Jump to content

Chester Barrie: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Trident13 (talk | contribs)
Trident13 (talk | contribs)
Line 57: Line 57:


In 1978, the Ackerman family sold the business to the [[Austin Reed (retailer)|Austin Reed]] Group, by which time the business was employing 470 people, selling to Harrods, [[Selfridges]], [[Turnbull & Asser]] and [[Saks Fifth Avenue]], [[New York]].<ref name=TIM344043/> Austin Reed started using the factory to produce a number of other brands beside Chester Barrie, and from 1981 started to produce the ready-to-wear stock for fellow Savile Row tailor H. Huntsman. In 1989 the company won the [[Queen's Award for Export Achievement]], and in 1998 started making the purple label suits for [[Polo Ralph Lauren|Polo]] [[Ralph Lauren]].<ref name=CNNFortune>{{cite web|url=http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1998/11/09/250851/index.htm|title=Ralph Lauren, Prince Charles, and You!|author=Lauren Goldstein|publisher=Fortune magazine|date=November 9, 1998|accessdate=2010-12-12}}</ref>
In 1978, the Ackerman family sold the business to the [[Austin Reed (retailer)|Austin Reed]] Group, by which time the business was employing 470 people, selling to Harrods, [[Selfridges]], [[Turnbull & Asser]] and [[Saks Fifth Avenue]], [[New York]].<ref name=TIM344043/> Austin Reed started using the factory to produce a number of other brands beside Chester Barrie, and from 1981 started to produce the ready-to-wear stock for fellow Savile Row tailor H. Huntsman. In 1989 the company won the [[Queen's Award for Export Achievement]], and in 1998 started making the purple label suits for [[Polo Ralph Lauren|Polo]] [[Ralph Lauren]].<ref name=CNNFortune>{{cite web|url=http://money.cnn.com/magazines/fortune/fortune_archive/1998/11/09/250851/index.htm|title=Ralph Lauren, Prince Charles, and You!|author=Lauren Goldstein|publisher=Fortune magazine|date=November 9, 1998|accessdate=2010-12-12}}</ref>

==Present==
As the dot.com boom decline hit world markets, the demand for bespoke suits declined. In financial troubles, Austin Reed sold the loss-making Chester Barrie business to [[Thomson Holdings]] in 2000. After the business went in [[receivership]] in 2002, the Crewe factory sold to former management, trading as the Cheshire Clothing Company, who later move to a brand new factory.<ref name=TIM344043>{{cite web|url=http://www.thisismoney.co.uk/news/article.html?in_article_id=344043&in_page_id=2|title=Chester Barrie is back in style|author=Sarah Bridge|publisher=Mail on Sunday|date=20 October 2002|accessdate=2010-12-12}}</ref> SRG Group plc acquired the Chester Barrie Brand and worldwide licensing rights, and engage CCC to manufacture top-end bespoke suits, while others are outsourced to Far East.

In 2006, CCC itself went into receivership and closed. A new independent manufacturing company was formed in Crewe, Cheshire Bespoke, who again widened their manufacturing offering to supply ranges for brands including [[Ozwald Boateng]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.drapersonline.com/news/cheshire-bespoke-to-step-up-tailoring-production/760764.article|title=Cheshire Bespoke to step up tailoring production|author=Marino Donati|date=28 April 2007|accessdate=2010-12-12}}</ref>

In 2007, the ownership of the Chester Barrie brand and worldwide licensing rights were sold to Prominent Europe, who continue the relationship with Cheshire Bespoke.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.warringtonguardian.co.uk/lifestyle/interviews/3731025.The_soul_of_the_suit/|title=The soul of the suit|publisher=Warrington Guardian|date=6 October 2008|accessdate=2010-12-12}}</ref>






==Input==
==Input==

Revision as of 10:26, 13 December 2010

Chester Barrie
Company typePrivate
IndustryRetailer
Founded1935
FounderSimon Ackerman
HeadquartersSavile Row, London, United Kingdom
ProductsClothing, Fashion
ParentProminent Europe
WebsiteChesterBarrie.co.uk

Chester Barrie are a semi-bespoke gentleman's tailor located at №35 Savile Row, London.

Founded in 1935 by expatriate English tailor Simon Ackerman, and presently owned by Prominent Europe. The company provides ready-to-wear clothes, as well as bespoke and military tailoring.

History

At the the turn of the Twentieth century, Englishman Simon Ackerman left England for New York city. Having built up a high priced, quality tailoring business in and around New York, in 1935 he decided that he wanted to import quality British-made suits for the US market.

Returning to London in 1935, he started producing suits from a shop on Savile Row in London in 1937. Ackerman, as well as offering bespoke tailoring, introduced ready-to-wear suits, popular in the United States as they greatly reduced purchase cost and delivery time scales. While the rest of Savile Row was still wholly bespoke, Chester Barrie were quickly equalling the volume of suits sold by every other tailor on Savile Row.

Suits for export had the button holes un-finished, where by sending them back to the United States unfinished thus avoided the import duty. In 1938 Ackerman returned to the United States, placing his son Myron in charge of the British business.

As the business expanded, Ackerman knew he needed to develop a factory, and resultantly concluded that he needed a distinctly British brand to carry the larger volume. At that time the Port of Liverpool was the main point of shipment for goods to the United States, and so Ackerman decided that the manufacturing side of his business should be based in the North West England. Choosing Crewe in Cheshire, close to the mills he used in Huddersfield, the factory opened in Chestnut Grove under the brand Chester Barrie, based on combining:

  • Chester, the city and county town of the location he choose for his factory
  • Barrie, the surname of children's fiction writer J. M. Barrie, who wrote Peter Pan

By now, World War 2 was in its early stages, and the factories production turned to the war effort, picking up a contract to produce uniforms for the US Army in Europe, after the United States entered the war post the attack on Pearl Harbour.

Post-war, business picked up, and in 1949 the factory moved into no longer needed sections of the Rolls-Royce Crewe factory, which itself had been constructed pre-war as a shadow factory to mass-produce the Rolls-Royce Merlin engine. The new capacity allowed the firm to expand, including supplying its product to Harrods after Myron sent his own sales people in initially to promote the product.

Ackerman was very wise in his promotional activity, engaging popular movie stars inclduing Cary Grant and popular figures including Sir Winston Churchill, backing this up with practical and relatively affordable style. Having sold across Europe and the former Commonwealth Empire since 1955, in 1961 the company moved to a new factory in Crewe, to allow the Bentley Motors business to expand.

In 1978, the Ackerman family sold the business to the Austin Reed Group, by which time the business was employing 470 people, selling to Harrods, Selfridges, Turnbull & Asser and Saks Fifth Avenue, New York.[1] Austin Reed started using the factory to produce a number of other brands beside Chester Barrie, and from 1981 started to produce the ready-to-wear stock for fellow Savile Row tailor H. Huntsman. In 1989 the company won the Queen's Award for Export Achievement, and in 1998 started making the purple label suits for Polo Ralph Lauren.[2]

Present

As the dot.com boom decline hit world markets, the demand for bespoke suits declined. In financial troubles, Austin Reed sold the loss-making Chester Barrie business to Thomson Holdings in 2000. After the business went in receivership in 2002, the Crewe factory sold to former management, trading as the Cheshire Clothing Company, who later move to a brand new factory.[1] SRG Group plc acquired the Chester Barrie Brand and worldwide licensing rights, and engage CCC to manufacture top-end bespoke suits, while others are outsourced to Far East.

In 2006, CCC itself went into receivership and closed. A new independent manufacturing company was formed in Crewe, Cheshire Bespoke, who again widened their manufacturing offering to supply ranges for brands including Ozwald Boateng.[3]

In 2007, the ownership of the Chester Barrie brand and worldwide licensing rights were sold to Prominent Europe, who continue the relationship with Cheshire Bespoke.[4]



Input

Chester Barrie was first established in London in 1935 by an Englishman, Simon Ackerman, who had emigrated to the USA at the turn of the century. In the States, Mr Ackerman built up a high priced, quality tailoring business in and around New York. When he came back to London, he set up Chester Barrie to make quality suits for the US market. He would produce suits in London with the button holes un-finished and then send them back to the US to be finished and thus avoiding duty!

After his return to London, Mr Ackerman became a leading figure in the British fashion circles before WWII. He was a far sighted man and saw his opportunity to establish his name and product in England's tailoring heartland, Savile Row.

He opened his first store on London's Savile Row in 1937. His one concern was that of his name, (or more accurately the name of his store) which he felt at the time was not "English" enough and he was keen to appeal to a local customer as well as an American one.

It is not exactly known how he decided upon Chester Barrie but it is understood that he wanted to have an English-sounding name. So he decided upon Chester (the English city in the north of England) and "Barrie" (as in J.M. Barrie, author and play write of Peter Pan fame).

London in the 1930's was the international centre of male elegance, with its famous streets Savile Row (for suits) and Jermyn Street (for shirts), and Chester Barrie thrived in this heady environment. Simon Ackerman's customers included the likes of Winston Churchill and later such luminaries as Frank Sinatra and Cary Grant.

During World War II Chester Barrie was involved in the war effort, providing hand-made uniforms for officers of the American forces.[5]

Input2

Until recently (mid 2000s) Chester Barrie was a vertical operation. Owning its own factory in Crewe (where it is still made to this day). The Chester Barrie values stem from its English made goods and the reason for its base in the north was due to proximity with the port of Liverpool (and his export to the USA) and good communication routes with the mills in Huddersfield.

Chester Barrie became extremely popular for one very good reason; they provided a suit, ready for you to take away, that is of "good Savile Row quality". The rest of the street were "bespoke" tailors, that whilst of excellent quality, meant that it often took weeks for your suit to be ready. Chester Barrie provided the first "Ready-to-Wear" suits on Savile Row! In addition to their ready-to-wear, they offered (and still do to this day) a handmade-to-measure service if you had a little more time.

At Chester Barrie the cutting is still done by hand, although to average measurements rather than a pattern designed for the individual customer.

Chester Barrie, though are still hand crafted using only the very finest suit cloths. Attention to detail is paramount, from the 'comfort splice' in the trousers, the covered "Chester Barrie belt" and the full canvas structure.

Today, Chester Barrie provides the gentleman with the very best in suits, shirts and ties, using only the highest quality suiting cloths and shirting fabrics.[6]

Notable clients

Films

Timeline

  • 1935 Simon Ackerman returns to set up business in London
  • 1937 Opened first Chester Barrie store on Savile Row
  • 1938 Myron Ackerman, Simon's son is despatched to run the business in the UK
  • 1939 Chester Barrie opened its first wholly owned factory on Chestnut Grove, Crewe.
  • 1941 World War II, Chester Barrie makes uniforms for American officers
  • 1949 Chester Barrie opened a larger factory shared with the Rolls Royce Company
  • 1950 Begin selling to Harrods and Austin Reed. Harrods originally rejected the brand for being too expensive but Myron Ackerman sent his own staff to work in store and the suits sold extremely well.
  • 1955 Started selling across Commonwealth countries (Australia, Canada, Hong Kong, etc) and Europe (notably France, Sweden and Belgium)
  • 1961 Chester Barrie moved to a new purpose built factory in Crewe to keep up with demand.
  • 1978 Business sold to the Austin Reed Group. By then Chester Barrie was employing over 470 people. Selling to Harrods, Selfridges, Turnbull & Asser and Saks Fifth Avenue, New York[1]
  • 1981 Chester Barrie gained recognition from founders of Savile Row, when H. Huntsman ordered their first ready-to-wear stock from Chester Barrie.
  • 1989 Won the Queen's Award for Export Achievement
  • 1998 Starts making purple label suits for Polo Ralph Lauren.[2]
  • 2000 bought by Thomson Holdings
  • 2002 Goes into receivership. Crewe factory sold to former management, trading as the Cheshire Clothing Company, who later move to brand new factory.[1] SRG Group plc acquires the Chester Barrie Brand and worldwide licensing rights, and engage CCC to manufacture top-end bespoke suits, while others are outsourced to Far East
  • 2006 CCC goes into receivership and closes. New independent manufacturing company formed in Crewe, Cheshire Bespoke, who now widen offering to cover ranges for brands including Ozwald Boateng,[7]
  • 2007 Chester Barrie business and brands sold to Prominent Europe, who continue relationship with Cheshire Bespoke.[8]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Sarah Bridge (20 October 2002). "Chester Barrie is back in style". Mail on Sunday. Retrieved 2010-12-12.
  2. ^ a b c Lauren Goldstein (November 9, 1998). "Ralph Lauren, Prince Charles, and You!". Fortune magazine. Retrieved 2010-12-12.
  3. ^ Marino Donati (28 April 2007). "Cheshire Bespoke to step up tailoring production". Retrieved 2010-12-12.
  4. ^ "The soul of the suit". Warrington Guardian. 6 October 2008. Retrieved 2010-12-12.
  5. ^ "About Us". Chester Barrie. Retrieved 2010-12-12.
  6. ^ "Maunfacturing". Chester Barrie. Retrieved 2010-12-12.
  7. ^ Marino Donati (28 April 2007). "Cheshire Bespoke to step up tailoring production". Retrieved 2010-12-12.
  8. ^ "The soul of the suit". Warrington Guardian. 6 October 2008. Retrieved 2010-12-12.

Template:UK-retail-stub