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Debenhams will close its doors today for the final time after over 200 years on the highstreet.
Staff have said they will be in tears when the last of the company’s 118 shops shut for the final time this evening.
The chain opened its first store in 1778 on Wigmore Street, London by William Clark, selling fabrics, bonnets and parasols. It was at one time the largest department store group in the UK, owning 84 companies and 100 stores in 1950.
With shopping increasingly moving to online combined with the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, the chain has struggled in recent years and last year filed for administration three times.
In January 2021 the company was bought for £55 million by online giant Boohoo. In total, 12,000 jobs were lost overnight as bosses revealed they were planning to take it to an online-only brand, rivalling the likes of John Lewis.
The purchase excluded all of the 118 physical stores owned by the company, many of which will now be redeveloped, made into flats or left bare.
Earlier this month, 97 of these stores reopened in an attempt to shift millions of pounds worth of stock in as part of the liquidation process. The last of these 28 stores will close for the final time today and include shops in Manchester, Liverpool, Bromley, Exeter and Colchester.
Shoppers have been able to pick up discounts of up to 80 per cent off, generally and 70 per cent off on beauty and fragrances.
Other well known highstreet brands including Laura Ashley, Edinburgh Woollen Mill Group, Oasis and Warehouse have also all slid into insolvency since March.
Boohoo have also purchased Oasis and Warehouse as well as its Debenhams takeover.
Nicola Rice, 35, who works in the Sheffield city centre store said she had worked there since she leaving school, reported The Mirror.
She admitted: “I’m going to cry when the shutters come down on Saturday.”
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