Swan & Edgar Ltd was a department store, located at Piccadilly Circus on the western side between Piccadilly and Regent Street established in the early 19th century and closed in 1982.
William Edgar ran a haberdashery stall in St James Market, before meeting George Swan.[1] They first opened a shop together in Ludgate Hill which Swan had been operating, but moved to 20 Piccadilly in 1812. They then moved to 49 Regent Street when their former site was demolished to make way for Piccadilly Circus,[2] which had been the home to the Western Mail coach offices and the Bull & Mouth public house.[3] Swan died in 1821, however Edgar continued to use the name.[1] By 1848 the premises had expanded to 45–51 and the entire corner of Piccadilly Circus.
In 1886, the old "partnership" businesses of Messrs Swan and Edgar and Messrs Halling, Pearce and Stone were acquired and amalgamated into a new Company named Waterloo House and Swan and Edgar (Limited).[4] The directors of the new Company were John Swayne Pearce Esq (Chairman), Edward G. Stone Esq & Lewis Edgar Esq with two others to be elected by the shareholders at the first general meeting.
In 1896, the capital of the company was reduced following a resolution passed on 21 April and the name was changed to Swan and Edgar (Limited).[5]
The premises were rebuilt and integrated in 1910–20 to a design by Sir Reginald Blomfield with the interior designed by Murray Adams-Acton. It became a popular place of assignation for Londoners for many generations: under the clock outside the department store, or sometimes the restaurant on the first floor, were often cited as meeting places.[6][7][8] The store sold very high quality goods[9] including the popular Merrythought teddy bear. The shop-front was one of the West End businesses targeted by the Suffragettes in their window-breaking spree on 21 November 1911. The store was hit in the last Zeppelin raid on London on 19 October 1917[10] and again rebuilt and remodelled in 1919, by Louis David Blanc and John James Joass.[11]
In 1920, during a period of difficult trading for the industry, Swan and Edgar (Limited) was acquired by Harrods' Stores Limited for a reported sum of £600,000.[12]
The business was sold to Charterhouse Trust in 1927 for £1 million, but two weeks later the business was taken over by the Drapery Trust for £1,250,000.[13][14] The Drapery Trust became part of Debenhams later in the same year. It was Debenhams that closed the store in 1982 because of the high cost of modernisation. The building lay empty for a few years until it became the flagship UK store for Tower Records. In 2003, it was bought by Richard Branson of the Virgin Group and became a Virgin Megastore. The Virgin name disappeared in 2007 and was replaced by Zavvi but Zavvi went into receivership in 2009. The Sting, a fashion department store with branches in the Netherlands, Germany and Belgium, opened in the building in July 2010.[15]
Legacy
The Feathers public house at 43 Linhope Street, Marylebone, was renamed the "Swan & Edgar" in honour of this former department store.[16]
Swan & Edgar was regularly mentioned by the staff in the television show Are You Being Served?
External links
References
- Story of London (Bill McCann)^
- Crime, Gender and Consumer Culture in Nineteenth-century England by Tammy Whitlock^
- Are you being served cabbieblog.com, 11 June 2013, retrieved 3 December 2014^
- St. James's Gazette August 4, 1886 page 15 column 3^
- Morning Post 13 May 1896 page 4 column 5^
- Frederick Raphael. Against the Stream Carcanet Press Ltd, 30 August 2018^
- Frederick Raphael. Going Up: To Cambridge and beyond - A Writer's Memoir Biteback Publishing, 22 July 2015^
- John Cole. Resolution Grosvenor House Publishing, 19 October 2012^
- Judith Flanders, The Victorian City: Everyday Life in Dickens' London^
- Alfred Rawlinson. The Defence of London: 1915–1918 Andrew Melrose, 1923^
- Dictionary of Scottish Architects: Louis David Blanc^
- Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer 12 July 1920 page 13 column 6^
- Swinson. C. Share Trading, Fraud and the Crash of 1929 A Biography of Clarence Hatry 2019^
- Drapery Trust 1930^
- John Ryan. The Sting, Piccadilly Circus Drapers, 24 July 2010, retrieved 23 May 2020^
- Oscar Williams. Bid to save the Swan & Edgar, Marylebone's pint-sized pub, from being converted into a home West End Extra, New Journal Enterprises Ltd, retrieved 1 June 2014^