Yellow Pack was a brand of generic groceries, first launched in March 1980 by Fine Fare , a British regional supermarket chain ultimately owned by the Weston family , whose extensive interests include the UK's Associated British Foods , Loblaw Companies in North America, and a range of upmarket retailers such as Selfridges , Brown Thomas and Fortnum & Mason .
51-562: Fine Fare was a chain of supermarkets which operated in the United Kingdom from 1951 until 1988. During the 1960s the company was the largest operator of supermarkets in Europe. Their Yellow Pack budget own-label range, introduced in 1980, was the first own brand basic range to be introduced in the UK and in 1983 it was the first British supermarket to sell organic food. The business for
102-412: A consultant for Associated British Foods construction subsidiary and impressed Weston enough to offer him the management role at Fine Fare. In 1966, George Weston Limited , another Weston company, bought DICOA, clearing the $ 18.7m debt that had occurred when DICOA had purchased Fine Fare. The company name was changed from Howardsgate Holdings to Fine Fare (Holdings) Ltd. Gulliver meanwhile was introducing
153-500: A deal worth £668 million, that was paid in a mixture of cash and a £308 million issue of new Dee shares. All Dee Corporation's newly acquired stores were then either rebranded as Gateway Foodmarkets or closed, meaning the Fine Fare name (including Shoppers Paradise and Melias) disappeared by the end of 1988. In 1968, Garland Compton replaced Fine Fare's previous agency, G S Gerrard, with a £250,000 contract. Their first advertisement
204-401: A expansion plan in the late 50s and early 60s, designed by their own inhouse architect team lead by Bryan Russel Archer and by 1962 had opened 236 supermarkets across the Fine Fare, Coopers and Burton brands, 30% of the total number of British supermarket stores, with a plan to open further supermarkets. In 1960, Garfield Weston brought in 500 Canadian supermarket clerks to train the management as
255-528: A further 13 new stores, profits had grown by 25%, and was the fastest growing business within Associated British Foods, with Garry Weston announcing a further 15 new stores would be opened during 1986. However, investors were speculating that the business would be sold, with James Gulliver's Argyll group being mention as a potential purchaser. The rumours were true, as Weston had decided that to try and compete with giants Tesco and Sainsbury's
306-522: A modestly successful own-label range, as the cheapest version of the product concerned available in Britain. In most cases, this involved product or packaging re-engineering, or uncovering of new sources. The range's colour scheme design was derived from the No Name brand of generics launched a year or two earlier by Fine Fare's Canadian sister grocery chain, Toronto-based Loblaws. The Yellow Pack brand
357-498: A non food chain of stores selling general merchandise, with Fine Ware gondolas appearing in Fine Fare stores. The remaining 20% of Fine Fare (Holdings) were purchased from George Weston in 1968 for $ 2,243,000 by Associated British Foods, making it a wholly owned subsidiary for the first time since 1963. In the same year, Fine Fare purchased the northern based grocery business of Great Universal Stores , William Cusson, with its supermarket subsidiary Carline, who operated 40 supermarkets and
408-450: A pre-tax profit of £35.3m in 1984-85, more than double made at the start of the decade, and by 1985 they were operating 437 stores including 40 superstores and 155 Shoppers Paradise. The company had continued to roll out the use of bar code scanning laser pen readers to stores, including all Shoppers Paradise shops so they could increase product lines from 650 to 1,250. Although Fine Fare spent money on closing down 32 older stores and opening
459-507: A price guarantee that stated Fine Fare would offer the best price week in, week out, and if you could prove it was cheaper elsewhere you could get a refund. The business grew further in 1980 by the purchase of 57 Pricerite stores in the South of the country from owner BAT adding them to their 131 Shoppers Paradise chain, and started to experiment with the use of bar code scanners at tills. In November 1980, Fine Fare opened their largest store yet,
510-498: A scheme called Management by Objective, splitting the central management structure into four regional groups, creating own brand products and revising operating processes from warehousing to shelf stocking. This included a new computerised distribution centre in Washington at the cost of £400,000 which opened in 1968. In 1967, Associated British Foods repurchased 31% of the shares owned by DICOA in Fine Fare for $ 23,376,000, adding to
561-565: A small range of bare necessities, opening them in competitive areas or in smaller former Fine Fare locations. They also announced a £10m building program over the next 12 months. and had moved into the burgeoning freezer centre market having opened four stores. In 1976, Fine Fare bought 47 stores of the East Anglian based Downsway supermarket chain, which was owned by the Vestey family business, Union International Group. Another chain purchased
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#1732776901695612-714: A successful product launch, they acquired a semi-iconic status in Ireland, and were extended throughout Quinnsworth's affiliate chains within the Power supermarket group (such as Stewarts and Crazy Prices in Northern Ireland and Crazy Prices in the Republic). The term "Yellow Pack" became a generic term for cheap products or low-paid jobs in Ireland. As a promotional offer, Quinnsworth started offering reduced-price flights to its customers. These were soon given
663-797: Is based in London , England. The company is 79.2% owned by the Garfield Weston Foundation , one of the United Kingdom's largest grant-making trusts, which was established in 1958 by Canadian businessman W. Garfield Weston (1898–1978), and 20.8% owned by members of the prominent Weston family . As of 5 April 2008, the trustees of the Garfield Weston Foundation valued their 79.2% stake in Wittington Investments at £3.62 billion. Wittington Investments owns 54.5% of Associated British Foods , one of
714-568: Is the name of two privately owned holding companies , one based in Britain, while the other is based on Canada. Both companies are controlled by the Weston family . Through these holding companies, the Weston family control some of the biggest names in food and retail on both sides of the Atlantic, including Loblaws and Associated British Foods . The British business was incorporated in 1941 and
765-824: The Birchwood Hypermarket , however they sold their 16 freezer centres to Bejam . The company made a pre-tax profit of £17.6m for 1980-81. The business moved into the burgeoning DIY industry with their Fix'n'Fit counters in superstores, before opening their own standalone stores. The business was sold to WHSmith Do It All in 1986. By 1982, the business had rebranded under the three umbrella brands of Fine Fare, for superstores and supermarkets, Shoppers Paradise, for minimum lines discount stores and Melias, for convenience stores. During 1982 and 1983, Fine Fare announced plans to open 17 new stores. Fine Fare became Britain's first supermarket to sell organic foods when they introduced them to their stores in 1983. The company made
816-720: The controlling shareholder of Wittington Investments, Limited. This company was the owner of the Selfridges Group of department store chains, including Selfridges in the UK, Brown Thomas and Arnotts in Ireland, and De Bijenkorf in the Netherlands. In December 2021, it was reported that the majority of the Selfridges Group's assets were being sold for around £4 billion to a joint venture between Thai conglomerate Central Group and Austrian firm Signa Holding . In 2024, Wittington Invesments became
867-768: The 30 grocery stores of Clarks in South East London. Joseph Burton & Co had started as a greengrocer in Nottingham during 1858 expanded rapidly and was incorporated and listed on the London Stock Exchange in 1900. The business operated under various names including the India & China Tea Stores; Valentine Stores; Shaw Brothers; Leckeby's; Swansons and J L Allcock. At the time, Howardsgate controlled over 600 stores, with Fine Fare accounting for 50+ grocery stores and 18 supermarkets. In January 1959,
918-480: The 49% it still owned. Gulliver's changes was seeing improvements, and in 1967 he was made chairman of Fine Fare. The company continued to grow, purchasing the 28 store East Anglian chain of Elmo for £1m from South African retailer O.K. Bazaars, and opening new supermarkets like Preston in the St. John's Shopping Centre, while Cooper's was rebranded under the trading name of Cooper's Fine Fare. Gulliver also opened Fine Ware,
969-464: The 58,000 sq. foot Shoppers Paradise hypermarket in Bedworth. Fine Fare announced that they would be the third UK retailer to withdraw from the full price records market in 1973, and that they planned to open 8 new superstores. The company announced a profit of £6m in 1973, with further growth to £7.4m a year later. In 1975, the company launched Shoppers Paradise as the company's discount chain, offering
1020-469: The British grocery trade for supermarkets had grown to 41%. The company announced that they would be spending £400,000 on updating their tills in preparation of decimalisation. Fine Fare's profits in the same year continued to grow to £4.5m, and although they had greatly improved since 1965 (by over 5000%), they were still behind Tesco who had posted a profit of £10m. At the beginning of the 1970s, Fine Fare
1071-739: The Fine Fare Supermarket, the Welwyn Store grocery branches and the bakery business owned by the Trust. In 1955, Allied Bakeries entered an agreement with Cooper & Co, a Scottish grocery retailer, purchasing shares in the business but with Coopers maintaining its management, while in the same year they also added the North London department store business of B.B. Evans, purchasing the business from Littlewoods through its retail subsidiary Howardsgate Holdings. They also completed
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#17327769016951122-775: The UK. "Wittington Investments, Limited" was founded by W. Garfield Weston in 1952 and is based in Toronto , Ontario , Canada. The company is the majority shareholder in the North American holding company George Weston Limited , owner of Choice Properties real estate investment trust , controlling shareholder in Loblaw Companies Limited , Canada's largest supermarket retailer and its in house retail brands including President's Choice , No Name and Joe Fresh . In 1963, Wittington Investments subsidiary, DICOA, (Diversified Companies of America) purchased
1173-614: The advertising agency Collett Dickenson Pearce after they signed an £850,000 contract, replacing their previous advertising agent Garland Compton . Fine Fare changed its advertising agency again in 1980, awarding Young & Rubicom London a £2m contract. Young & Rubicom London's advertising campaign for the launch of Fine Fare's new Birchwood Hypermarket received second prize in the IPA Effectiveness Awards. In 1985, Fine Fare increased its annual advertising spend by 30% to £4.3m, after spending around £3.3m to £3.5m in
1224-606: The advertising agency Collett Dickenson Pearce won a Bronze Arrow at the British Television Awards. Below is a list of names and companies that Howardsgate Holdings/ Fine Fare operated under or purchased from 1951 to its sale to the Dee Corporation in 1986. Fine Fare is mentioned in the song Aisle of Plenty from the album Selling England by the Pound by the progressive rock band, Genesis . It
1275-478: The boss of Weston's Canadian grocery chain Loblaws joined as chair of Howardsgate Holdings. The company at the time had 275 supermarkets and 375 grocery stores operating under such names as John Shental; Albert Hausen; Fred Brown; Boyce Adams and Arthur Davy & Sons. Welwyn Department Store was not part of the sale of Howardsgate Holdings and was transferred directly to Associated British Foods. The DICOA deal took
1326-603: The business after the retirement of Mr J C Sanderson. Associated British Foods would buy the remaining shares in Melias in 1972, merging the business into Fine Fare. In 1972, Gulliver was named Britain's Young Businessman of the Year but left the company to set up his own business. Seven years after Gulliver's appointment as chairman, the turnover had grown from £35 million to £200 million. The company continued to grow, purchasing grocery firm City Stores, who had recently opened
1377-431: The business struggled to find the required business leaders. In 1963, with the company struggling with its rapid expansion and not having enough junior managers, Garfield Weston stopped the supermarket building plan, with 46 of the stores not opened being sold or leased to rivals, like Tesco . Soon after it was reported that business had made a net loss of $ 3.7 million to the year ending 30 March 1963, with many criticising
1428-409: The company of poor marketing. In June 1963, Associated British Foods sold 51% of Howardsgate Holdings to DICOA, a holding company owned by Weston's principal Canadian investment business, Wittington Investments . The deal saw DICOA (Diversified Companies of America) pay $ 11.7 million for the stake plus a further $ 17 million advance to cover some of Fine Fare's loans. As part of the deal, George Metcalfe,
1479-594: The company won a court case against Brighton Corporation, which had insisted that its outlets closed on Wednesday afternoons under the Shops Act 1950 . In the same the company disposed of the North London department store B.B.Evans, to the Harrow Stores group, and the Cresta ladies fashion stores to Debenhams . In 1959, multiple grocery retailers like Fine Fare only had 25% of the whole market. The company went on
1530-539: The controlling share in Howardsgate Holdings, owners of Fine Fare supermarkets and it's various grocery brands, from Associated British Foods for $ 11.7 million after the business lost $ 3.7 million. Howardsgate Holdings was sold in 1966 to another subsidiary George Weston Limited , before being sold back to Associated British Foods . In December 2020, the Weston family announced that Galen Weston Jr. had succeeded his father ( Galen Weston Sr.) as
1581-751: The development of the town to the Welwyn Garden City Development Corporation under the New Towns Act 1946 , with the remaining parts of the business transferring to the Howardsgate Trust in 1951. Fine Fare was opened as a single supermarket in 1951, as an offshoot of the Welwyn Department Store. In December 1954, Garfield Weston 's Allied Bakeries business, the forerunner of Associated British Foods, purchased from Howardsgate Trust
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1632-533: The founder of the garden city movement. The business would open further branches in Hertfordshire selling groceries. Welwyn Garden City Company refused to allow any other retailer in the new town until 1936, when the Co-op were allowed to open a branch. The business opened the newly purpose-built Welwyn Department Store in 1939 to replace the former Welwyn Stores. In 1948, Welwyn Garden City Company transferred
1683-572: The high end grocery chain Hodgson & Hepworth in Doncaster. Under Gulliver's reorganisation Fine Fare's profit before tax in 1968 had grown to £2.7m. During 1968, the company introduced new products, including plants, a first for a British supermarkets which was not followed by its rivals until two years later, and its own brand wines and spirits. The company also moved into the off-licence trade, with 21 stores opened by 1969. By 1969, market share in
1734-569: The huge losses off Associated British Foods consolidated balance sheet. Soon after joining, Metcalf introduced Sperry & Hutchinson Pink Saving Stamps, which were already given out at Loblaws in Canada, and stated he would restart the supermarket rebuilding programme with the aim to open 1,000 supermarkets. However Sainsbury's joined forces with other grocery firms to form the Distributive Trades Alliance. In protest at
1785-647: The issuing of the stamps, the alliance members stopped stocking Associated British Foods Sunblest bread brand, and by 1964 Fine Fare cancelled their contract with Sperry & Hutchinson, though Cooper stores in Scotland continued. By 1965, the management team were still trying to turn the business around, opening the largest supermarket in England, with some stores being turned into a discount store Busy B, while they realised that 1 in 10 were uneconomical and would need to be remodelled and open under new names. Another plan
1836-431: The largest food companies in the world and the parent company of Primark , the largest discount clothing chain in the UK and Ireland. Associated British Foods also owns British Sugar , processor of the entire UK beet crop and producer of half the UK consumption of sugar. Further assets include ownership of the British department store Fortnum & Mason , as well as Heal's , a chain of homeware and furnishing stores in
1887-495: The low price wars, Fine Fare launched Yellow Pack , Britain's supermarket first basic range, which followed the idea first started by Carrefour in 1976. The launch may have helped Fine Fare reach 25% of all sales being own brand in the same year, however they were still behind Sainsbury's and Waitrose who were over 50% and 40% respectively. In addition to Yellow Pack, the company introduced the Fine Fare Guarantee ,
1938-509: The majority of its existence was owned by companies controlled by Garfield Weston and his family, but were sold in 1986 to the Dee Corporation, operators of Gateway Foodmarkets with the stores being rebranded. A year after Welwyn Garden City was founded, Welwyn Stores opened there as an all-encompassing department store and social hub owned by the Welwyn Garden City Company , the business formed by Ebenezer Howard ,
1989-604: The nickname Yellow Pack Flights . In the mid 1990s, Power Supermarkets began to phase out the Yellow Pack brand, replacing them with two new brands. Budget products were branded "Five Star" (later "K.V.I" (Keenest Value in Ireland)), and a more upmarket "Premium Choice" brand created for higher quality goods. After the acquisition of the Irish business by Tesco , the brand was completely replaced by Tesco own-brands, including
2040-534: The purchase of the Welwyn Department Store (and its subsidiary, the ladies' fashion store Cresta) from the Howardsgate Trust, and added the south east grocery multiple, Forrest Stores. By 1958, Howardsgate Holdings had added the 200+ stores of Joseph Burton & Sons to the business, as well as 100 stores of The London & Newcastle Tea Company and the Midlands & South West based Fearis Group, and
2091-492: The similar in concept Tesco Value , using white rather than yellow packaging). Tesco Value had been developed (as "Value Lines") in 1981, as Tesco's answer in Britain to Yellow Packs. Derived from the company's Victor Value chain, Tesco's Value range has, since the early 1980s played a consistent, though minor, role in Tesco's repertoire of private brands. Wittington Investments#Canadian company Wittington Investments
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2142-462: The site of the former North Station opening in 1979. Fine Fare however had dropped behind in the cheapest supermarket race, with Asda , Tesco, Sainsbury's, Key Markets and International being cheaper in branded and own brands by 1979. By 1980, the business was still in fourth place in market share, though Asda now had a larger share than Fine Fare, and Sainsbury's and Tesco market share had nearly doubled since 1970. To improve their competitiveness in
2193-534: The three years previously. Fine Fare sponsored the Scottish Football League for three years from the season of 1985–86 (beginning August 1985) to the season of 1987–88 (which ended in May 1988, around the same time that the last Fine Fare stores closed). The business also advertised on television, with some of the commercials fronted by the actor Gordon Jackson . A Fine Fare Yellow Pack advert by
2244-602: Was Mercury Market, a North West based chain started by the De Rooy family By 1977, Fine Fare operated 460 supermarkets and a further 372 stores. In the same year, before Tesco launched their Checkout campaign, Fine Fare were cheaper than Tesco on branded products, however they were dearer on own brand goods. In 1978, the expansion of the discount centres under the Shoppers Paradise and Elmo brands continued, and were opening further superstores, with Blackpool, built on
2295-426: Was a customer recommendation piece with the tag line You will always find fairness at Fine Fare .The tagline was replaced soon after to Fine Fare Care , but due to a price error in an advert, Garland Compton had to reimburse Fine Fare and would need to repitch for the business which they retained. Another tag line used during this time was Where you can be fair to your family, and your purse . From 1973, Fine Fare used
2346-665: Was also the subject of a song by the punk band Toy Dolls called Nowt Can Compare to Sunderland Fine Fare from their fourth album Bare Faced Cheek . Yellow Pack Distinctively packaged in yellow with aggressive black print, under a brand name ("YelLOW PRICE Packs") invented in January 1980 by the Collett Dickenson Pearce advertising agency, Yellow Packs, unlike previous generic grocery launches in North America and Europe, were positioned, next to
2397-600: Was not sure what name to call it, but named it superstore after the local bus company put it as the destination on the front of the bus. Fine Fare's parent company, Associated British Foods, had in 1967 had purchased a controlling share holding in the grocery firm Melias, who also operated Merlin Supermarkets, and in 1970 agreed to share costs amongst both companies and allow the Fine Fare brand to be used on Melias supermarkets. The connection between Fine Fare and Melias grew further in 1971, when James Gulliver became Chairman of
2448-410: Was prohibitive. However Gulliver did not make a bid, and two interested bidders came to the fore. David Smith, an accountancy consultant who had worked for Arthur Young , had joined forces with former Asda boss, John Fletcher to make a bid, while a rival bid came from the Dee Corporation, operators of Gateway Foodmarkets. In June 1986, Associated British Foods sold the company to The Dee Corporation in
2499-652: Was reasonably successful, accounting for 30% of the chain's grocery sales by the time Fine Fare was acquired by the Dee Corporation – then mostly trading as Gateway, now Somerfield – in mid 1986. It was then discontinued in Great Britain . In the meantime, after initial internal hostility to someone else's idea, the range was adopted by Fine fare's Irish sister company, Quinnsworth, where it featured heavily in advertising presented by Quinnsworth's advertising manager, Maurice Pratt. Whereas in Fine Fare's Scottish and Teesside heartland, Yellow Packs had merely been
2550-524: Was the fourth largest chain in terms of market share. The business continued to grow by purchasing rival grocery chains, purchasing the 200 strong Waterworth business based in Lancashire. The company were still operating a variety of brands including Elmos, Carlines, Forrest Stores, Blower Bros., Scott's Fine Fare and Chas H. Sheen. The company opened one of Britain's biggest supermarkets in Aberdeen, and
2601-639: Was to turn the company into three focused brand, Cooper for the top end of the market, Fine Fare as the middle market store and Busy B for the discount market. Many of the Canadian management team resigned that summer as the strain took its toll as they struggled to turn the business around. The company, the largest supermarket chain in Europe at the time, made a pre-tax profit of just £85,000 in 1965, while rival Tesco had made £2.5 million. Garfield Weston replaced these with British management, with James Gulliver appointed as Chief Executive. Gulliver, 35, had worked as
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