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Over a century ago, in 1886, John Hatfield
could be found in his front room at 31 St John's Street, Colchester
dealing in curios. The front room was used to store all his stock during
the week's business. Only on Saturday night was it cleared out and
gradually restored to its original state so that he and his wife could
enjoy the use of a normal front room on Sundays! This enchanting
arrangement marked the establishment of Hatfields and the roots of what
was to grow into the Colchester family business, known today as Hatfields
Furnishers Ltd.
John Hatfield was born in 1847 and before founding Hatfields he worked
hard outside the furniture industry. John served as a page boy to the
Round family of Birch Hall and later became butler to William Gladstone's
son. This work often involved serving the Prime Minister himself on his
visits to Hawarden Castle in North Wales. After years of serving others it
is no wonder that John's ambition led him to work for himself. His
experience in the service industry, however, obviously stood him in good
stead when building his own business catering for the needs of his
customers. John Hatfield was a popular character who noted his
customers' requirements on his paper shirt cuffs! This primitive paperwork
was obviously successful and John's business soon outgrew the front room
of his house. To cope with this increase in demand, John acquired
buildings across the road from his house and subsequently used them as a
warehouse in which to store second-hand furniture. This furniture proved
to be popular and indeed was also recently confirmed to be durable. A
daughter of a man who purchased some second hand dining chairs from Mr.
Hatfield in the 1880s contacted the present day company informing them
that the furniture is still in use today, over a hundred years on!
John Hatfield and his wife had three sons and three daughters and in
1916 their youngest son, Arthur joined John's business initiating its life
as a family firm. The business expanded even further and more premises
were purchased. The adjoining properties of 32, 33 and 34 St John's Street
were bought for £500. The new site included three cottages, 4, 5 and 6 Sir
Isaacs Walk and a yard.
The advent of the first world war brought with it several changes for
the Hatfields. Arthur left Colchester to serve his country with the Argyll
and Sutherland Highlanders. During this time the greenhouse in the
Hatfields new yard proved to be very useful. In a slight diversion from
furniture, the grapes growing in the greenhouse were sold over the counter
for a halfpenny a pound. When Arthur returned he was faced with the
gradual changes affecting the character of St John's Street including the
increasing amount of motor traffic along the road. |
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John Hatfield |
The Hatfields resumed business as usual after
the war and the firm continued to flourish. However, on the 13th of August
1930 John Hatfield was tragically killed. Minutes after giving his local
policeman a photograph of himself, John stepped out in front of an
oncoming van and later that afternoon died of his injuries in hospital.
The following week a glowing obituary in the Essex Telegraph remembered
John Hatfield's interesting and lively character recalling such times as
when he appeared in the 1926 Clacton carnival dressed as King Neptune, for
which he won a £4 prize!
Five years later Arthur, who had taken over the business since his
father's death, decided to sell the St John Street properties. He moved
the Hatfield business to 5 Stanwell Street where he continued to trade
until 1981. 1943 was an important year for the survival of
the Hatfield family business and its future continuation. This was the
year that Elsie Hatfield, John Hatfield's daughter, married John London.
The link between the Hatfields and the Londons was thus established. After
returning from the war, where he had served in the RAF in Iceland and
Italy, John London joined his father-in-law in the business. John's
younger brother, Tony London, had spent his early working life in the
Merchant Navy and the RAF. He subsequently joined his brother in the
Hatfield furniture business in 1957. |
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Arthur Hatfield in a picture dating from the late
1910s outside the St John Street shop. |
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John and Tony worked for Arthur Hatfield until 1959. By this time Arthur,
who had worked for the family business for over four decades, decided to
retire and went to live in Hayes Road, Clacton where he stayed until his
death, aged 88, in 1975 John and Tony London purchased the Hatfield
furniture business on Arthur's retirement and began to work towards making
some changes in order to improve and expand the company. Without any staff
John and Tony had to work extremely hard to build up the business. Over
the following two years the brothers both worked six days a week and
virtually every night, buying, selling and delivering furniture. In
between carrying out this work they also managed to fit in some renovation
and repair work as well as all the administration. They soon found themselves needing extra help
and just over a year after buying the business they persuaded their elder
brother Stanley to join them. Stanley was busy running his own wholesale
confectionery business in North Wales when his brothers asked for his
help. He was approaching retirement at this time, and he expected that he
would only be needed to work mornings to complete the book-keeping for his
brothers and that he would be able to spend his afternoons leisurely on
the golf course. Little did he know what his ambitious brothers had in
store with their plans for development. |
Arthur Hatfield (centre) with Tony London (left) and
John London (right) prior to Arthurs retirement in 1959 |
In 1962 Stanley's son David
joined the firm after attending Hawarden grammar school during which time,
by a remarkable coincidence, he had taken history lessons in the same
castle that John Hatfield had served in many years before. A year later in
1963, the family took the opportunity to bring all their hard work to
fruition by expanding the business. In the April of this year a 125 year
old confectionery business, C W Hancock in St Botolph's Street,
Colchester, came on to the market. The site was purchased by the brothers
for £16,500 and Tony was left to organise the conversion of the existing
shop, the building work and the opening of the site. The shop adjacent to
the new Hatfield shop was a toy shop, Moore and Roberts, owned by Mr
Roberts. From the day that the London brothers moved in, they built up a
friendship with Mr Roberts, so much so that it was agreed that they would
buy his premises when he retired. For now though, the London family
concentrated on their newest purchase. The old factory buildings at the
back of the newly built shop were, for the time being left untouched as
warehouse space. The other buildings were converted into showrooms. These
showrooms were carpeted throughout, centrally heated and spot-lit and
rapidly gained a reputation for being the best furniture showrooms in the
town. The opening day of the new showroom turned out to be a memorable
one for everyone concerned, a day that would go down in history. The date
was Friday 22nd November and the showroom was opened in the morning
without ceremony. An advert had been placed in the local newspapers prior
to the event offering a free coffee table with every suite purchased. The
Londons were hoping that this would attract a substantial crowd for the
first day of trade. |
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St Botolphs street store during building work |
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Our Peartree Road Store today |
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However, two and a quarter hours after
opening, not one customer had entered the showroom. This was a
disappointment for Hatfields but eventually they managed to sell a
fireside chair. The shop stayed open late, until eight at night, but
unfortunately the takings for that first day only reached £59.19.6d.
It was only whilst Tony and David were standing outside the showroom,
trying to create a crowd effect, that they discovered from a passer-by the
reason for such a poor turnout Ð President John F Kennedy had been
assassinated that very day. Fortunately, the first day's takings were
not typical and the new showroom went on to become a success. However,
only a year later, on the 13th April 1964, the showroom was to suffer
another setback. Five fires were started in the town centre, one in the
storeroom at the back of the St Botolph's showrooms. The company bounced
back from their misfortune and only five months later accidentally
stumbled across what was to become a significant promotional technique for
Hatfields. A special mink couch was featured in the window of the
showroom, on offer at 2,000 guineas. The couch attracted a hugh amount of
attention and brought large numbers of people in to the shop just to
stroke it!
The steadily growing success of the business meant that in the August
of 1964 the rest of the St Botolphs site could be developed. The
storerooms were demolished and replaced with a two floor showroom costing
£10,000. The opening of this showroom in 1965 broke records when a £100
advert became the largest ever advert placed in the local paper. |
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Inside part of our purpose built warehouse. |
Two years on, in 1967 Hatfields furnished its first
showhouse at the prestigious Welshwood Park. The showhouse was soon
snapped up for £8,750 and this led to the furnishing of another house on
the same estate. This was the first house in the country to be built to
metric measurements and therefore secured further publicity for Hatfields
when it was covered by both television networks.
In 1975 the Peartree Road building was acquired. Its office building,
car park and warehouse made the site perfect for Hatfields. The ensuing
extra work meant that Stanley, far from relaxing on the golf course, took
on all legal and financial matters. John supervised the building work and
Tony looked after St Botolphs, leaving David to take overall
responsibility for the opening of Peartree Road. The actual conversion
however, did not run smoothly. The construction of the first floor was
delayed by a steel strike and at one point the opening deadline seemed
beyond their reach. It took eight months to bring the Ôempty shell' up to
the standard Hatfields demanded. There was a last minute panic though when
momentarily, the scissors for the Mayor, Councillor Joyce Brooks, to cut
the ribbon with could not be found! These initial hiccups were soon
justified when the original sales targets of £600,000 for the first year
and £800,000 for the second year were exceeded. |
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Hatfields Current Board of Directors.
Seated Left to Right. Robert Fuller (Co-Chairman), David London, Debbie London,
Tony London (Co-Chairman) Standing Left to Right.
Robert London (Merchandise Director), Andrew London (Managing Director),
Malcolm Durbridge (Finance Director) |
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Three years after the opening of Peartree Road, the staff
had increased to 44 and a quarter of the first floor was opened as a
showroom. This development saw staff from St Botolphs being brought in on
Saturdays to meet increasing demands. Eventually, the St Botolphs store
was closed. Half of the top floor at the Peartree site was opened to
compensate for this closure and additional warehousing was build nearby
and opened in 1980.
The old delivery vans were replaced with four Mercedes demountable
bodies and two cabs. Also, David's study tour of out-of-town stores in New
York and Los Angeles prompted the installation of a new warehouse racking
system and forklift trucks. The business was thriving and maintaining
accurate adminstrative records was increasingly difficult. Hatfields was
one of the first family owned retail furnishers in the country to become
computerised when, in 1979, a Philips system was installed costing
£35,000. This system was upgraded five years later and Hatfields donated
the original computer with its six screens to Philip Morant School.
The eighties saw business booming. In 1984, the company appointed a
General Manager. Also, a new training office was set up for the staff. It
was also in this year that Stanley eventually retired to catch up with his
golf he had been promised over 20 years previously! Television became the
main medium for advertising Hatfields. In 1985 the actor Robert Powell
starred in a 30 second advert for the company. Unexpectedly, the
television advertising even attracted customers from Holland, the Dutch
being avid watchers of British TV.
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The year 1986 marked 100 years of trading for
Hatfields since its establishment in 1886. This auspicious anniversary was
celebrated in style by the company who achieved a million pounds in the
first sale period of this Year. A 1920s style van was added to the fleet
and a permanent carnival float was designed, built and donated to the
town. A special lunch for local people who had reached their 100th
birthday was held and an outing to a theme park was arranged for 100 local
children. The company also sponsored a special performance by the London
City Ballet at the Mercury Theatre as a tribute to the Hatfield family.
The most spectacular event, however, was the centenary dinner held at
Colchester Castle to which £5000 was donated for their restoration appeal.
A total of 100 guests were invited and Terry Waite, the guest of honour,
presented awards to ten local unsung heroes! The evening came to a close
in grand style when the General Manager, Derek Wyatt, read a letter
received from H M The Queen congratulating Hatfields on its centenary.
Hatfields' involvement in the local community continued after the
events of the centenary, indeed the company has supported many local
causes over the years. One such memorable event took place in 1987 when
Hatfields was reported in the local press to have Ôbrought down the Iron
Curtain'. This story stemmed from the St Mary's School balloon race that
Hatfields had sponsored. The adventurous winning balloon had managed to
travel 700 miles from Colchester all the way to Luzycka in Poland where it
was found by Susanna Pyrezek. Hatfields then arranged for Susanna to visit
England as a guest of the company for a week where she stayed with Tony
London and his family.
As the company moved into the nineties it continued to thrive. In 1988
Tony, in association with the manufacturer Sleepeezee, designed a range of
divans known as BackChoice, with back sufferers in mind. Following the
huge success of this range, Tony was asked to produce a range of beds for
the Green Group, the largest furniture buying group in the country. The
Green Group had 130 stores, including Libertys of London. A year later, a
Hatfields range of furniture designed by their Chief Buyer, Don Massey,
and sold in the Colchester store, was spotted by a Harrods' furniture
buyer, who subsequently snapped up the range for the Knightsbridge store.
The exceptional success of Hatfields was officially recognised in 1994
when the company was voted the Best Independent Furniture Store in the
country by representatives from the furniture trade.
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1994 retail award. |
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The business continued to grow from there with both David London's sons, Andrew and Robert joining the business in 1991 and 1994 respectively. In 2005, the Peartree Road site was purchased and Hatfields also expanded with a new store called Hatfields2Go, a budget and clearance furniture outlet based next door to the main store.
Hatfields held their most successful sales event to date in August and September 2010. More than 5,000 people visited the store on the opening day of 'The Great £2,000,000 Refurbishment Sale'. Following the phenomenal success of the sale, Hatfields undertook a grand refurbishment of half of the ground and first floor. The new showrooms were opened on Saturday 2nd October 2010.
A picture of the queuing crowds on the opening of Hatfields' 'Refurbishment Sale'.
In the summer of 2010 Hatfields realised the need to expand the 'Hatfields2Go budget and clearance furniture outlet' business following 5 years success in the relatively small location just across the road to the main store. With this the business started looking for larger premises and in November 2010 a new site of some 23,000 sq ft had been found. It was the site once occupied by the Co-op, and then occupied by Vergo, which went out of business in May 2010 with the loss of 12 employees' jobs.
The opportunity was taken to re-brand Hatfields2Go, and it is now known as 'Hatfields Budget & Clearance Outlet'. The main intention of the business is to clear obsolete stock and end of line ranges from their suppliers. It also sells purposely bought-in 'budget conscious' ranges and containers of competitively priced and exclusive merchandise - which have proved very popular. The store opened its doors for the first customers on Saturday 4th December 2010.
Hatfields are celebrating their 125th Anniversary this year with many celebrations planned. It is not inconceivable that a third Hatfields store could be opened in the future. This growth will hopefully ensure the continuing success of one of the oldest and largest family run furniture stores in the country.
Today Hatfields boasts the one of the largest quality furnishing showroom in East Anglia with facilities ranging from car parks and lifts to baby changing facilities and an in-store coffee shop. The company now employs over 65 staff who are renowned as being kind and considerate' and indeed, are helping to ensure that the oldest and largest furniture store in Colchester continues on its steady path of progression for many more years to come.
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