Foy & Gibson,also known asFoy'sand laterCox-Foys,was one ofAustralia's largest and earliestdepartment storechains. A large range of goods were manufactured and sold by the company including clothing, manchester, leather goods, soft furnishings, furniture, hardware and food.[1]
Company type | Department store |
---|---|
Industry | Retail |
Founded | 1883 Collingwood, Victoria,Australia |
Founder |
|
Defunct | 1960s-1970s |
Headquarters | Melbourne,Victoria, Australia |
Products | Clothing, manchester, leather goods, soft furnishings, furniture, hardware, food |
History
editThe first store was established as adraperyinSmith Street,Collingwood, VictoriabyMark Foy.This business prospered, occupying three shops by 1875 and six by 1880. Ownership was transferred to his sonFrancis Foyin partnership with William Gibson in March 1883, but very soon after Francis Foy sold his half share to Gibson and moved toSydneywith his brother Mark, establishingMark Foy'sthere in 1885.[2]
When the business expanded in the late 1880s, Gibson was joined by William Dougal and by his nephews Samuel Gibson and John Maclellan. He opened a hardware department and then rearranged the store in 1889, reputedly modelled on the ParisianBon Marché,creating what is said to be the first department store in Melbourne.[3]Gibson kept his store going despite the 1893 bank crashes through hard work and 'dogged determination', and began to establish his own manufacturing works. By the early 20th century Gibson's workshops produced men's clothing, shirts, ladies' underclothing, millinery, furniture, bedding and hardware, and 'Gibsonia' woollens and hosiery. The complex and the stores became one of the largest employers in Victoria, and dominated the Wellington and Smith streets area with huge red brick multi-level buildings, all designed by architectWilliam Pitt.[4]
Gibson established a branch of the business inPerthin 1895, and subsequently opened a store inBrisbanein 1903 and another inRundle Street,Adelaide(nowRundle Mall) in 1907,[2][5]on the site of theYork Hotel,becoming the first department store with many interstate branches. A second Melbourne store called the Big Store, opened inChapel Street,Prahran,in 1902, and in 1935 the Melbourne city store on the corner ofBourkeandSwanstonstreets was rebuilt.[6]
In 1955 the company was bought out by Cox Brothers. In 1964 Foy & Gibson (WA) Ltd, including ten stores inWestern Australia,was sold toDavid Jones.The Bourke Street, Melbourne store was sold toWoolworthsin 1967. The Bourke Street store still stands but had been modernised, with three-storeys added at some point.[7]
A building owned byCharles Atkins Hornabrookon the corner ofRundleandPulteney Streetswas demolished by Foy & Gibson in 1909 to make way for theGrand Central Hotel,ahotelof six storeys built in the style of their emporium next door.[8]However, despite some high-profile guests (thePrince of Walesin 1920,Arthur Conan Doylein 1922), it never prospered, and around 1925 was incorporated into the emporium.[9]It later became showrooms and offices for theElectricity Trust,then in 1975–1976 was demolished to make way for a multi-level car park.[10][11]Since demolition in 1976 and as of 2023[update]the Rundle Street site is occupied by the multi-storey car park and aHungry Jack'sfast food restaurant.[12]
The site of the Adelaide store in what is now Rundle Mall now hosts multiple tenancies. Cox brothers went into receivership in 1968 ending the name of Foys in Melbourne. Letter books, financial records and catalogues are held by the University of Melbourne Archives.[4]
Origins
editBy 1868 Mark Foy had established a drapery store in the Victorian gold mining town ofBendigofinding this town too small to develop and expand his business he hired several wagons and moved his business to Melbourne. He chose a place in Collingwood and set up his business in a building at the rear of the property.[13]In 1931 the little house in Collingwood in which Foy started his business was still part of the entrance to Foy & Gibson Emporium.
References
edit- ^"Part of former Foy and Gibson Complex".Heritage Victoria. Archived fromthe originalon 19 March 2008.Retrieved27 April2008.
- ^ab"Gibson, William (1842? - 1918)".Australian Dictionary of Biography.Canberra: National Centre of Biography,Australian National University.ISBN978-0-522-84459-7.ISSN1833-7538.OCLC70677943.Retrieved27 April2008.
- ^"Former Foy & Gibson Factory Buildings".Collingwood Historical Society.Retrieved25 July2019.
- ^abSchool of Historical Studies, Department of History."Foy & Gibson - Entry - eMelbourne - The Encyclopedia of Melbourne Online".www.emelbourne.net.au.Retrieved25 July2019.
- ^"A Mammoth Store".The Advertiser.Adelaide. 7 September 1907. p. 10.Retrieved23 November2012– via National Library of Australia.
- ^"ARCHITECTURE & PROPERTY".The Argus (Melbourne).No. 27, 598. Victoria, Australia. 31 January 1935. p. 4.Retrieved25 July2019– via National Library of Australia.
- ^"Cox Brothers (Australia) Ltd (1928 - )".Guide to Australian Business Records.Retrieved27 April2008.
- ^"Expansion of Adelaide".The Advertiser (Adelaide).South Australia. 17 June 1911. p. 6.Retrieved10 January2020– via Trove.
- ^"Grand Central Hotel".The Register (Adelaide).South Australia. 12 August 1924. p. 9.Retrieved10 January2020– via Trove.
- ^"Adelaide City Heritage: Grand Central Hotel".National Trust of South Australia.Retrieved10 January2020.
- ^"One-of-a-kind building demolished for a carpark".The Advertiser (Adelaide).
- ^Ntafillis, Viki (24 February 2023)."Thebarton Police Barracks to join list of Adelaide architectural wonders that have disappeared".ABC News (Australia).Retrieved22 April2023.
- ^"Foy and Gibson's".The West Australian.Vol. XLVII, no. 9, 139. Western Australia. 9 October 1931. p. 21.Retrieved22 July2020– via National Library of Australia.