List of supermarket chains in the United Kingdom
As of May 2024, there are 17 supermarket chains currently operating in the United Kingdom. The food retail market has been dominated by the 'big four' supermarkets – Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda and Morrisons – who made up over three quarters of sector market share in 2010. Tesco is the largest retailer in Great Britain, with a market share of 27.5% at the end of 2022.[a][1]
However, discounters Lidl and Aldi have grown rapidly.[1] A number of sources reported that in September 2022, Aldi overtook Morrisons to become Great Britain's fourth largest grocery retailer.[1][2] At the end of 2022, Morrisons and Aldi both remained at 9.1%.[b][1] Collectively, the big four accounted for two thirds and the big four and discounters combined for four fifths of the grocery market share at the end of 2022.[c][1]
Northern Ireland has similar major chains. In 2022, Tesco was the largest retailer in NI, followed by Sainsbury's, Asda and Lidl.[3] However, the market is different because some chains are not shared between the different parts of the UK. For example, Aldi and Morrisons do not operate there.[4]
Historical background
[edit]Before 1932, British grocery stores operated as counter service, however that year David Greig opened the first self-service grocery store in the UK at Turnpike Lane, Hornsey, but the store although a success, was closed down after eight months of the experiment.[5][6] The first permanent self-service grocery store in the United Kingdom was opened 12 January 1948 in Manor Park, London by the Co-op, with Tesco opening their first self-service grocery store and Marks & Spencer starting a trial of self-service in the same year.[7] Sainsburys opened their first self-service branch in Croydon in 1950.[8] By 1951, the Co-op had 604 self-service stores.[7] In the same year, Express Dairies opened Britain's first supermarket under the Premier Supermarket brand in Streatham, South London,[9] while the first Fine Fare was opened as a single supermarket later that year, as an offshoot of the Welwyn Department Store.[10] Waitrose opened their first supermarket in Streatham during 1955, although their first self service store had opened at their subsidiary Schofield & Martin in 1951.[7][11] Tesco though did not open their first supermarket until 1956 in Maldon, Essex,[12] while Morrisons was not until 1961,[13] and Asda was not until 1963.[14] By 1959, multiple grocery retailers only accounted for 10% of grocery outlets and 25% of the British market, however by a decade later the expansion of supermarkets had seen them take 41% of all grocery turnover.[15] The growth of the supermarket is also shown in store numbers, with Britain only having 175 supermarkets in 1958 but had expanded to 2,803 by 1967.[16] Britain's first out of town supermarket was opened by American retailer GEM in West Bridgford, Nottinghamshire by in November 1964.[17]
List of current UK supermarket chains
[edit]Chain operators | Logo | Est. | Owned by | Based in | Market share (%)[18][19][20] | Store count | Brands | Notes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2021 | 2007 | 2000 | ||||||||
Aldi UK | 1990
|
Aldi Süd GmbH | Atherstone | 8.0 | 2.6 | 1.5 | 960[21] |
|
No frills supermarket | |
Amazon Fresh UK | 2021
|
Amazon | London | - | - | - | 19[22] | Cashierless store | ||
Asda | 1965
|
|
Leeds | 14.6 | 16.6 | 14.1 | 603 |
|
Founded by merger of Queens (owned by the Asquith family) and Associated Dairies. | |
Booths | 1847
|
Booth Family and staff | Preston | - | - | - | 28 | Only operating in northern England | ||
Co-op Food | 1844
|
Various consumers' co-operatives | Manchester | 5.7 | 4.4 | 5.4 | 2,500[24] | About 16 retail co-operatives with a shared Identity, the seven largest are: | ||
Farmfoods | 1954
|
UK private company | Cumbernauld | - | 0.5 | - | 340 | Started as a meat processing business in Aberdeen in 1954.
Primarily focused on Frozen foods Opened first retail outlet in the 1970s also in Aberdeen. | ||
Heron Foods | 1979
|
B&M | Melton | - | - | - | 290 |
|
Primarily frozen foods; concentrated mainly in the Midlands and the North. Heron Foods was bought in 2017 with some stores rebranded to B&M Express since 2018.[25][26] | |
Iceland | 1970
|
The Walker and Dhaliwal families[27] | Deeside | 2.3 | 1.6 | 2.8 | 1030 |
|
First store opened at Oswestry, Shropshire in 1970 | |
Lidl GB | 1994
|
Lidl Stiftung & Co. KG | Kingston upon Thames | 6.1 | 2.2 | 1.3 | 935[28] | No frills supermarket | ||
Marks & Spencer | 1884
|
Publicly traded on the London Stock Exchange |
London | - | 4.3[29] | - | 852 | Clothing and food retailer | ||
Morrisons | 1899
|
Clayton, Dubilier & Rice[30] |
Bradford | 9.8 | 11.2 | 4.9 | 542 |
|
From 2011 to 2015 also operated M Local (later MyLocal) convenience stores. | |
Ocado | 2002
|
Publicly traded on the London Stock Exchange |
Hatfield | 1.8 | - | - | 0 | Online only, product supply partnership with M&S. | ||
Oseyo | 2015
|
UK private company | Kingston upon Thames | 0 | - | - | 15 | Asian goods chain; such as from Korean, Japanese, Chinese, Thai and Indian. | ||
Proudfoot | 1948
|
Family owned | Scarborough | - | - | - | 5 | Small independent chain with shops around Scarborough. | ||
Sainsbury's | 1869
|
Publicly traded on the London Stock Exchange |
London | 15.5 | 16.2 | 17.9 | 1,430 |
|
||
Tesco | 1919
|
Publicly traded on the London Stock Exchange |
Welwyn Garden City | 27.7 | 31.6 | 25.0 | 3,443 (UK)[31] | Shoprite was bought in 2023 and branding phased.[32][33] From May 2021, Tesco Metro stores were phased out and rebranded as Tesco Express or Tesco.
Tesco purchased Booker Group in 2018, the group includes Budgens as well as[34] | ||
Waitrose & Partners | 1904
|
John Lewis Partnership | Bracknell | 5.0 | 3.9 | 2.7 | 344 |
|
List of defunct UK supermarket chains
[edit]These supermarkets are either no longer trading, have been renamed, or have been taken over and rebranded.
Chain operators | Est. | Fate | Closed | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Adsega | 1960 | Bought by Tesco | 1965 | Formed by Martin Green and Henry Seaberg. North East England based, had budget model and around 50 stores. It was purchased by Tesco in 1965 for just over £1 million.[35] |
Ailsa Superstores | 1970s | Small chain of Scotland based supermarkets, owned by Allied Suppliers (51%) and Goldberg Department Stores (49%)[36][37] | ||
AJ & M Freezer Foods | Purchased by Iceland | Newcastle-upon-Tyne based freezer food chain.[38] | ||
APT Stores | Small supermarket chain with the catchphrase The Store with More.[39] | |||
Axe Stores | Created in 1976 by Italian supermarket chain PAM with British partner Hintons, the partner was bought by PAM in 1978. The 15 stores were bought by the management team in 1987. The company used the slogan Axe – Cut of Value.[40][41] | |||
Bateman & Sons | Bought by Booker Group and merged into Budgens. | 1973 | Chain of 31 supermarkets and 17 self-service stores based in South Wales.[42][43] | |
Bejam | 1968 | Bought by Iceland | 1989 | Frozen food chain started by John Apthorp in London, it grew became the biggest frozen food, freezer and microwave seller in the United Kingdom. The business was bought by Iceland after a hostile bid. |
Big W | 1998 | Discontinued, rebranded as Woolworths | 2004 | 21-megastores chain started by Kingfisher plc, to include all the products of their chains, Woolworths, B&Q, Comet and Superdrug. Seven stores sold groceries via a partnership deal with Booker Group and were sold to Asda and Tesco, the remaining 14 stores rebranded and downsized under the regular Woolworths banner. |
Bishops Stores | Bought by Budgens[44] | 1984 | 63 stores in south east England[42] | |
Bonimart Freezer Centre | 1981 | Purchased by Argyll Foods and added to Cordon Bleu chain.[45] | ||
BP Safeway | 1998 | Dissolved | 2004 | Joint venture between Safeway and BP that operated forecourt convenience stores.[46] Morrisons bought Safeway in 2004 ans the partnership was dissolved. Morrisons then had no plans to enter into the convenience store market and, in September 2005, Morrisons sold twenty-one of the sites to Tesco for conversion to Tesco Express stores. The other nine reverted to BP ownership through a Right of first refusal and five of the nine were later sold to Somerfield.[47] |
Brian Ford's Discount Store | 1975 | Bought by Tesco in 2004 | 2010 | Opened by Brian Ford after the sale of the family Ford & Lock business to Gateway in 1974. The business opened in the former Deveres Kensington engineering building in Barnstaple, Devon expanding with an extension in 1981. The business was based on the 'cash & carry' principle.
The business was purchased by Tesco in 2004, with the store closing in June 2010 after permission was granted to demolish the site and build a Tesco Extra in its place.[48] |
Brierleys Supermarkets | Went into receivership in 1974.[42] Superseded by Hillyards supermarket | Small supermarket chain founded by Frank Brierley, a former market trader in Northamptonshire, offering very low prices with a moderate choice of products; on occasions the owner would set up a market stall right in the middle of the supermarket. Launched an own brand range with the pirate logo.[49][50][51] | ||
Budgens | 1872 | Became a convenience store symbol group | Grocery store chain, that was initially based in the South East of England. Owned by several companies, including Booker Group on two occasions, the business left the supermarket trade under the ownership of the Musgrave Group to concentrate on convenience stores before becoming a symbol group. | |
Burton Supermarkets | Bought by Fine Fare | Small Nottinghamshire based supermarket chain purchased by Fine Fare and re-branded[52] | ||
Capital Freezer Centres | Bought by Farmfoods | Chain of freezer stores located in England and Scotland; owned by United Biscuits since 1979; a management buyout happened in 1989[53][54] | ||
J.C. Carline | Bought by Associated British Foods, rebranded as Fine Fare | Supermarket chain of around 40 stores owned by grocers William Cussons. Cussons were purchased by Great Universal Stores in 1962. The business was sold to Associated British Foods and integrated into its subsidiary Fine Fare[55][56][57][58] | ||
Carrefour | 1970s | Exited out of UK market, sold to Gateway/Somerfield, then later to Asda | 1990 | French retailer went into partnership with Wheatsheaf Distribution & Trading Ltd.[42] |
Cartier's Superfoods | 1969 | Bought by Tesco | 1979 | Small Kent based supermarket chain started by Lewis Cartier in 1969, the chain was taken over by Tesco for £19.4 million.[59] |
Cater Brothers | 1881 | Became part of Presto | 1979 | Henry John Cater founded the grocery and provisions business in Mile End, London 1881. Cater Brothers were a South East-based chain. When their first supermarket (Bromley,Kent) opened in 1958 it was the largest in the UK. In 1972 they were bought out by Debenhams after the death of the chairman Leslie Cater in the same plane crash that killed F J Wallis. In 1979 Debenhams sold the chain to Allied Suppliers who re-branded the stores under their Presto brand. |
Cave Austin and Company | 1896 | Taken over by Burton, Son and Sanders in 1963. Purchased by Moore Stores in 1966.[60] | 1966 | Cave Austin and Co., Ltd was a chain of Grocery Stores and Cafés in the South East of England. At its height, there were over fifty branches over South-East London, North-East London, Kent, and Surrey as well as cafés in many major South Coast resorts such Deal in Kent and St Leonards-on-Sea and Hastings in Sussex. |
Cee N'Cee | Late 1950s | Purchased by Kwik Save in 1978. | 1978 | Discount supermarket started in Kidsgrove by Alex Humphries, who sold the 49 store chain to Kwik Save in 1978.[61][62] |
Challenge Supermarket | Became part of Frank Dee | Supermarket based in Yorkshire owned by Wheatsheaf and Distribution & Trading Ltd,[42] that was purchased by Frank Dee in the 1980s and incorporated into the chain.[63] | ||
Cooltrader | Bought by Heron Foods | 2017 | Opened in Wrexham, founded by Iceland founder Malcolm Walker.[64] Cooltrader became part of Iceland after Malcolm Walker's takeover of that business, then sold in 2012 to Heron Foods. The location In Shrewsbury still has the cooltrader branding[25] | |
Coopers & Co | Bought by Fine Fare | 1955 | Scotland based supermarket and grocers chain bought by Fine Fare and re-branded as Coopers Fine Fare[65] | |
Cordon Bleu Freezer Food Centres | 1970 | Purchased by Argyll Supplies | Chain of freezer shops started by W N Cassell in 1970,[66] before being purchased by Argyll Supplies subsidiary Louis C Edwards; several chains were purchased and added by Argyll to form second largest freezer chain after Bejam;[45] stores were re-branded under the Lo-cost or Presto name[42] | |
Crazy Prices | Bought by Tesco | Associated British Foods owned Northern Ireland group | ||
Curleys Supermarkets and wine cellars | 1960s | Supermarkets were sold to Sainsburys in 2008 and the remaining 11 Wine Cellars to WineFlair seven years later in 2015 | Stores (2009) Wine Cellars (2017) | Chain of supermarkets and Wine stores in Northern Ireland[67] |
Dalgety Freezer Centres | Bought by James Gullivers Argyll Supplies | 38 freezer centre bought by James Gulliver and added to Argyll Supplies Cordon Bleu business.[68][42] | ||
Danish Food Centre | [69] | |||
David Greig | 1870 | Bought by Fitch Lovell | Late 1970s | Grocery store chain started in South London, that in 1972 became part of Wrensons. The Wrensons business was renamed David Greig in 1973. The business was nearly sold to Combined English Stores, but they withdrew their bid after concerns regarding the company's finances, and it was eventually sold to Fitch Lovell. Fitch Lovell sold off many of the stores to recoup the purchase price, and in the late 1970s merged the firm into its Keymarkets business. |
DEE Discount Stores | Re-branded as Gateway, later Somerfield now owned by Co-op | Chain of supermarkets based in North East of England; parent company Linfood Holdings purchased the smaller Gateway chain and re-branded stores as Gateway and the parent company as Dee Corporation | ||
Dewhurst Freezer Food Centres | Chain of 52 freezer stores.[42] | |||
Dickie's Discount | Bought by Linfood & Oriel Foods and split up | 1977 | Early discount supermarket chain with stores in locations such as Exeter and Hastings. In 1977, both Linfood and Oriel Foods purchased the business, with 11 stores going to Linfood, while 9 going to Oriel.[70][71][72] | |
Downsway Supermarkets | Bought by Fine Fare | 1976 | East Anglian based supermarket group with 80 stores owned by Vestey Group. Group had purchased grocery stores Platt Stores and C.H.Kaye, and had £10.9 million in sales during 1974. 47 stores were sold in 1976 and converted to Fine Fare stores. The remaining stores were converted to Freezer Fare.[73][74] | |
Elmo Stores | Bought by Fine Fare | 1967 | Started as grocery store chain by Mossy Vanger, a cousin of Jack Cohen.[75] The business grew into a small chain of 28 stores based in East Anglia and the South of England. The business was purchased by South African retailer O.K Bazaars in 1962, the same year they opened their first supermarket in Norwich.[76][77] It was later purchased for £1m by Fine Fare and run as Elmo Discount Centres before being re-branded under either Fine Fare or Shoppers Paradise.[78] | |
extra | Supermarket brand used by Leicestershire Co-operative Society.[79] | |||
Fairway | c.1960s | Bought by Frank Dee | 1980s | Doncaster based chain of supermarkets started by Mr. Harry Round,[80] bought by Frank Dee in 1980s and merged into that chain[81] |
Fine Fare | 1951 | Bought by Gateway | 1986 | Britain's third supermarket until the 1980s behind Tesco and Sainsburys; bought by Gateway Corp. in 1986 and shops rebranded as Gateway by 1988 |
Fulham Frozen Foods | Purchased by Iceland | Doncaster based frozen food retailer[38] | ||
Fulton's Foods | 1974 | Bought by Poundland | 2022 | Primarily frozen foods supermarket chain based in South Yorkshire with branches across the Midlands and North of England; acquired by Poundland in October 2020.[82] In February 2022, Poundland announced the closure of all remaining Fulton's Foods stores.[83] |
Food Giant | 1970s | Rebranded as Kwik Save | 1990s | Originally part of Somerfield group, all stores converted to Kwik Save following the Somerfield/Kwik Save merger |
Ford & Lock | 1960 | Sold to Gateway | 1974 | 36 shops across south-west England; owner Brian Ford went on to open a new store in his own name[84] |
Freezer Fare | Bought by Argyll Group | 1980 | 66 freezer store chain formed by Vestey from the remainder of Downsway, bought by Argyll Group and added to Cordon Bleu chain[85] | |
Freezeway | Bought by Farmfoods | Small chain of freezershops bought by Farmfoods[54] | ||
FreshXpress | 2007 | Administration in 2008, liquidated in 2009 | 2009 | Smaller stores of former Kwik Save chain; bought out by management team led by Brendan Murtagh |
Frank Dee Supermarkets | Re-branded as Gateway, later Somerfield now owned by Co-op | Chain of supermarkets based in North East of England; parent company Linfood Holdings purchased the smaller Gateway chain and re-branded stores as Gateway and the parent company as Dee Corporation | ||
Galbraith supermarkets | 1894 | Bought by Allied Suppliers, then Argyll Group | Scottish chain | |
Gateway Foodmarkets | 1950 | Rebranded as Somerfield | 1992 | |
GEM | 1965 | Purchased by Asda | 1966 | Opened Britain's first out of town supermarket in West Bridgford, Nottinghamshire during 1964, GEM was an American department store retailer who ran the store under a concessions basis. A further store in Leeds was added in 1965, but the UK business was sold to Asda in 1966.[86] |
Goodfellows | Hull and East Yorkshire based chain[87][88] | |||
Grandways | Some stores sold to Argyll Group for their Presto chain and Kwik Save, remainder renamed Jacksons | 1992/3 | Regional in Yorkshire | |
Granville Supermarkets | 31 stores purchased by International Stores.[74] | |||
GT Smith | Bought by Co-operative Group | 2002 | Regional in West Yorkshire | |
J. Gunn & Co | Voluntary Liquidation | 1970 | Started life as corn merchant stores, but moved into the self service grocery and supermarket business during the 1950s and 60s, operating under the names Gunn Self-Service Stores, Selina Supermarkets and Selina Superettes. Company went into voluntary liquidation.[89] | |
Haldanes | 2009 | (including UGO stores) | 2011 | Fell into Administration[90] |
Hanburys[91] | 1889 | Bought by Co-Op | 1997 | Started in 1889 when Jeremiah Hanbury opened a small store in Market Street, Farnworth, selling butter and bacon. In 1929, the business was bought by Bolton wholesale grocers E.H. Steele Ltd. In 1997 the 31 Hanburys stores, which cover the north-west, including 8 in Bolton, were acquired by United Norwest Co-op and subsequently re-branded. |
Heagneys Supermarkets | 1999 | North East chain, who purchased fellow local business Star Discount and operated from 12 stores.[40] | ||
Hodgson & Hepworth | South Yorkshire grocery chain based in Doncaster. Supermarket at St Sepulchre Gate. Purchased by Fine Fare, closed in 1979 and became a Primark.[92][93] | |||
Hillards | 1880 | Bought by Tesco | 1988 | Several locations throughout Midlands, North East |
Hintons | Bought by Argyll Foods to become part of Presto | Mainly in North East England and Yorkshire | ||
Homefare Supermarket | Based in former Wickhams Department Store building on Mile End Road.[94] | |||
Home and Colonial Stores | 1883 | Bought by Cavenham Foods | 1972 | Acquired Lipton's (1931), Galbraith's (1954), Andrew Cochrane, A. Massey and Sons, R. and J. Templeton and Vye and Son. Converted to Presto or Lo-Cost stores |
Hollis Supermarkets | Former Grocery business based in Norfolk and Suffolk which opened several supermarkets, including a store in the former Boundary Garage on Hellesdon and the current site of Wilkinson in Gorleston.[95][96] | |||
Igloo | Purchased by Iceland | North East based freezer food chain.[38] | ||
Imperial Stores | Bought by International | 1977 | Grocery store group in South Buckinghamshire. Purchased by International Stores in 1949. High Wycombe branch converted to a supermarket in 1963. Closed when International Stores bought Price-rite chain which had a store opposite.[97] | |
Irwin's Stores | Bought by Tesco[98] | |||
International | 1874 | Bought by Dee Corporation | 1996 | Stores were re-branded gateway or sold off to competitors |
Anthony Jackson Foodfare | Bought by Victor Value | [99][74][100] | ||
Jacksons | Bought by J Sainsbury | 2008 | See also Grandways, above, which was originally part of the same group. Stores originally traded under the Jacksons name, and were slowly converted to the Grandways brand. After the sale of a number of larger stores in 1992, all smaller store reverted to the Jacksons facia until the company was sold to Sainsbury in 2004.[101] The Jackson name was then retained under the 'Sainsbury's @ Jackson' fascia until they were rebranded Sainsbury's Local in 2007-8.[102] | |
James Duckworth | Wright's Biscuits was purchased by Cavenham Foods in 1971, and was merged with Moores Stores into holding company Cavenham-Southland. Stores were re-branded under Moores Stores. | Founded by James Duckworth, and known as Jimmy Ducks, the grocery chain grew to 180 stores across Lancashire, Yorkshire and Cheshire. The business was bought by Wright's Biscuits in 1958, and during the 1960s started opening supermarkets under the James Duckworth brand. | ||
John Gardner | Bought by Safeway | 1963 | Small chain of supermarkets based in London. Purchased along with sister brand Prideaux for £1.2 million.[103][104] | |
Kenton Supermarkets | Small chain based in North West of England[105] | |||
Key Markets Supermarkets | Bought by Dee Corporation | Created by food giant Fitch Lovell in 1963. Purchased by Dee Corporation in 1983. Re-branded as Gateway. | ||
Kibby's Supermarkets | Chain of supermarkets owned by Unigate. The business was sold off to Laws Stores in the early 70s.[106] | |||
Kingsway Supermarkets | Small chain based in the South West. Became part of Gateways.[107][108] | |||
Kwik Save | 1959 | Administration | Company purchased by Somerfield in 1998. Name and 177 stores sold by Somerfield in 2006 but went into administration in 2007. The name was later purchased by Costcutter who began opening convenience stores under the name in 2012. | |
Laws Stores | c.1890s | Bought by Wm Low for £7.1 million in 1985 | 1985 | Chain of supermarkets focused on North East England |
Lennons Supermarkets | 1958 | Bought by Dee Corporation | Chain of Supermarkets and off-licences based in North East. Started out as a wholesaler in 1900, before opening a chain of grocers in between the wars. Opened their first supermarket in 1956 in Widnes and by 1974 operated 34 supermarkets and 49 off licences. The company had 41 supermarkets and 96 off-licenses
when it was bought by the Dee Corporation in 1984 for £23 million. The stores were re-branded as Gateway.[109][74][110] | |
Leos | Rebranded Co-operative Pioneer | Name given to larger co-operative stores during the 1980s | ||
Liptons | 1871 | Bought by Allied Suppliers | Converted to Presto or Lo-Cost stores | |
Lo-Cost | Converted to Safeway. Some stores sold to other chains e.g. Kwik Save. | |||
Lodges | 1921 | Bought by Co-operative Retail Services | 1995 | Trading name of F and A E Lodge. Founded in Huddersfield by Albert and Frank Lodge growing to more than 30 shops, mainly in West Yorkshire and Lancashire market halls by the early 1960s. Opening first supermarket in a converted cinema in Marsh, followed by another converted cinema at Waterloo. Market hall shops were closed with other supermarket branches opening in Meltham, Huddersfield Town Centre, Crossland Moor, Lepton, Darwen, and finally Honley and Holmfirth in 1975. In the late 1960s, Clough Mill in Birkby was bought with plans for 90,000 sq ft hypermarket, objections delayed opening until 1978 and it was sold to Asda in 1980. Remaining stores were bought in 1991 for more than £5 million.[111] The brand was sold to Co-operative Retail Services in March 1995.[112] |
Lowfreeze | Bought by Bejam | Small chain of freezer shops started by W M Low as part of expansion plans. The business was bought by Bejam.[54][113] | ||
Mac Food Centre | Bought by International Stores | 1978 | Supermarket chain created by Unilever by expanding their Wet fish stores, Mac Fisheries. Was further expanded by the purchase of Premier from Express Dairy's | |
Madora Supermarkets | Chain of supermarkets owned by Fitch Lovell's subsidiary Key Markets.[114][115] | |||
Mainstop | Acquired by Gateway | 1981 | ||
Markdown Supermarkets | Stores nationwide including Nantwich Road, Crewe,[116] Prescot,[117] Denton,[118] Disbury and Tottenham[119] | |||
A. Massey & Sons | Bought by Home & Colonial | Chain of Scottish grocery stores purchased by Home & Colonial.[74] The chain opened a few supermarkets.[120] | ||
Memory Brothers | Bought by Wallis Supermarkets | 1974 | Grocers that were owned by the Matthews Butchery chain and operated 6 supermarkets, including opening in Woolwich in the former Century cinema. The business was sold to F J Wallis in 1974.[121][122][123] | |
Mercury Market | Bought by Fine Fare | Chain of supermarkets based in the North West opened by the De Rooy family who had previously run grocers.[124][125][126] | ||
Merlin Supermarkets | Bought by Associated British Foods | 1967 | Chain of supermarkets formed by Melias. The original business was set up as a separate company, but in 1961 Melias closed the company and transferred management internally. A majority shareholding in Melias was purchased by Associated British Foods (ABF) in 1967, with many of the management structure shared with ABF's Fine Fare business and Merlin's stores rebranded under the Fine Fare name. ABF purchased the remaining shares in Melias in 1972 and was merged into Fine Fare holding company.[127][128][129][130] | |
Midland Supermarket | Had a branch in Earle Street, Crewe.[131] | |||
Moores Stores | Bought by Cavenham Foods in 1971; Merged with Sister group owned by Wright's Biscuits; added to Cavenham's Allied Suppliers group in 1976/77. | 1977 | Chain of small supermarkets based in the North East of England which had a turnover of £53m in 1969/70[132] The store was bought by Cavenham Foods in 1971 after purchasing the shareholdings of Wright's Biscuits owner Willie Webster.[133][134]
The stores of Wright's and Moores were merged into a new group, Cavenham-Southland, part owned by 7-eleven owner Southland Corporation. The stores were later transferred to Cavenham's Allied Suppliers division after it purchase in 1976, and were either rebranded under the Liptons or Presto nameplates. | |
Netto | 1990 | Bought by Asda | 2011 | Was a no frills supermarket. In 2010, Asda acquired Netto UK for £778M from Dansk Supermarked Group. In 2011, 147 of the stores were rebranded under the Asda Supermarket name, with the remaining 47 stores being sold off to other companies such as Morrisons and new convenience store UGO and other retailers due to competition laws. |
Netto | 2014 | 2016 | Joint-venture with Sainsbury's.[135] In July 2016, Sainsbury's ended the joint venture, scrapping the Netto name in the UK once again. | |
Normans supermarkets | Bought by Plymco | Chain of cash and carry stores in the South West. Founded by Ken Norman in Budleigh Salterton in 1957, becoming first cash and carry in the South West. 7 Stores across Somerset, Devon and Cornwall by 1979. Sold to Singlo Holdings who opened further stores before selling to Plymco.[136][137] | ||
Normid | Rebranded Co-op | Was owned by United Co-operatives | ||
Norco | Rebranded Co-op | Aberdeen based co-operative society | ||
Oakeshotts | Purchased by Fine Fare | Grocery and supermarket chain run by Barker & Dobson (originally called Scribbans-Kemp), which brought together 180 shops trading under 31 different names including United Counties, Baylis and Stevenson & Rush. The business had sales of £14.2 million in 1974. Purchased by Fine Fare.[138][139][74] | ||
Orchard Frozen Foods | Went into receivership and 12 stores were bought by Iceland | 1986 | Chain of freezer centres based in the South East of England and owned by the Carr family. The business went into receivership in 1985 and 12 of the 37 stores were purchased by Iceland, after a bidding war with rival Bejam, for £910,000.[140] | |
Paddy's Superstore | Chain of 33 no frills grocery superstores. Purchased by Morgan Edwards, a wholesaling business that also owned Supavalu, which became part of Argyll Foods. The stores were either closed or moved to the Lo-Cost brand.[141][142] | |||
Peglers Stores | Wright's Biscuits was purchased by Cavenham Foods in 1971, and merged with Moores Stores into holding company Cavenham-Southland. Stores were re-branded under Moores Stores. | A grocery chain purchased by Wright's Biscuits that moved into the supermarket trade during the late 1960s. | ||
Premier Supermarkets | Bought by Mac Fisheries | 1965 | Subsidiary of Express Dairies, opened UK's first supermarket in Streatham, South London in 1951.[9] Sold after losing out on purchase of Irwin's stores to Tesco | |
Presto | 1977 | Rebranded as Safeway after purchasing the chain | 1998 | |
Price Rite | Chain of stores purchased by British American Tobacco[143] and incorporated into International Stores; some stores were re-branded as International Stores while 67 were sold to Argyll Foods.[45] | |||
Prideaux | Bought by Safeway | 1963 | Small chain of supermarkets based in London. Purchased along with sister brand John Gardiner for £1.2 million.[103][104] | |
Quality Fare | Bought by the Co-operative Group in 2004.[144] | 19 store chain started by the Leathley family in 1969 and based in the North East. | ||
Queens Supermarkets | 1958 | Merged with Associated Dairies and GEN to form ASDA | 1965 | Small chain of supermarkets started by Asquith family in Pontefract. In 1965 merged with Associated Dairies and purchased the GEN brand, relaunching as ASDA Queens, before becoming ASDA. ASDA is an abbreviation of ASquith and DAiries. |
Rainbow | Discontinued, rebranded as parent Co-op | |||
Richway Supermarkets | Retail chain operating in South of England and the Isle of Wight.[145] | |||
Robsons Eucomarket | Based in Haxby Yorkshire.[146] | |||
Safeway | 1962 | Bought by Morrisons | 2005 | Safeway Compact stores sold to Somerfield. Was still trading under Safeway in Channel Islands until becoming Waitrose in 2010. |
Sainsbury's Freezer Centres | 1974 | Bought by Bejam | 1986 | Sainsburys opened the chain of freezer shops to try and compete with the new style of food store, with the first store opening in Southbourne near Bournemouth. By 1980 there was 21 freezer centres, but these were sold off in 1986 to Bejam. |
Sainsbury's Savacentre | 1977 | Discontinued, Rebranded Sainsbury's | 2005 | Savacentre was a joint project started by Sainsburys and BHS to compete in Hypermarket scene. Sainsburys added when BHS pulled out of the company. |
Sanders Brothers | 1877 | Bankruptcy | 1950s | One of Britain's biggest grocers and food producers, with over 263 stores in 1937 within London and the South East. The business collapsed in the 1950s.[89] |
Savemore | Hull based group created by Cliff Dunn and spread across the North.[147] | |||
Saverite | 1968 | Bought by West Midlands Co-operative Society which later became Mid-counties Co-operative after a merger with Oxford, Swindon and Gloucester Co-operative | 2000 | Shropshire based grocery business started in 1869. Renamed Saverite in 1968 (from Morris & Co) and expanded into supermarkets. Sold to Mid-Counties Co-operative in 2000.[148] |
Savon Foods | Converted to Key Markets | 1970s | A supermarket subsidiary set up by grocers, Green's Stores of Ilford, who were in turn owned by Fitch Lovell. Would eventually become part of their Key Markets chain.[149][150] | |
Scan Superstores | 1974 | Sold to Tesco | 1978 | Two superstores setup by Debenhams to sell a mixture of food and non food products.[151][152][153] |
Schofield & Martin | Rebranded Waitrose | c.1965 | Small chain of grocers based in South Essex purchased by Waitrose in 1944. Had the first self-service supermarket store within the Waitrose group in 1951. | |
SIMCO Supermarkets | Taken over by Dunnes Stores | Supermarket chain based in North of England.[154][155] | ||
Shoppers Paradise | Taken over by Gateway | Discount food store chain created by Associated British Foods from un-profitable Fine Fare stores. Became part of Gateway as part of Fine Fare purchase. | ||
Shopping Giant | Brand name for Co-op stores in the Greater Manchester area | Brand name for CO-OP | ||
Shop Rite | 1972 | Bought by Kwik Save, Still trades as ShopRite in the Isle of Man stocking a range of Waitrose & Iceland products as well as locally produced goods | 1994 | Discount supermarket chain started by Isle of Man business in Scotland, and expanded to the North of England between 1990 and 1994. The company's finances collapsed. |
Smiths Freezer Centres | c.1990s | Small chain of freezer stores located in Essex; went into liquidation during the 1990s | ||
Somerfield | 1875 | Purchase agreed by the Co-operative Group on 16 July 2008 for £1.56bn; from 2009 many larger stores were sold off and smaller stores rebranded to The Co-operative Food[156] | 2011 | |
Solo | Trading name of Gateways - rebranded Somerfield | Trading name created by Gateways | ||
St Catherine's Freezer Centres | Bought by Iceland | 1983 | Chain of 18 freezer centres located in Bristol and South West area | |
Star Discounts | Bought by Heagneys Supermarkets in 1990s | 1990s | Goole based chain, with stores located across Teesside.[40] | |
Stewarts Supermarket Limited | Bought by Tesco | Associated British Foods owned Northern Ireland group | ||
Stitchers Supermarkets | Bought by Downsway | Small chain of supermarkets purchased by Downsway and re-branded[157] | ||
Supa Centa | Supermarket brand owned 50% by Fitch Lovell.[158][159][160] | |||
Supa-Save | 1960 | Closed by owners Keddies | 1970s | Independent American style superstore opened by Southend's largest department store chain, Keddies, in the former Essoldo cinema. Store was closed in the 70s due to competition from national competitors, and the building demolished and the site used to extend the department store. |
Supavalu | Chain setup by Morgan Edwards Ltd, a Shrewsbury-based wholesaler. Morgan Edwards had 30% purchased by James Gulliver Associates subsidiary Avonmiles. In 1980, Morgan Edwards was purchased by Gulliver's other company, butchers Louis G Edwards for £4.3 million and became part of the newly formed Argyll Food in May 1980. The Supavalu brand was merged into the Lo-Cost brand.[142] | |||
Super Key | Parent Key Markets was bought by Linwood Corporation, owners of Gateway. Stores were re-branded. | Alternative brand name for certain larger Keymarket Stores. Largest store was in Wisbech.[161][162] | ||
Supermac | 1964 | Demolished to make way for Forrestside Shopping Centre | Northern Ireland's first out of town supermarket opened by Anderson & Macauley.[163] | |
Supernational Stores | 1935 | Bought by Gateway | ||
Taskers | 1961 | Local supermarket based in Burnley and Blackpool, started by Eddie Skinner.[164] | ||
Templeton supermarkets | 1880 | Bought by Allied Suppliers then Argyll Group | Scottish chain, rebranded as Presto | |
Tower Discount | Were re-branded under Allied Suppliers brands | 1977 | Trading name given to the larger supermarkets owned by Cavenham-Southland.[165] | |
Value Foods | 1959 | Re-branded as Kwik Save | 1965 | Opened as a grocery store in Rhyl in 1959, grew into a small supermarket chain operating in North Wales. In 1965 the brand name was changed to Kwik Save.[42] |
Victor Value | Bought by Tesco | 1968/1986 | Chain created by the combine, London Grocers; larger stores were rebranded as Tesco after takeover; remaining stores were sold to Bejam in 1986, before being sold to Kwiksave in 1989 by Iceland after its purchase of Bejam. | |
Vye & Son: The Kentish Grocer | 1817 | Bought by Home & Colonial | 1960s | Independent chain of about 40 stores. Originally tea and coffee importers.[166] |
Wallis | 1955 | Bought by Somerfield | 2003 | Founded by Francis J Wallis of Rainham Essex in 1955. By 1968 there were 38 stores. In 1977 the chain's 100 stores were sold to British American Tobacco and merged with their already owned chain International Stores. The stores were re-branded International. The company officially still existed and was wound up by Somerfield, who had purchased International Stores in 2003. |
Wallis Frozen Foods | Purchased by Farmfoods | 1990 | A chain of 18 stores, Purchased by Farmfoods in the 1990, which was there foray into England.[167][168] | |
Wavy Line | Small chain of small supermarkets and convenience stores located in the South and South East of England | |||
Walter Willson | Bought by Alldays | Chain of small supermarkets and convenience stores in the north east of England and Cumbria | ||
Wellworths | Bought by Musgrave Group & Safeway | 1997 | Northern Ireland supermarket chain split into Supervalu and Safeway | |
Whelan Discount Stores | Bought by Morrisons for £1.5 million[169] | 1978 | Chain of supermarkets based in Lancashire started by JJB Sports owner Dave Whelan | |
Wm Low | Bought by Tesco | Presence in Scotland and northern England | ||
Williamson & Treadgold | Bournemouth based grocers that opened a supermarket at The Hampshire Centre.[170] The store was eventually purchased by Sainsburys. | |||
Woolco | 1966 | Discontinued, rebranded as Woolworth and later bought by Gateway in 1986 | 1982 | Hypermarket chain started by Woolworth |
Wrensons | 1909 | Renamed David Greig | 1973 | Grocery store chain based in Birmingham, who were purchased by Martin & Peter Green, formerly of Adsega in 1972. They purchased fellow grocery store chain Redmans and David Greig, moving into the supermarket trade, before rebranding the business under the David Greig name. |
Waitrose effect
[edit]Proximity to a supermarket has been widely reported[171][172][173] to be an amenity that can have a significant effect on residential property prices in Britain. Beginning under Andy Hulme[174] and continuing under Mike Songer,[175] the home mortgage unit of Lloyds Bank has published pricing research that examines the premiums commanded by homes in a given neighbourhood against comparables in the same post-code and correlates the difference in price with convenience of access to the various supermarkets. The following table averages information from neighbourhoods across England and Wales, compiled by Lloyds Bank for their 2016 report using supermarket location information from CACI Datalab and house price information from the UK Land Registry.[176]
Supermarket | Nearby property premium | |
---|---|---|
(%) | (£) | |
Waitrose | 10% | £38,666 |
Sainsbury's | 10% | £27,939 |
Marks & Spencer | 9% | £27,182 |
Tesco | 9% | £22,072 |
Iceland | 8% | £20,034 |
Co-op | 8% | £17,904 |
Morrisons | 5% | £10,558 |
Asda | 2% | £5,026 |
Lidl | 2% | £3,926 |
Aldi | 1% | £1,333 |
See also
[edit]- List of supermarket chains, for supermarkets worldwide
- Kantar Worldpanel – UK grocery market share figures
- List of convenience shops in the United Kingdom
- List of discount shops in the United Kingdom
- List of clothing and footwear shops in the United Kingdom
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e "Big four line-up changes as UK grocery price inflation accelerates again". www.kantar.com. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
- ^ "Aldi becomes Britain's fourth-largest supermarket". BBC News. 13 September 2022. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
- ^ McDonald, Gary (18 October 2022). "Northern Ireland's grocery market down by 3 per cent as prices continue to soar". The Irish News. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
- ^ McAleer, Ryan (28 September 2021). "No sign of Aldi changing policy on Northern Ireland". The Irish News. Retrieved 5 January 2023.
- ^ "The Centenary of Britain's First Self-Service Grocery Shop". Building our past. 9 January 2023.
- ^ Kent, Tony; Brown, Reva (2009). Flagship Marketing. Concepts and Places. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-07668-0.
- ^ a b c Historic England (12 January 2023). "How England's First Self-Service Store Heralded the Birth of the Modern Supermarket". Heritage Calling.
- ^ "Overview". Sainsbury Archive. Archived from the original on 6 October 2008. Retrieved 11 November 2008.
- ^ a b Helen Gregory (3 November 2001). "It's a super anniversary: it's 50 years since the first full size self-service supermarket was unveiled in the UK". The Grocer. Archived from the original on 17 January 2012. Retrieved 30 June 2010.
- ^ "Welwyn Garden City:Welwyn Gardens own Supermarket Chain". Our Welwyn Garden City. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
- ^ "Acquisition of small food chains by Linda Moroney – Waitrosememorystore.co.uk". Retrieved 31 March 2016.
- ^ "Historic Maldon District: Jack Cohen and Maldon's pioneering supermarket". Maldin Hub News. 7 September 2021.
- ^ "Welcome To Morrisons" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2011. Retrieved 12 March 2011.
- ^ "Obituary: Peter Asquith". Yorkshire Post. 14 June 2008. Archived from the original on 2 May 2019. Retrieved 2 May 2019.
- ^ Bill Grimsey (2012). Sold Out. Filament Publishing. p. 97. ISBN 9781908691316.
- ^ Andrew Rosen (2003). The Transformation of British Life, 1950-2000. A Social History. Manchester University Press. p. 150. ISBN 978-0-7190-6612-2.
- ^ "How first out-of-town superstore changed the UK". BBC News. 2 September 2013.
- ^ 2021: "Grocery Market Share - Kantar". kantarworldpanel.com. Retrieved 5 March 2021.
- ^ 2000: "Supermarket market share (UK)". Retrieved 19 June 2016.
- ^ "Number of store branches of Aldi Süd in the United Kingdom (UK) from 2013 to 2022". Statista.
- ^ Nott, George (22 June 2022). "Amazon chooses Sevenoaks for first checkout-free Fresh store outside London". The Grocer. Retrieved 21 July 2022.
- ^ "Asda reveals higher finance costs as boss defends debt structure".
- ^ "co-operative.coop Annual Report 2021 (PDF, 221 pages, 3.9 MB)" (PDF).
- ^ a b "Iceland agrees Cooltrader sale to Heron Foods". Retrieved 31 March 2016.
- ^ "B&M converts Heron Foods branches to 'B&M Express'". The Grocer. 3 September 2018.
- ^ "Our Owners – About Iceland". about.iceland.co.uk. Retrieved 5 October 2024.
- ^ "About Lidl GB - Lidl Great Britain". corporate.lidl.co.uk.
- ^ "Annual report" (PDF). corporate.marksandspencer.com. 2007. Retrieved 23 June 2019.
- ^ "Morrisons ends 54-year run as public company as CD&R takes control".
- ^ "Preliminary Results 2017" (PDF). Tesco plc. Retrieved 24 April 2017.
- ^ "Shoprite sells all nine stores to Tesco".
- ^ "Final Shoprite stores to close at the end of the month". Manx Radio.
- ^ "Musgrave Group Agrees Sale of Budgens and Londis to Booker". Musgrave Group. Archived from the original on 14 December 2015. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
- ^ "Forgotten budget supermarket empire used to be fixture on Manchester's high streets". Manchester Evening News. 30 January 2023.
- ^ "Goldberg". The Journal. 58: 112. 1973.
- ^ "Slow down at Goldberg". Investors Chronicle. Vol. 28. 1974. p. 1104.
- ^ a b c Malcolm Walker (2013). Best Served Cold. Icon Books. ISBN 9781848317017.
- ^ "Vintage shopping bags - Little Red Dog". Retrieved 11 May 2015.
- ^ a b c "Axe Stores. This is a description not an instruction". Stirling Retail. 9 September 2021.
- ^ Retailing and 1992 The Impact and Opportunities. Corporate Intelligence Research Publications. 1989.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "A STUDY OF THE EVOLUTION OF CONCENTRATION IN THE FOOD DISTRIBUTION INDUSTRY FOR THE UNITED KINGDOM" (PDF). The Commission of the European Communities. 1. October 1977.
- ^ Lionel Faraday Gray (1975). "Bookers McConnell plc". Jane's Major Companies of Europe. McGraw-Hill. p. B-117. ISBN 978-0-354-00514-2.
- ^ "Competition Commission report, para 3.10 (a)" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 January 2007. Retrieved 27 March 2007.
- ^ a b c Andrew Seth, Geoffrey Randall (1999). The Grocers. The Rise and Rise of the Supermarket Chains. Kogan Page Publishers. p. 103. ISBN 9780749421915.
- ^ "BP and Safeway to create 2,000 jobs". BBC News. 15 July 1998.
- ^ "UK: Morrisons sells Safeway forecourt sites to BP, Somerfield, Tesco". 26 September 2005.
- ^ "End of an era as Brian Fords closes". North Devon Gazette. 25 June 2010. p. 25. Retrieved 6 July 2019.
- ^ "The 12 Northamptonshire shops we've loved and lost". Northants Live. 26 December 2020.
- ^ "Recalling the pioneering Leicester discount supermarket and its flamboyant owner". Leicestershire Live. 10 May 2019.
- ^ "From the archives: Peterborough's pirate trader". Peterborough Telegraph. 8 February 2016.
- ^ "The High Road in Beeston - Station Road to Acacia Walk". Exploring Beeston's History. Retrieved 6 December 2021.
- ^ "Biscuits again drawing support - The Glasgow Herald p.16 Jan 1984". Retrieved 11 May 2015.
- ^ a b c "Capital assets - The Herald p. 23 December 1989". 23 December 1989. Retrieved 11 May 2015.
- ^ "Enter Gussies". The Economist. Vol. 204. 1962. p. 840.
- ^ Carson, David (1967). Jnternational Marketing: A Comparative Systems Approach. p. 392.
- ^ "Associated British Foods". Investors Chronicle and Stock Exchange Gazette. Vol. 9. 1969. p. 364.
- ^ "GUS now goes in for supermarkets". The Guardian. 24 August 1962. p. 14.
- ^ "Cartier". Pintrest. Retrieved 1 January 2022.
- ^ The New Dawn. 1966. p. 84.
- ^ "Bee-Jay Discounts - the shop where you can get almost anything (including Port Vale rock!)". Stoke Sentinel. 23 October 2017.
- ^ Leigh Sparks. Spatial-Structural Relationships in Retail corporate Growth: A Case-Study of Kwik Save Group P.L.C. (PDF). Institute for Retail Studies, University of Stirling. Retrieved 10 February 2024.
- ^ "u09456 - Picture Sheffield". Retrieved 21 December 2015.
- ^ "Malcolm Walker's biography - Iceland.co.uk". Archived from the original on 29 June 2017. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
- ^ "Associated British Foods". The Accountant. 147: 824. 1962.
- ^ "Argyll Supplies". Retail Business. No. 275–286. 1981. p. 17.
- ^ "In with the new". Belfast Telegraph. 14 April 2003.
- ^ Seth, Andrew; Pringle-Pattison, Andrew Seth; Randall, Geoffrey (1999). The Grocers: The Rise and Rise of the Supermarket Chains By Andrew Seth, Geoffrey Randall. Kogan Page Publishers. ISBN 9780749421915. Retrieved 23 June 2017.
- ^ "Those Were The Days: Danish culture's Glaswegian roots". The Herald. 13 September 2017.
- ^ Parliamentary Papers. Vol. 40. 1982. p. 67.
- ^ "Exeter Memories". Facebook. 9 October 2023.
- ^ "Dickies Discount Store, on The Ridge". Hastings Forum. 27 March 2015.
- ^ "Fine Fare buys 47 stores". Financial Times. 1 July 1976.
- ^ a b c d e f Commission for European Communities (October 1977). A STUDY OF THE EVOLUTION OF CONCENTRATION IN THE FOOD DISTRIBUTION INDUSTRY FOR THE UNITED KINGDOM (PDF).
- ^ Stephen Aris (1970). The Jews in Business. p. 149. ISBN 9780224619530.
- ^ "O.K. Bazaars (1929) Ltd". Beerman's Financial Year Book of Southern Africa. Vol. 1. 1964. p. 526.
- ^ "Supermarket Sweep". Vintage Roadscene. No. 233. April 2019. p. 11.
- ^ "How many of these Worcester supermarkets did you use?". Worcester News. 17 March 2021.
- ^ "Extra Co-op Superstores". Pinterest. Retrieved 16 May 2024.
- ^ "Supermarket opened at Denaby". South Yorkshire Times. 10 April 1965.
- ^ "Supermarket opened at Denaby - South Yorkshire Times April 10, 1965". Retrieved 21 December 2015.
- ^ "Poundland acquires Fultons Foods, so what's next for its frozen food offering?". Retail Gazette. 21 October 2020. Retrieved 23 April 2021.
- ^ "Fultons Foods closing: Poundland confirms closure of remaining stores, including shops in Sheffield". The Star. 13 February 2022. Retrieved 4 April 2022.
- ^ "End of an era as Brian Fords closes - North Devon Gazette p.25 June 2010". 25 June 2010. Retrieved 23 June 2016.
- ^ "Argyll Foods to buy RCA offshoot". The Times. 16 December 1960.
- ^ Whysall, Paul (April 2005). "GEM, 1964–1966: Britain's First Out-of-Town Retailer" (PDF). The International Review of Retail, Distribution and Consumer Research. 15 (2): 111–124. doi:10.1080/09593960500049183.
- ^ "Goodbye Goodfellows". Hull and Hereabouts. 20 May 2012.
- ^ "Planning permission 1 Sharp Street". Hull City Council. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
- ^ a b Neil Tyler (2014). Sanders Bros. The Rise and Fall of a British Grocery Giant. History Press. ISBN 9780750957274.
- ^ "Store closures loom as indie grocer Haldanes calls in administrators". Soutts Retail View. 9 June 2011.
- ^ "PICTURES: Bolton's iconic shops throughout the years". Pintrest. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
- ^ "Tears at breaking-up of the 'Hodgson and Hepworth family'". The Star. 10 October 2007.
- ^ "TRUST TOPICS - Doncaster Civic Trust Newsletter Issue No. 47". October 2012.
- ^ "Eastend Photographs and Drawings - casebook.org". Retrieved 11 January 2019.
- ^ "Peter King - Great Yarmouth Memories". Retrieved 2 June 2021 – via Facebook.
- ^ "Boundary Road, Hellesdon". Sprowston History. Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- ^ "Looking back at High Wycombe High Street's Imperial Stores - part 2". Bucks Free Press. 15 March 2020. Retrieved 2 May 2021.
- ^ "A look back at Irwin's 'Ruby Red Stores'". North West Chronicle. 24 July 2022.
- ^ "Sad loss of a supermarket pioneer". The Grocer. 14 January 2006.
- ^ "Anthony Jackson Foodfare". Pinterest. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
- ^ 2004-08-16T08:29:00+01:00. "Sainsbury buys Jacksons Stores". The Grocer. Retrieved 29 September 2024.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ 2007-05-05T00:00:00+01:00. "Sainsbury's to rebrand Jacksons, Bells stores". The Grocer. Retrieved 29 September 2024.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ a b "Supermarkets in Difficulties? Competition from Safeway". Glasgow Herald. 24 June 1963.
- ^ a b "British Store Chain Sought by Safeway; COMPANIES PLAN SALES, MERGERS". The New York Times. 17 August 1962.
- ^ "New Development". The Estates Gazette. Vol. 106. 1968. p. 243.
- ^ George Thursby Murray (1973). Scotland: the New Future. Scottish Television; Blackie. p. 184.
- ^ "To Let". The Estates Gazette. Vol. 216. 1970. p. 360.
- ^ "Kingsway Supermarkets Wessex Ltd". The London Gazette. 24 December 1996. p. 16965.
- ^ "List supermarket chsin sold kwench orange juice and Smedkeys peas". Liverpool Echo. 29 September 2022.
- ^ "Dee makes agreed £23m bid for Lennons". The Times. 11 September 1984. p. 27.
- ^ Zientek, Henryk (25 September 2017). "Tributes to supermarket pioneer and former Huddersfield Town director Edward Lodge who died aged 86". Examiner Live. Huddersfield Daily Examiner. Retrieved 3 October 2019.
- ^ "Lodges: Reopen at last after 11 years". Examiner Live. Huddersfield Examiner. 6 December 2008. Retrieved 3 October 2019.
- ^ Sparks. L (1 October 1995). "Restructuring Scottish grocery retailing: the rise and demise of Shoprite and Wm Low". International Journal of Retail & Distribution Management. 23 (10): 28–36. doi:10.1108/09590559510102469.
- ^ "Kilburn Investment Transaction". The Estates Gazette. Vol. 223. 1972. p. 319.
- ^ Who Owns Whom: United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland. 1991. p. 419.
- ^ "Crewe, Nantwich Road c.1965". Francis Frith. Retrieved 24 August 2022.
- ^ "High Street Improvement". Liverpool Echo. 22 July 1964.
- ^ "ref t00701 Manchester Road". Tameside Metropolitan Borough Image Archive. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
- ^ "Old Supermarkets Mark Down". Pinterest. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
- ^ "A Massey & Son". Pinterest. Retrieved 16 August 2022.
- ^ "Woolwich Cinema Redeveloped as Supermarket". The Estates Gazette. Vol. 215. 1970. p. 760.
- ^ "Caters Chelmsford". Facebook. 6 November 2016.
- ^ "F J Wallis". Retail Trade Developments in Great Britain, 1976-1977. 1976. p. 307. ISBN 9780716103066.
- ^ "Mercury". Refrigeration and Air Conditioning. Vol. 69, no. 814–819. 1966. p. 243.
- ^ "Wythenshawe Civic Centre". Modern Mooch. 8 November 2020.
- ^ "Bet Fred to Roger Dean". Herald Green Heritage. 12 February 2022.
- ^ "Melias Ltd". Investors Chronicle and Money Market Review. Vol. 218. 1962. p. 385.
- ^ "Food, Breweries and Stores". Labour Research. Vol. 56–57. 1967. p. 31.
- ^ "Somerfield plc". Business Archives. No. 83–86. 2002. p. 33.
- ^ "ABF to buy rest of Melias". Investors Chronicle. Vol. 19. 1972. p. 714.
- ^ "Crewe, Earle Street c.1960, from Francis Frith". Pinterest. Retrieved 10 February 2024.
- ^ Batzer, Erich; Greipl, Erich; Geml, Richard; Laumer, Helmut (16 November 1971). Die Nahrungsmitteldistribution in Westeuropa. 2. Dänemark, Grossbritannien (in German). Duncker & Humblot. ISBN 9783428425709. Retrieved 17 April 2015.
- ^ "Goldsmith is Unstoppable". Food & Drink Weekly. 1 October 1971.
- ^ "Who will laugh kast?". Investors Guardian. 1 October 1971.
- ^ "Sainsbury's & Netto stores to help create 300-plus jobs in Scunthorpe". 24 July 2014. Retrieved 19 June 2016.
- ^ "About the trust - History". Norman Family Charitable Trust. Retrieved 30 January 2023.
- ^ "Better retailing efficiency behind Normans profit lift". The Financial Times. 1 November 1986.
- ^ "Cullimore, Colin (26 of 40). Food: From Source to Salespoint". British Library. August 2000.
- ^ "Picture of Oakeshotts". Pinterest. Retrieved 3 February 2023.
- ^ Malcolm Walker (2013). Best Served Cold. Icon Books. ISBN 9781848317017.
- ^ "Paddy's Superstore Exterior, Rugeley". Retrieved 3 August 2022.
- ^ a b Andrew Seth, Geoffrey Randall (1999). The Grocers. The Rise and Rise of the Supermarket Chains. Kogan Page Publishers. pp. 102–103. ISBN 9780749421915.
- ^ "Current Deals". Director. Vol. 26, no. 1–6. 1973. p. 461.
- ^ "The weekbin five minutes". Chronicle Live. 22 August 2004.
- ^ "Things Seen". Design (267): 69. March 1971.
- ^ "More 'lost' supermarkets of York - is your old local here?". York Press. 21 February 2021.
- ^ "The superstars of the supermarket chains". The Independent. 26 May 1999.
- ^ "Morris & Co - Heritage". Retrieved 11 May 2015.
- ^ "New retail stores". Modern Refrigeration and Air Control. Vol. 61. 1961. p. 61.
- ^ Who Owns Whom: United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland. 1983.
- ^ "Debenhams plc". Retail Business. No. 197–202. 1974. p. 27.
- ^ David Gosling, Barry Maitland (1976). Design and Planning of Retail Systems. Architectural Press. ISBN 9780851391427.
- ^ A. M. Findlay (2002). Retailing Critical Concepts. Retail practices and operations. Taylor & Francis. p. 213. ISBN 978-0-415-08722-3.
- ^ "Simco, Barnsley". Pinterest. Retrieved 12 May 2022.
- ^ "Simco Supermarkets Carrier Bag". Pintrest. Retrieved 12 May 2022.
- ^ "Co-op buys rival supermarket Somerfield". 16 July 2008. Retrieved 16 July 2008.
- ^ "Stitchers Supermarkets Rushden". Pinterest. Retrieved 20 February 2023.
- ^ "Locations of Hypermarkets in Great Britain". The Architects Journal. 163: 22. 1976.
- ^ Love, J (1976). "Fitch Lovell". Jane's Major Companies of Europe. p. C95.
- ^ Morrison, Kathryn (2003). English shops and shopping : an architectural history. Paul Mellon Centre for Studies in British Art. p. 279. ISBN 9780300102192.
- ^ Lewis, J. C (1 June 1985). "Technical Change in Retailing: Its Impact on Employment and Access". Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science. 12 (2): 165–191. Bibcode:1985EnPlB..12..165L. doi:10.1068/b120165. S2CID 153926814.
- ^ Retail Trade Developments in Great Britain, 1976-1977. Gower Press. 1976. p. 238. ISBN 9780716103066.
- ^ "Old Belfast Magazine and Tours - Belfast History Project". Facebook. 21 March 2016.
- ^ "Obituary Eddie Skinner". Burnley Express. February 2013.
- ^ Retail Trade Developments in Great Britain, 1976-1977. Gower Press. 1976. pp. 324–325. ISBN 9780716103066.
- ^ "The history of Vye and Son, the Kentish grocers". Kent Online. 24 March 2022.
- ^ "Farmfoods tops table for private Scottish mid-market firms". The Herald. 12 October 2007.
- ^ "Farmfoods". Grocery. 1998.
- ^ "FA Cup final: Wigan's Whelan makes poignant Wembley return - BBC Sports Website p.9 May 2015". BBC Sport. Retrieved 30 April 2015.
- ^ "Castlepoint before it was Castlepoint - Bournemouth Echo p.18 March 2015". 18 March 2015. Retrieved 19 February 2016.
- ^ "Living near Waitrose boosts your house value, claims research". BBC. 3 April 2015. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
- ^ "Waitrose's latest offer: £40,000 added to your house price". The Guardian. 25 July 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
- ^ Furness, Hannah (25 July 2016). "Living near Waitrose could add £38,666 to your house price, survey says". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
- ^ "Supermarkets: top of the homebuyer shopping list?". Lloyds Bank. 3 April 2015. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
It's easy to assume the effect of different factors on the value of a property but this research enables us to clearly see that there is a significant association between the convenience of a local supermarket and house prices.
- ^ "Living near a supermarket can bag you a £22,000 bonus on your home". Lloyds Bank. 25 July 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
Of course, there are many other drivers of house prices beyond having a supermarket on your doorstep, but our research suggests that it is a strong factor
- ^ "Living near a supermarket can bag you a £22,000 bonus on your home" (PDF). Lloyds Banking Group. Retrieved 19 October 2016.