Anthony Hordern & Sons

Anthony Hordern & Sons was once the largest department store in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. With 52 acres (21 hectares) of retail space, Anthony Hordern's was also once the largest department store in the world. The historic Anthony Hordern building, which was located in Goulburn Street, in Sydney's CBD, was controversially demolished during 1986, to make way for the World Square development.

Early history

The Palace Emporium
Sign for Anthony Hordern Palace Emporium

The business was originally established by a free immigrant from England, Anthony Hordern, in 1823, as a drapery shop. He was the founding member of the Hordern family in Australia. A further large menswear store was in upper George Street, and Hordern's also operated one of the largest mail order businesses in Australia. The business remained in family hands for a century, and a huge six-storey building was opened by them in 1905, called The Palace Emporium, the main entrance being completely fitted out in imported Italian marble. The massive store was located on the corner of George, Pitt, & Goulburn Streets in the south end of the CBD. One of its advertising slogans was that it sold "anything from a needle to an anchor". The crest on their coat of arms was a budding tree, the motto: "While I live I'll grow". It appeared above all the store's window fittings and on all its stationery.[1]

Anthony Hordern sen. (1788–1869) came from Staffordshire, where his family was prominent in Wolverhampton banking circles.[2] He and his wife Ann (ca.1791–1871) and four children arrived in Sydney on the Phoenix on 6 August 1823 (one reference has 16 June 1824)[3] and set up a drapery business "Mrs. Hordern's" at 12 King Street, between Pitt and Castlereagh Streets[4] on the eastern corner of Terry Lane (later Truth Lane);[2] (He may have initially set up as a coachbuilder.) An advertisement for her shop in the Herald of 3 April 1834, is said to have been the first display advertisement in any Australian newspaper.[5] They moved to Melbourne[6] in 1839, and Anthony jun. (1819–1876) found employment as a cabinetmaker, but was shortly to return to Sydney.[2] Anthony Hordern senior remained in Melbourne, living at 86 Russell Street. His son William (1831–1881) also remained in Melbourne.

In 1842 Anthony jun. purchased a block of land by the corner of George Street and Charlotte Place[7] and in 1844 he and his brother Lebbeus set up business as L. & A. Hordern at 689 George Street, Brickfield Hill.[2] Anthony jun., his wife, and family lived above the store and it was there that Samuel Hordern (1849 1909) was born. They purchased the site for a second store at 557 (later renumbered to 756) George Street, Haymarket. The King Street shop was closed by Anthony Hordern sen. in 1845, leaving John (1819–1864) running the Lower George Street shop "Nottingham House" and Anthony jun. running the Brickfield Hill shop.[8] Lebbeus and Anthony dissolved their partnership in 1855 with Lebbeus setting up business for himself in 489 George Street.

In 1856 the new three-storey Haymarket store was opened and Anthony jun. took his elder son Anthony III (1842–1886) into partnership as Anthony Hordern and Son. In 1869 Samuel (ca.1849–1909) was admitted to the partnership and the business was renamed Anthony Hordern and Sons. Anthony III and Samuel expanded the business vigorously. "The Warehouse" and the "Palace Emporium" were built and put into operation in remarkable time.

Anthony Hordern III ("Anthony Tertius") (1842–1886) left Sydney for Western Australia, where he made his mark as a railway entrepreneur.[9] He died aboard the steamer R.M.S. Carthage while returning to Australia after several years conducting his business affairs from London.[10]

With Anthony's death, Samuel became sole owner of Anthony Hordern and Sons, Ltd., and under his control the business continued to expand, as did his personal wealth.[11] Anthony's share of the business was however not disposed of by dissolution of the partnership, a fact that was the subject of a considerable legal tussle. Samuel Hordern argued that the sum of £158,232/15/10d paid to Anthony Hordern junior's estate was the outcome of a fair stocktaking and was accepted by his trustees. This view was shared by the Privy Council and an appeal was rejected.[12] The principal claimants, sons Anthony Shubra Hordern (1879–1934) and Arthur Gilbert Hordern (1877–1937), who were business associates based in England, were also subjected to an injunction preventing them using "Anthony Hordern" in their trading name.[13]

On 10 July 1901 the Haymarket premises was destroyed by fire. Business was resumed almost immediately in the Exhibition Building, Prince Alfred Park, and a new building "New Palace Emporium" or "Senior Store" erected on the site of the original Brickfield Hill store in 1905. A further storey was added a few years later. In 1912 the business was sold to a private limited liability company with Samuel Hordern jun. as governing director.[2] Samuel Hordern jun. was knighted in 1919.

The New Palace Emporium offered customers a range of services to attract and keep customers. These included a branch of the Commonwealth Bank, Tea rooms, a post and parcels office, rest rooms, public phone booths, and a Thomas Cook & Son travel agency.[14]

The company established factories across Sydney which produced a diverse range of items from clothes and baked goods to pressed metal ceilings.[15]

Anthony Hordern & Sons produced general catalogues[16][17] from 1894 to 1935 to tap into the country market and mail order trade. These catalogues were distinctively bound in red cloth.[14]

Other sons of Arthur and Ann had their own drapery businesses in competition with Anthony and Samuel: John left Anthony Hordern & Sons around 1922 and with his sons John Lebbeus (1848–1910), Edward Carr (1853–1940) and Alfred James (ca.1859–1932) founded Hordern Brothers Limited, "Horderns in Pitt Street". Lebbeus (1826–1881) was originally in partnership with Anthony, then alone from 1855 at 489 George Street. John joined him for a while, then Edward,[18] at 676 George Street South (near Liverpool Street) from around 1870; Edward bought out his brother and the partnership was dissolved in 1875.[19]

A Public Company

In April 1926 the mostly family owned business was sold to a public company set up for the purpose for £2,900,000, the highest sum paid for an Australian business to that date. The sale was approved by governing director Sir Samuel Hordern, with Sir Mark Sheldon appointed chairman, and Mr. Justly Rawlings promoted from general manager to managing director of the new company.[20]

In 1966 Anthony Hordern & Sons combined under one general management with Hordern Bros.[21]

Demise of Anthony Hordern's city store and retailing

On December 6, 1960, Anthony Horderns constructed a store in Keira St, Wollongong.[22] The store included automatic opening doors, an escalator to the second floor and roof top parking for 160 vehicles.The company's logo was paved in grey and green/brown toned terrazzo at the store's front door. This tile is now part of the collection of the Illawarra Museum. The store traded for nine years before becoming a Waltons store and closing in July, 1972. The building was used by Norman Ross before passing to Bing Lee. The building was redeveloped by the GPT Group in 2008.[23]

Anthony Hordens also opened a store in West Ryde.[24][25] It was a Waltons store from 1970 to 1987. It then became a Norman Ross store and today the site is West Ryde Marketplace with a Woolworths supermarket as anchor tenant.

By the early 1960s Anthony Hordern and Sons began to accumulate yearly losses instead of profits. By 1965-66, this had become noticeable and restructuring was underway. Most notable were the losses from the Brickfield Hill Flagship store and the Anthony Hordern store in Wollongong. A number of the upper levels of the Brickfield Hill store were closed, as the management of Anthony Hordern's tried to restructure the business.

By mid-1969, the situation had not improved and the situation was dire. Things had come to a head and drastic action was needed. Waltons launched a bid for the retail operations of Anthony Hordern, whilst Stocks and Holdings Ltd, launched a bid for the massive Anthony Hordern city Brickfield Hill site.

Despite some counterbidding from Buckingham's Holdings Ltd, Walton's succeeded in gaining control of Anthony Hordern and Sons Ltd by January 6, 1970.[26]

After the takeover of Anthony Hordern's by Walton's, the Brickfield Hill site was then sold to Stocks and Holdings Ltd, for $8.5 million. It turned out Stocks and Holdings Ltd were acting for their client, The State Superannuation Trust. It was then leased back by The Superannuation Trust, to Stocks and Holdings Ltd, for retail space. This was completed by Christmas Eve 1969, ending 64 years of retail pioneering and ownership of the building by Anthony Hordern's Ltd.

The development of American-style suburban shopping malls during the later 1960s, coupled with fiercer competition in the city, is said to have sealed the fate of the store. Mysteriously, the tree on the Hordern family's estate at Camden, New South Wales, upon which idea of the crest was based, died soon afterwards. For many years the building stood idle, and eventually part of it was made into a car park.

Hunter and Ross Horden, grandsons of Edward Carr Horden, founded a new family business under the name of Horden Brothers in Windsor, New South Wales. It was operating until at least 1986[27] and sold hardware, manchester, haberdashery and clothing.[28] It included old glass top display cabinets and a HCF (Health Care Fund) agency in the back corner.

The Anthony Hordern Brickfield Hill site, Palace Emporium, was subsequently used by the NSW Institute of Technology (now UTS) for some years. It (and surrounding buildings) was controversially demolished in 1986 for the infamous 'World Square' development, which remained a hole in the ground for nearly twenty years, before finally being completed in 2004.

Originally, in the early 1980s the building's new owner, Singaporean based Ipoh Garden Development, planned to try to save the Anthony Hordern's building, but in the end it was found to be too costly after receiving independent advice from the CSIRO, on the state of the buildings concrete and other fittings. Ipoh Garden, however did refurbish the Queen Victoria Building back to heritage standard.

There are still some legacies left in Sydney, such as the Hordern Pavilion, Hordern Towers (within the World Square development), and the Presbyterian Ladies' College, Sydney in Croydon of which its oldest building, 'Shubra Hall' was the home of Anthony Hordern III until 1889.

Notes

  1. Sydney Harbour Bridge Official Souvenir & Programme, NSW Government Printer, Sydney, 1932, 'Anthony Hordern & Sons Limited': 113
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 "Store That Has Become a National Institution.". The Land (Sydney: National Library of Australia). 28 January 1938. p. 21. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
  3. "The Horderns & Windsor". Windsor and Richmond Gazette (NSW: National Library of Australia). 21 May 1926. p. 8. Retrieved 4 May 2013.
    This article points out that Harriett Marsden was the daughter of a master tanner named Samuel Marsden and the niece of Thomas Marsden of the firm Marsden and Flower; Thomas Marsden married Jane Catherine Marsden, fourth daughter of the celebrated Rev. Samuel Marsden; they were parents of Samuel Marsden, first bishop of Bathurst.
  4. "Advertising.". The Sydney Herald (National Library of Australia). 7 January 1842. p. 1. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  5. "History of City Firm". The Sydney Morning Herald (National Library of Australia). 11 April 1932. p. 4. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
  6. "Lived and Grew". The Land (Sydney: National Library of Australia). 27 May 1932. p. 14. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
  7. "Town Allotments". The Sydney Herald (National Library of Australia). 15 April 1842. p. 3. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  8. "Advertising". The Morning Chronicle (Sydney: National Library of Australia). 7 June 1845. p. 3. Retrieved 4 May 2013.
  9. "Summary for Europe". The Argus (Melbourne: National Library of Australia). 2 January 1884. p. 7. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  10. "Anthony Hordern Ltd.". Albany Advertiser (WA: National Library of Australia). 3 February 1938. p. 2. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
  11. "Mr. S. Hordern's Purchases". Clarence and Richmond Examiner (Grafton, NSW: National Library of Australia). 24 June 1899. p. 4. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
  12. "Anthony Hordern & Sons". The Northern Miner (Charters Towers, Qld.: National Library of Australia). 6 May 1909. p. 3. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  13. "Similar Trading Names". Australian Town and Country Journal (NSW: National Library of Australia). 8 May 1907. p. 14. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
  14. 1 2 "Sydney's home furnishing stores, 1890-1960". Sydney Living Museums.
  15. "The Hordern dynasty". nsw.gov.au.
  16. "31 Jul 1909 - Anthony Hordens' Sale.". nla.gov.au.
  17. "12 Dec 1912 - Anthony Hardern's". nla.gov.au.
  18. "Advertising.". The Sydney Morning Herald (National Library of Australia). 25 January 1860. p. 1. Retrieved 8 May 2013.
  19. "Advertising.". The Sydney Morning Herald (National Library of Australia). 25 March 1875. p. 10. Retrieved 4 May 2013.
  20. "ANTHONY HORDERN AND SONS. HISTORIC BUSINESS SOLD". The Sydney Morning Herald (National Library of Australia). 21 April 1926. p. 15. Retrieved 1 May 2013.
  21. "State Library of NSW Search - Manuscripts, Oral History, and Pictures Catalogue". nsw.gov.au.
  22. Wollongong Advertiser March 7, 2012: Page: 38
  23. BRETT COX (22 April 2008). "Doubts on Central expansion". Illawarra Mercury.
  24. The Sydney Morning Herald, April 7, 1963, Page 78
  25. "Historic Houses Trust - Museum collections". hht.net.au.
  26. The Sydney Morning Herald, January 6, 1970, Page 7
  27. "The Sydney Morning Herald - Google News Archive Search". google.com.
  28. "Exhibitions". nsw.gov.au.

Links as sources

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