- William Whiteley
William Whiteley, (
September 29 ,1831 –January 24 ,1907 ) was a Britishentrepreneur of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. He was the founder ofWhiteleys department store.Biography
Whiteley was born in
Yorkshire in the small village of Purston, situated betweenWakefield andPontefract . His father was a prosperous corn dealer. William along with his three brothers enjoyed a healthy open-air life. He left school at the age of 14, and started work at his uncle's farm. He would have liked to have been aveterinary surgeon or perhaps ajockey but his parents had other ideas. In 1848 they started him on a seven yearapprenticeship with Harnew & Glover, the largestdraper s inWakefield . Whiteley took his new job seriously and received a 'severe drilling in the arts and mysteries of the trade.'In 1851 he paid his first visit to
London to see theGreat Exhibition . The exhibition fired his imagination, particularly the magnificent displays of manufactured goods. All that could be bought or sold was on display, but nothing was for sale. Whiteley had the idea that he could create a store as grand as the Crystal Palace where all these goods could be under one roof and it would make him the most important shopkeeper in the world. Wakefield, once the centre of theYorkshire woollen trade, was in decline and Whiteley now wanted to be something more than a small town draper. On completion of his apprenticeship he arrived inLondon with £10 in his pocket.Growing business
He took a job with R. Willey & Company in
Ludgate Hill , and then Morrison & Dillon's to learn all aspects of the trade. Whiteley lived frugally. Not smoking or drinking he was able to save up £700, enough to start his own business.London was expanding rapidly in the 1860s and after consideringIslington he turned his attention toBayswater ; the area was rapidly being developed into a high class residential district. He observed the number of fashionable people usingWestbourne Grove and decided to open his shop there. He started his business in 1863 by opening a Fancy Goods shop at 31 Westbourne Grove, employing two girls to serve and a boy to run errands. Later one of the girls, Harriet Sarah Hall, became his wife.Seizing every opportunity, he acquired a row of shops in Westbourne Grove in 1867 and turned them into 17 departments. Dressmaking was started in 1868, and a house agency and refreshment room, the first ventures outside drapery, opened in 1872. By then 622 people were employed on the premises and a further 1,000 outside. Whitley started selling food in 1875, and a building and decorating department was added in 1876. This proved to be particularly profitable, as the large stuccoed houses in the area needed regular repainting. Claiming that he could provide anything from a pin to an elephant, William Whiteley dubbed himself "The Universal Provider".
He met strong opposition from smaller tradesmen, and also from the local authorities over his grand building plans, and several bad fires in the 1880s may have been caused by opponents. Business nonetheless prospered, aided by a delivery service extending up to 25 miles (40 km), and in 1887 the store was described as 'an immense symposium of the arts and industries of the nation and of the world'.
By 1890 over 6,000 staff were employed in the business, most of them living in company-owned male and female dormitories, having to obey 176 rules and working 7 am to 11 pm, six days a week. Whiteley also bought massive farmlands and erected food-processing factories to provide produce for the store and for staff catering. In 1896 he earned an unsolicited Royal Warrant from
Queen Victoria - an unprecedented achievement.Disaster
In 1897 disaster struck and the store in Westbourne Grove burnt down. In his autobiography, "Drawn From Memory",
E. H. Shepard said the fire could be seen fromHighgate Hill, and some days later when he and his friend Cyril were allowed to visit Westbourne Grove, that, "The long front of the shop was a sorry sight with part of the wall fallen and the rest blackened."ad end
Whiteleys was to rise again like the Phoenix from the fire, when the
Lord Mayor of London in the presence of thousands opened the new store in Queensway on21 November 1911 . This was claimed to be the largest British store in the world. Sadly William Whiteley was not to enjoy this triumph; on24 January 1907 he had been shot dead at his shop by a Horace George Raynor aged 29, who claimed that he was Whiteley's illegitimate son. Although Whiteley himself came to this sad end, in his will he left £1,000,000 (a fabulous amount at that time), with which theWhiteley Village , nearWalton-on-Thames inSurrey , was created.External links
* [http://www.whiteleys.com Whiteleys]
* [http://www.whiteleys.com/Ease/servlet/DynamicPageBuild?siteID=1819&categoryID=143&callingCatID=142 Whiteleys - company history]
* [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=22671 A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 9 - Paddington economic history]
* [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.asp?compid=22666 A History of the County of Middlesex: Volume 9 - Bayswater]
* [http://www.whiteleyvillage.org.uk/Foundation.htm Whiteley Village official website]
* [http://tengenerations.org.uk/10Gen/StoryPrint.jsp?query=_primary_key:5168 Whiteley history by Ten Generations]
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