, remo. Not to be confused with John Lewis Partnership or H K Lewis amp Co Ltd 53 24 18 1 N 2 58 45 2 W 53 405028 N 2 979222 W 53 405028 2 979222 This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lewis s news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message Lewis sCompany typeDepartment storeIndustryRetailFoundedLiverpool 1856 168 years ago 1856 FounderDavid LewisDefunct29 May 2010 14 years ago 2010 05 29 FateLease unable to be renewed brand name bought grotto re openedSuccessorLewis s Home RetailHeadquartersLiverpool EnglandKey peopleDavid ThompsonSir Philip GreenDavid LewisLouis CohenRex CohenLord WooltonParentLHR Holdings LtdWebsitelewiss wbr co wbr uk Lewis s Building Liverpool Former Lewis s Department Store Market Street Manchester as Primark in 2008 Lewis s is an online retailer and homeware brand It was also a chain of British department stores that operated from 1856 to 2010 The owners of Lewis s went into administration several times including in 1991 The first store which opened in Liverpool city centre became the flagship of the chain Several stores in the chain were bought in 1991 by the company Owen Owen and continued to operate under the Lewis s brand name for several years but after the closure of the Manchester store in 2001 only the original Liverpool store continued to trade under the Lewis s name This store was sold in 2007 to Vergo Retail Ltd and closed in 2010 Lewis s was briefly a member of the International Association of Department Stores from 1951 to 1953 Contents 1 History 1 1 Christmas grotto 1 2 Decline 2 Rebirth 3 Former branches 4 Current branches 5 Lewis s Bank 5 1 Lewis s Bank under Martins ownership 6 Popular culture 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory editThe first Lewis s was opened in 1856 in Liverpool by entrepreneur David Lewis as a men s and boys clothing store mostly manufacturing his own stock In 1864 Lewis s branched out into women s clothing In the 1870s the store expanded and added departments including shoes in 1874 and tobacco in 1879 His motto was Friends of the People and he intended the shopping experience to be inclusive 1 The first Lewis s outside Liverpool opened in nearby Manchester in 1877 Another store was opened at the suggestion of Joseph Chamberlain on the new Corporation Street in Birmingham in 1885 The Manchester store included a full scale ballroom on the fifth floor which was also used for exhibitions Buying offices were also located on the fifth floor until a takeover by Liverpool based competitor Owen Owen see below A fourth store opened in Sheffield in 1884 but proved unprofitable and closed in 1888 2 Louis Cohen took over the business after Lewis s death in 1885 and oversaw a period of consolidation After Cohen s death control passed to Harold and Rex Cohen who took the company public in 1924 New stores were once again opened in Glasgow 1929 Leeds 1932 Hanley in Stoke on Trent 1934 and Leicester 1936 Lewis s were generally among the largest department stores in their cities Lewis s took over the Royal Welsh Warehouse the company that started large scale mail order 3 in 1938 The company responded to the Anschluss with a total boycott of goods imported from Nazi Germany despite pressure from the pro appeasement National Government of Neville Chamberlain 4 In 1951 the Lewis s group purchased the famous London department store Selfridges expanding that brand by adding Moultons of Ilford in 1962 and rebranding it Selfridges 5 In 1965 Lewis s became part of the Sears Group headed by Charles Clore In 1966 the group launched Miss Selfridge fashions which later became a store chain in its own right A branch was opened on Blackpool promenade next to Blackpool Tower in 1964 on the site of the Alhambra The building had a distinctive 1960s design with a turquoise tiled exterior After it closed in 1993 building work was undertaken to remove some of the upper floors and the redeveloped site housed a Mecca bingo hall with part of the ground floor space being subsequently occupied by Woolworths Group and later by Poundland Harry Ramsden s and a variety of smaller retail units The company s Manchester store was one of several targets attacked by the Provisional Irish Republican Army IRA on 27 January 1975 6 Christmas grotto edit The world s first Christmas grotto opened in Lewis s in 1879 entitled Christmas Fairyland 7 a concept devised by the store s founder David Lewis this first is listed in the Guinness Book of Records 7 A staple of Liverpool s festive season many generations first visited Father Christmas here with the final displays covering over 10 000 square feet 930 m2 In 2010 the Lewis s grotto manager display team and staff moved the Lewis s Christmas Grotto to the fourth floor of Rapid Hardware in the former George Henry Lee John Lewis building Decline edit The company went into administration in 1991 as a result of a combination of problems including the early 1990s recession and failing to compete effectively This resulted in Liverpool competitor Owen Owen buying up several branches of Lewis s but retaining the Lewis s brand name on those purchased stores Sir Philip Green revived the selling of toys on a large scale by launching the brand Kids HQ in four Lewis s Owen Owen stores including those in Liverpool and Manchester The Leicester branch traded independently for a short while following a management buyout as Lewis s of Leicester before eventually closing Other branches including the Birmingham store closed down After the 1996 Manchester bombing by the IRA trading space in Lewis s was rented to Marks amp Spencer and other smaller retailers displaced following heavy damage to the Corn Exchange Marks amp Spencer and the small retailers moved into new accommodation in 1999 Lewis s suffered from a smaller footfall thereafter and attempted to remain in business by reinventing itself as partially a discount retailer In a final attempt to arrest the decline the remainder clothing retailer TK Maxx was invited to trade from the basement floor In 2001 the Manchester branch ceased trading the premises are now occupied by a branch of Primark The last store to trade as Lewis s was the Liverpool original This followed the sale of other branches of Lewis s from Owen Owen to other operators including Debenhams and Allders during the 1990s On 28 February 2007 the Liverpool store went into liquidation 8 On 23 March 2007 it was sold as a going concern to Vergo Retail Ltd enabling the store to continue to trade as Lewis s 9 The store closed permanently on 29 May 2010 as the lease could not be renewed 10 Until it closed the building retained its original lifts controlled by a lift operator rather than users Rebirth editAfter Vergo Retail went into administration in 2010 the rights to the Lewis s name were bought by Lewis s Home Retail Ltd They intended to open a home store in Bury later that year and have since bought out six branches of TJ Hughes including the Liverpool branch which was also the first branch of Owen Owen Lewis s Home Retail purchased seven Paul Simon Homeware stores in 2014 and relaunched them under the Lewis s brand This coincided with the launch of TJ Hughes Lewis s branded homeware goods The items are tagged Established 1856 referencing the historic store Lewis s Home Retail also owns Lewis s related brand names including Kids HQ and Owen Owen Former branches editRanelagh Street Liverpool 1856 2010 now part of the Central Village development partially occupied by PureGym and Adagio Aparthotel Bold Street Liverpool 1859 Bon Marche Basnett Street Liverpool 1877 1950s Manchester 1877 2001 now Primark Sheffield 1884 1888 Birmingham 1885 1991 now offices shops restaurants and County Court 11 Glasgow 1929 1990s became Debenhams now vacant Leeds 1932 1996 became an Allders now Broadgate Office and retail units including Sainsbury s Hanley Stoke on Trent 1934 1998 became Debenhams in 1998 until Debenhams became defunct Leicester 1936 1993 demolished except the original high tower at the western end of M amp S on Humberstone gate now a city landmark Bristol 1958 1981 bought by John Lewis subsequently occupied by Bentalls House of Fraser and then Primark Blackpool 1964 1993 became Mecca Bingo and Woolworths Weston Favell Supa Centre 1975 1985 Newcastle upon Tyne 1985 87 replaced by Hamleys then Mark One and HMV now JD Sports Preston 1980s 1990s former Owen Owen store Oxford 1989 1996 originally G R Cooper bought by Selfridges in 1966 Original store demolished 1973 as part of Westgate development and replaced with new store Subsequently Allders 1996 2005 later Primark 2006 2016 when they relocated to a larger unit in the extended part of the centre original store partially demolished in 2016 now smaller units 12 Lakeside Shopping Centre 1989 1991 London Selfridges Ellesmere Port Supa Centre Planned store in Cheadle Greater Manchester 13 Current branches editThere are non original stores owned and operated by Lewis s Home Retail Limited and are former Paul Simon Stores rebranded under the Lewis s name in Chelmsford and Harlow in Essex Lewis s Bank editFrom 1928 Lewis s included a banking department in each store It was incorporated as a subsidiary limited company in 1934 and was owned by Martins Bank from 1958 to 1967 when it was bought by Lloyds Bank It continued to operate into the 1980s 14 Lewis s Bank under Martins ownership edit Details of the nine year ownership 1958 1967 of Lewis s Bank by Martins Bank are published within the Martins Bank Archive 15 Lewis s retained its name and operated as a separate entity to Martins throughout Martins Bank Archive maintains a Lewis s Bank staff database covering the nine years and family tree researchers can enquire about new entrants transferred and or promoted staff marriages retirements and deaths Popular culture editThe store gave rise to the well known phrase Standing there like one of Lewis s As a popular meeting place for dating couples standing like one of Lewis s referred to being stood up It has also been described as being due to idle staff the statues by Jacob Epstein Liverpool Resurgent at the Liverpool branch and The Man of Fire at the Hanley branch or the reputation of the Lewis s Arcade at the Manchester store as popularised in the 1960 film Hell is a City The 1990 claymation of Terry Pratchett s Truckers has short interior scenes shot at the Manchester branch of Lewis s as appears in the credits The line Meet under a statue exceedingly bare in the chorus of the folk style song In my Liverpool Home is a reference to the naked male statue Liverpool Resurgent by Jacob Epstein on the outside of the Liverpool Lewis s building standing over the main entrance portico 16 It referred to the custom of Liverpudlians who were planning to meet in town to agree to meet under the man See also editSears Group Sears plc unrelated to Sears of the USA Bill Smith fell runner Blacklers another Liverpool Department Store David Lewis CentreReferences edit Lewis the shop that time forgot Daily Telegraph p 17 Mar 2011 Retrieved 23 December 2014 Stobart Jon 2017 Cathedrals of Consumption Provincial Department Stores in England c 1880 1930 PDF Enterprise amp Society 18 4 810 845 doi 10 1017 eso 2016 91 S2CID 157105045 Davies John Jenkins Nigel Menna Baines Lynch Peredur I eds 2008 The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales Cardiff University of Wales Press pp 973 974 ISBN 978 0 7083 1953 6 Bouverie Tim 2019 Appeasement Chamberlain Hitler Churchill and the Road to War 1 ed New York Tim Duggan Books p 173 174 ISBN 978 0 451 49984 4 OCLC 1042099346 Bids and deals The Guardian pg 13 18 September 1962 Retrieved 5 May 2021 BOMB INCIDENTS Hansard 28 January 1975 api parliament uk a b Liverpool s record breaking Christmas grotto beloved by generations Liverpool Echo Retrieved 15 April 2024 Lewis s bosses call in receivers BBC News 28 February 2007 Jobs saved as iconic store sold BBC News 22 May 2007 John Siddle 29 May 2010 Liverpool department store Lewis s closes its doors today Liverpool Echo Technology and Construction Court GOV UK Selfridges Oxford Ltd a very brief history UKMade Retrieved 2 January 2021 Evans Karen Fraser Penny Taylor Ian 1996 A Tale Of Two Cities Global Change Local Feeling and Everyday Life in the North of England a study of Manchester and Sheffield International Library of Sociology London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 13828 4 Lewis s Bank Limited Lewis s Bank Archive Martins Bank Archive 18 5 Web Design Retrieved 2 June 2016 Martins Bank Archive Leight Spencer 7 April 2007 Obituary Pete McGovern Independent Archived from the original on 14 June 2022 Retrieved 4 October 2018 Further reading editBriggs Asa 1956 The Friends of the People the centenary history of Lewis s Ferry John William 1960 A History of the Department Store pp 277 291 Lewis s Directory for the Towns of Manchester and Salford for the Year 1788 Manchester Lewis s 188 Text of Edmond Holme s original directory republished with map of Old Manchester and Salford pp 47 65 contain A description of Manchester written for this edition pp 66 72 contain Lewis s extract from a letter from Mr Ike Halky to Mr Hugh Bett and the back wrapper advt for Lewis s and view of the store at 106 122 Market Street The map reproduces one showing the two towns ca 1794 British Library catalogue dates as 1880 which is perhaps too early Lewis s Manchester store was established in 1877 having been founded in Liverpool in 1856 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lewis s department store New Lewis s Home Store Website Lewis s Famous Christmas Grotto at Rapid Liverpool 5th Floor project http www martinsbank co uk Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lewis 27s amp oldid 1226432058 Lloyds Bank Act 1981, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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