Jacksons Stores Explained

Jacksons Stores Limited
Type:Private
Fate:Converted into
Sainsbury's at Jacksons then Sainsbury's Local shops
Foundation:1891
Defunct:2008
Founder:William Jackson
Location:40 Derringham Street, Hull
Key People:Angus Oughtred (Managing director)
Area Served:Yorkshire and North Midlands
Industry:Convenience shops
Parent:J Sainsbury plc

Jacksons Stores Ltd, named after the founder William Jackson, was a British chain of 114 convenience shops in Yorkshire and the North Midlands that was founded in 1891 by the Hull-based William Jackson & Sons Ltd and sold to Sainsbury's in 2004, an acquisition which doubled that company's share of the convenience shop market.[1] After the takeover by Sainsbury's, many Jacksons Stores were initially refurbished to trade under the Sainsbury's at Jacksons brand. This brand was phased out and replaced with the Sainsbury's Local brand by March 2008.

Shortly before the Sainsbury's acquisition the chain was voted Britain's best independent retail chain.[2]

Sainsbury's acquisition of Jacksons Stores was part of a wider strategy to expand into the convenience sector. The deal was not subject to a competition inquiry due to the precedent of Tesco's T&S Stores acquisition; The Office of Fair Trading took the view that the convenience sector was distinct from the supermarket sector.[3]

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Notes and References

  1. News: Susie. Mesure. Sainsbury's snaps up Jackson convenience shop chain. The Independent. Independent News and Media. 17 August 2004.
  2. News: Nick. Bevens. Sainsbury's increases its stake in the booming convenience shop sector. The Scotsman. The Scotsman Publications. 48. 17 August 2004. 0307-5850.
  3. News: Patience. Wheatcroft . Ministers must hear auditors’ call. The Times. Times Newspapers. 17 August 2004. 7 March 2007 . London.