W Boyes & Co

For the community in the United States, see Boyes, Montana.
W Boyes & Co Ltd
Private
Industry Retail
Founded 1881
Headquarters Eastfield, North Yorkshire, England
Number of locations
57 (June 2016)
Website www.boyes.co.uk

Boyes is a chain of department stores in the UK. William Boyes founded the firm in 1881 and it has been run by generations of the Boyes family ever since. It began as one small shop in Scarborough, North Yorkshire selling remnants from merchants. The area was full of poverty and the store was therefore popular with housewives.

Additional stores opened in York and Hull early in the 20th century, with the company then developing a chain of stores throughout Northern England in the following decades.[1][2]

In recent years, Boyes have also opened several stores in the South of England, although the vast majority are still the North of England including in Kingston upon Hull, which has the most stores, 4 in total, following the opening of their Hull City Centre store in November 2014. A new store is due to open in Thornaby around the later part of September.

Boyes stores now stock a large range of products including clothing, toys, stationery, babywear, toiletries, housewares, DIY, fishing tackle, footwear, soft furnishings, wool, haberdashery, confectionery and pet products. Some of their also larger stores have a carpet and furniture department and even a cafe.

Its full trading name is W Boyes and Co Ltd, however the stores trade as "Boyes" (pronounced Boys or Boys-es). The company is based at its head office in Eastfield.

The company's slogan is "for good value" and the stores now specialise in the discount retail sector, stocking a mixture of regular lines and one off special purchases and clearance lines. It runs sales in "Summer and Christmas time sales" and has a presence on social media, but only joined Twitter in 2015.[3]

List of stores

Cambridgeshire


County Durham


Cumbria


Derbyshire


East Riding of Yorkshire


North Yorkshire


South Yorkshire


West Yorkshire


Lancashire


Leicestershire


Lincolnshire


Nottinghamshire


Teesside


Tyne and Wear

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.