History of Harrods department store

  • Published

London department store Harrods has been sold by its owner Mohammed Al Fayed to the Qatari royal family for £1.5bn.

Image caption,

The Knightsbridge store was rebuilt to its current design after a fire in 1880

Recognised for its celebrity-endorsed sales, food hall and signature green bags, Harrods is one of the world's largest and most famous department stores.

With more than a million square feet (90,000 sq m) of space, Harrods sells luxury and everyday items across seven floors and 330 departments.

Its motto is Omnia Omnibus Ubique - All Things for All People, Everywhere - and the store attracts 15 million customers each year.

The Knightsbridge store was established in 1849 by Charles Henry Harrod. Beginning in a single room and employing two assistants and a messenger boy, it mainly sold tea and groceries.

Harrods steadily expanded, and by 1880 was a thriving department store, offering everything from medicines and perfumes to clothing and food and attracted wealthy customers.

Its expansion suffered a knock in 1883 when a fire destroyed the store. This did not halt the owners, however, who duly rebuilt the store, with the help of architect Charles William Stephens, into what it is today.

Known for its grandeur, when the store reopened it had a palatial style, featuring a frontage clad in terracotta tiles adorned with cherubs, swirling Art Nouveau windows and was topped with a baroque-style dome.

Harrods became a public company in 1889 and by the 1890s it had established a bank and estate agency and a department selling exotic pets that lasted until the 1970s.

It featured one of the world's first escalators in 1898.

During World War II, the store transformed itself from selling luxury goods to making uniforms, parachutes and parts for Lancaster bombers.

In 1959, High Street department store group House of Fraser bought Harrods.

Bitter feud

In 1985 the store returned to private ownership when Egypt-born Mr Al Fayed and his brother Ali bought House of Fraser for £615m, snatching it from mining conglomerate Lonrho.

Image caption,

Mr Al Fayed bought Harrods with his brother in 1985

The takeover bid was bitterly fought as Mr Al Fayed had previously served on Lonrho's board but left nine months later after a disagreement.

Lonrho's director, the late Tiny Rowland, took his campaign against the takeover to the Department of Trade who duly held an inquiry.

The subsequent report, issued in 1990, concluded that the Al Fayeds had lied about their background and their wealth.

"We are satisfied that the image they created between November 1984 and March 1985 of their wealthy Egyptian ancestors was completely bogus."

The public feud between the businessmen appeared to reach reconciliation in 1993 however Mr Rowland later accused Mr Al Fayed of breaking into a safety deposit box held at the store.

This dispute was later settled with Mr Rowland's wife after his death.

Dress code

Harrods has twice experienced bomb attacks by the IRA. In 1983, six people were killed, external and 75 injured after a car exploded in an adjacent street while in 1993, four were injured when a bomb was placed in a litter bin outside.

The store controversially introduced a dress code in 1989 which included a ban on wearing high-cut, Bermuda or beach shorts; swimwear; cycling shorts and flip flops or thong sandals.

In 1994, the Al Fayed brothers let go of the other House of Fraser businesses in a stock market flotation, keeping only Harrods.

By 2000, the Harrods empire had expanded to take in outlets at airports and on the QE2 cruise ship.

Mr Al Fayed also added his own personal touches to the store, such as the Egyptian Room, which is adorned with several busts of himself.

Following the death of his son, Dodi, and Diana, Princess of Wales, in a car crash in August 1997, Mr Al Fayed created a memorial to the couple in the store.

He also made a series of allegations about the circumstances of the death and the British Royal family.

In 2000, Mr Al Fayed decided to not renew his royal warrants, saying that since neither the Queen, nor Prince Charles had shopped in Harrods for several years, continuing to display the Royal Crescent would be "totally misleading and hypocritical".

Harrods now employs about 4,000 staff. The sale includes all parts of the group, including Harrods Estates and the charter aircraft service Air Harrods.

Related internet links

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.