Ogilvy (department store)

For the Ogilvy's department store in Ottawa, Ontario, see Ogilvy's.
Ogilvy
Privately held company
Industry Retail
Founded 1866
Founder James Angus Ogilvy
Headquarters Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Products Clothing and accessories, footwear, fragrances, jewellery, beauty products
Website http://www.ogilvycanada.com/
Saint Catherine Street entrance to Ogilvy's

La Maison Ogilvy, or simply Ogilvy in English and French, is a prominent retail establishment located in downtown Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Founded in 1866, the store, at 1307 Saint Catherine Street West, is considered a retail landmark. Originally a dry goods store, Ogilvy today hosts an array of luxury goods shops, brands and boutiques. Much of its retail space is devoted to designer brand shops including Louis Vuitton, Michael Kors, Burberry, and Hugo Boss, in addition to other well known labels such as Canada Goose. Ogilvy is the only one of Montreal's four major west-end retailers still operating under its original name and is also known as the "Grande dame of St. Catherine Street".[1] In July 2011, it was announced that the store had been purchased by the Selfridges Group Ltd., a subsidiary of Wittington Investments and the owner of the Selfridges and Holt Renfrew retail chains.[2]

History

Founding

In 1866, James Angus Ogilvy, a recent immigrant from Kirriemuir, Scotland, opened a wholesale and retail dry goods store at 91 and 93 Mountain Street in Montreal.[3] Ogilvy is said to have started with a single counter and one employee.[1] He remained at the same location for the next ten years until moving his "fancy and staple dry goods" business to 199 St. Antoine Street.[4] In 1884, Ogilvy relocated once again, this time to St. Antoine and Mountain streets. By 1890, James A. Ogilvy & Sons had expanded its operation to include house furnishings, household linens, and fine dry goods, in addition to serving as "agents for the celebrated Rob Roy Linen Fire Hose."[5]

Jas. A. Ogily & Sons "spring fashions" mail order catalogue, Montreal, 1906.

St. Catherine Street

In September 1896, James Ogilvy unveiled a new, larger, three storey granite premises, at the corner of St. Catherine Street West and Mountain Street. Designed by David Ogilvy, the proprietor's architect son, the store was described as "having every device known at the present time for the convenience of the public, the comfort of employees, and the economy of time."[6] Amenities included a ladies' sitting room, detailed in cherrywood, and furnished with writing tables and chairs. In spite of the larger, more prestigious quarters, Ogilvy declared that his business would remain largely unchanged:

We came up to St. Catherine Street and mean business — a Dry Goods Business — only Dry Goods. A number of people have asked us if we are going into department store work. This we have positively refused to do. Our business is dry goods.[6]

In fact, one of the company's mail order catalogues boasted that Ogilvy's was the "largest exclusive dry goods store in Canada," featuring "the world's best merchandise at the lowest possible price."[7]

"The Ogilvy Store," St. Catherine and Mountain streets, Montreal, 1906.

For the next sixteen years, the store remained at the northeast corner of St. Catherine Street West and Mountain Street. But with business expanding, Ogilvy bought land directly across the street and commenced construction of a new establishment in 1908. The four storey, Romanesque Revival structure, once again designed by David Ogilvy, and costing well over a million dollars,[8] was formally unveiled in March 1912.[9] Press reports noted the spaciousness of the new store and how "the accommodations are such that 1,000 people can be standing at the counters at one time and still have the aisle space for a couple thousand more people."[6] Advertisements promoted the new establishment as "The Daylight Store" - an apparent reference to the abundance of natural light allowed by its many windows.[10]

By 1920, Ogilvy's array of merchandise and services had expanded and its policy of remaining strictly a dry goods business had changed. Jas. A. Ogilvy Limited now promoted itself as a department store that included amenities such as a "Hair Dressing Parlor" as well as "Lunch Room."[11] During this period, the store's ownership also changed hands and Jas. A. Ogilvy & Sons became an asset of the Home Bank. In 1927, following the bank's failure, investment dealer Arthur J. Nesbitt, of Nesbitt, Thomson and Company, bought the firm's entire common stock at $5 a share, for a total of $38,500, on the urging of his 19 year old son. J. Aird Nesbitt hoped to quickly resell the business for a profit.[12] Instead, he "fell in love with the place” and proceeded to manage Ogilvy's for the next 54 years.[13]

Grand opening of the new Jas. A. Ogilvy & Sons store, Montreal Daily Star, March 27, 1912

Nesbitt era

As head of Ogilvy's, James Aird Nesbitt became a leading figure in Montreal retailing. Described as "an innovator and pioneer marketeer"[14] who spent his career "ignoring the mass-merchandising techniques of the big department stores."[15] Nesbitt characterized himself as "more showman than storekeeper."[16] Soon after taking charge of Ogilvy's, he added a fifth floor to the building and opened Tudor Hall, a 300 seat oak paneled music hall that featured an elaborate pipe organ. The venue hosted public concerts and shows, from Punch and Judy to performing baby elephants, along with early radio shows, including the first Montreal Symphony Orchestra across-the-country broadcast, and Canada's first experimental television transmission, aired in 1931.[16] Other attractions included the world's fastest aircraft, a Vickers-Armstrongs Supermarine biplane, which in 1932 Nesbitt had dismantled and reassembled for in-store display.[14]

Nesbitt also placed renewed emphasis on elegant interior design and chandeliers became a common store fixture. During the 1960s, he purchased the century-old, 100-light crystal Bohemian chandelier from Her Majesty's Theatre, Montreal, following its demolition, and put it on display on Ogilvy's ground floor, where it still hangs today. Nesbitt also established a policy whereby Ogilvy's would carry items that its clientele would enjoy, rather than merchandise only designed to make the most money:

We feel that the more fun we get out of merchandising ourselves, the more our customers will enjoy it, and the more successful we will be. Therefore, it is our policy to both choose in Canada and to import from around the world as many delectable and exciting things as we can afford, sometimes not worrying too much whether the things will be a big commercial success as long as they are a pleasure to have in the store.[17]

Nesbitt paid tribute to the store’s Scottish heritage, along with his own, with the introduction of tartan shopping bags and store packaging. He also initiated the tradition of a Scottish bagpiper who paraded through the store, playing for the entertainment of patrons and staff alike. Beginning in 1945, the bagpiper closed the store at the end of the day — initially on Saturdays only but later on a daily basis.[18] For the past several decades, though, the bagpiper has played at noon hour, winding his way through all the floors of the store.

Nesbitt was also responsible for the annual tradition of the store's Christmas window display. In 1947, he commissioned German toymaker Steiff to create two animated holiday scenes, known as "The Mill in the Forest" and "The Enchanted Village," made up of dozens of handcrafted mechanical toy animals, with more than a hundred moveable parts. In 2008, the displays, in a state of disrepair, were completely refurbished.[19]

With the 1960s, the store was one of the first to use such contemporary expressions as "go-go" and "mod" in its promotional displays. It was also one of the first "to make use of the Chelsea look," associated with the miniskirt[12] as it offered up the fashion of British designer Mary Quant.[17] Ogilvy also expanded into suburban Montreal with the opening of branch stores at Fairview Pointe Claire in 1965 and Anjou in 1968. By the 1970s, though, the store was no longer considered "the fashion leader," better known for its "conservative clientele." Its profitability had also been on the decline. In 1976, it reported earnings of $81,000 on sales of more than $16 million.[15]

Redevelopment

Ogilvy seen in August 2012.

In 1981, after more than half a century as Ogilvy head, J. Aird Nesbitt retired. Edward Walls, a former general merchandise manager with the T. Eaton Company, became the new Chief Executive Officer. Among other changes, Walls expressed his desire to reduce the number of store departments from 66, which ranged from antiques to television sets.[15] Four years later, after entertaining various offers, and asking for reassurances that "every reasonable effort" would be made to retain its retail tradition, the Nesbitt family sold Jas. A. Ogilvy Limited to Equidev, a Montreal development group led by real estate entrepreneur Daniel Fournier.[14] The new owners proceeded to undertake major renovations, both structural and cosmetic, which resulted in much of the store being gutted. The redesign saw the introduction of a new retail format called the "store within a store."[20] Ogilvy was subsequently remodeled and transformed from a department store into a series of upscale shops and boutiques operated by independent retailers and brands, but under a common store policy. In November 1986, the first of the renovations, consisting of a completely redesigned second floor, were unveiled. It took two more years for the rest of the 150,000 square feet of retail space to be fully remodelled. The completed renovations saw 85 percent of the store’s space leased to some 50 retailers.[21]

In 1994, Standard Life Assurance Company bought Ogilvy. Six years later, the retailer again changed hands, this time acquired by Pyxis Real Estate Equities Inc. In 2004, the store underwent another remodeling at a cost of $12 million.[22] In 2010, it was bought by a Quebec-based consortium[23] but within a year was sold again, this time to the Selfridges Group Limited, chaired by W. Galen Weston, a subsidiary of Wittington Investments Limited. Wittington's other holdings include upscale retailers Selfridges in the United Kingdom, Brown Thomas in Dublin, Ireland, de Bijenkorf of the Netherlands, and Holt Renfrew in Canada.[24]

See also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Ogilvy, the grande dame of rue Sainte-Catherine". mixtemagazine.ca. Retrieved 7 January 2013.
  2. Marotte, Bertrand (29 July 2011). "Selfridges to buy Ogilvy department store". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 29 July 2011.
  3. Montreal Directory. John Lovell. June 1866.
  4. (Montreal Directory for 1877-78. John Lovell. June 1878.
  5. "Souvenir Numbers — the various financial and commercial interests of the City of Montreal". Montreal Daily Star. 1890.
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Elizabeth Sifton (2005). "Montreal's fashion mile: St Catherine Street, 1890–1930". In Alexandra Palmer. Fashion: A Canadian perspective. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
  7. Ogilvy's Spring Fashions (mail order catalogue). Montreal: Jas. Ogilvy & Sons. 1906.
  8. "New Ogilvy store will cost over million dollars and will be one of finest in city". Montreal Daily Star. December 4, 1909.
  9. "Announcing the formal opening of our new store (advertisement)". Montreal Daily Star. March 27, 1912.
  10. "A series of departmental sales centring on the inauguaration of our new store (advertisement)". Montreal Daily Star. March 28, 1912.
  11. Montreal Directory. John Lovell. 1921–1922.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Moon, Robert (September 1966). "Nesbitt of Ogilvy's: Montrealer's taste maker". Southam publication.
  13. "Love affair lasted 54 years". Gazette, Montreal. May 30, 1981.
  14. 14.0 14.1 14.2 Auf der Maur, Nick (May 8, 1985). "Store's sale heralds new era for Ogilvy's". Gazette,Montreal, May 8, 1985.
  15. 15.0 15.1 15.2 Bryan, Jay (May 30, 1981). "New Ogilvy boss old Eaton hand". Gazette, Montreal.
  16. 16.0 16.1 Fitzgerald, John (September 12, 1977). "The man, like his store, is one of a kind". Gazette, Montreal.
  17. 17.0 17.1 "The Brigadier's boutique". Time (Canadian edition). 16 April 1965.
  18. "Ogilvy's 'living tradition' bids adieu". Montreal Star. July 31, 1974.
  19. "Ogilvy's peek at the Christmas season". Gazette, Montreal. November 19, 2011.
  20. Enchin, Harvey (August 3, 1987). "Store within a store key to Ogilvy’s changes". Globe and Mail.
  21. Palik, Betty (November 1989). Ogilvy – an innovative retail concept. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  22. "Hot Shop Ogilvy". Globe and Mail. October 30, 2004.
  23. Marotte, Bertrand (July 7, 2010). "Montreal retail icon Ogilvy back in Quebec hands". Globe and Mail.
  24. Marotte, Bernard (July 29, 2011). "Weston adds Ogilvy to upscale department store holdings". Retrieved 7 January 2013.

External links

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