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Heals 1810-2010 Bicentenary Book

1810 - 1819

PEOPLE

In the early 19th-century, brothers John Harris and Ambrose Heal

headed to London to seek their fortune. John Harris Heal joined a firm in

Leicester Square, where he trained as a feather dresser, before setting up

his own mattress business in 1810. And so began an eminent 200-year

story of Heal’s making mattresses, beds, bedding and furniture.

JOHN HARRIS HEAL

FOUNDER 1810

1820 - 1829

JOHN

HARRIS

HEAL

FOUNDER & DIRECTOR 1810-1833

PEOPLE

When John Harris Heal

came to London from the

West Country, he started

work as a feather dresser

for a firm in Leicester

Square before going on

to found his own featherdressing

business, Heal

& Son, in 1810 at 33

Rathbone Place. In 1818,

the business moved to

203 Tottenham Court

Road, which was at the

centre of Victorian

London’s furniture trade.

The business was then

described as a ‘Mattress

and Feather-bed

Manufacturer’.

1830 - 1839

FANNY HEAL

DIRECTOR 1833-1840

After Heal’s founder, John Harris Heal died in 1833, his widow Fanny Heal, persevered with the family business.

DICKENS ADVERTISING

1837

“Heal & Son promoted its French mattresses in The Pickwick Papers...."

1840 - 1849

JOHN

HARRIS

HEAL

JUNIOR

DIRECTOR

1840-1876

PEOPLE

Following the death of his father and after working alongside his mother, John Harris Heal junior took over the business in 1840, and steered the company for 36 years. Thanks to his adoption of new mattress-making techniques and his belief in the power of advertising, the firm became one of London’s most successful furniture houses.

1850 - 1859

196-198

TOTTENHAM

COURT ROAD

1854

ARCHIVE

After a period of substantial growth, Heal’s needed more retail and workshop space. Architect J Morant Lockyer – an authority on the Italian Renaissance period – designed a new building in Venetian Palazzo style to incorporate 196-198 Tottenham Court Road. The new Heal’s shop became one of the

largest in London. The ‘Established 1818’ date shown at the top of the building marks when the premises moved from 203 Tottenham Court Road, where it briefly resided after relocating from the original premises at Rathbone Place.

1860 - 1869

GREAT INTERNATIONAL

EXHIBITION 1862

OFFICER’S CAMPAIGN

BED 1863

This ornate half tester-bed in the Louis XVI style was the centrepiece of a set of bedroom furniture designed by Heal’s for the Great International Exhibition.
John Harris Heal was keen to market furniture and bedding to overseas officers.

1870 - 1879

PEOPLE

John Harris Heal

Junior is succeeded

in partnership by

his sons Harris and

Ambrose Heal, along

with his son-in-law

Alfred Brewer.

ALFRED BREWER

1876

1880 - 1889

1880

The first room sets

are shown in the shop.

Complete examples

of furnished bedrooms

and living rooms are on

show in the Tottenham

Court Road store.

1890 - 1899

HEAL’S

BEDDING

FACTORY

1890s

ARCHIVE

Thanks to Heal’s director

John Harris’s considerable

efforts and unwavering

belief in quality and

innovation, from the 1840s

a Heal’s bed was regarded

by the middle classes as

the best that money could

buy. It was in the bedding

factory, located behind the

main store, that Ambrose

Heal started his career at

the family firm in 1893.

1900 - 1909

HEAL'S PRODUCT

CATALOGUE 1900

PARIS AWARDS

FOR HEAL’S 1900

AMBROSE HEAL

CHAIRMAN 1913-1953

An example of an early 20th-century catalogue.
Sir Ambrose Heal (1872-1959) was a designer, retailer and influential figure.
Ambrose Heal was keen to expand the business across the Continent.

1910 - 1919

CAPPERS FARM 1910

HEAL'S CENTENARY 1910

CECIL BREWER

BUILDING EXTENSION 1916

MANSARD GALLERY

1919

Capper’s Farm was a 17th-century farmhouse behind the furniture store where some of Heal’s employees lived.
Commemorative stamps marking the company’s first century.
An extension to the original Heal’s building was completed in 1916 by architect and cousin of Ambrose Heal Cecil Brewer (1871-1918).
“Ambrose Heal had a keen interest in fine art ... it is therefore no surprise that Ambrose... should set up a gallery at Heal’s "

1920 - 1929

HEAL'S CAT

1920's

STORE INVENTORY

POSTER 1928

DODIE SMITH

1923

The Heal’s cat, which can still be found on the Cecil Brewer staircase in the Tottenham Court Road store, has become something of an icon.
This poster shows the store’s layout, with the Mansard Gallery on the fourth floor.
Dodie Smith (1896-1990), who later became an acclaimed playwright joined Heal’s in 1923 as a shop assistant.

1930 - 1939

ECONOMY WITH A DIFFERENCE 1933

SIR EDWARD MAUFE

1937

HEAL'S AT WAR

1938

The company launched ‘Heal’s Economy Furniture 1932 and All That’, a catalogue designed to help Heal’s survive the Great Depression.
Sir Edward (1883-1974) designed the extension to the Heal’s building at Tottenham Court Road.
Illustration dating from the Second World War depicting a four poster bed on top of a tank.

1940 - 1949

TOM WORTHINGTON

1948

WARTIME PRODUCTION

1940

The workshops on the upper floors were used by machinists for making parachutes for the Ministry of Aircraft Production.
Tom Worthington took over the helm as director of Heal’s Wholesale and Export in 1948.
Illustration dating from the Second World War depicting a four poster bed on top of a tank.

HEAL'S AT WAR

1940's

1950 - 1959

LUCIENNE DAY

1951

FESTIVAL OF BRITAIN

1951

CHRISTOPHER HEAL

1952

ANTHONY HEAL

1953

In 1951 Lucienne Day created the textile design Calyx for the Festival of Britain.
The Festival of Britain set out to convey a sense of recovery and progress after the end of the Second World War.
Ambrose Heal’s youngest son, Christopher (1911-1985), joined the business in 1934.
Anthony Heal joined the company in 1929 after an apprentiship at the Gordon Russell furniture workshops. In 1953 he sat as chairman.

1960 - 1969

FABRICS

1965

BARBARA BROWN

1968

Cascade by Evelyn Redgrave.
“Barbara Brown has become the golden girl of Heal’s Fabrics designers” proclaimed the Heal’s Fabrics brochure in 1967.

1970 -1979

OLIVER HEAL

VARIOUS ROLES 1971-1983

PEOPLE

Oliver Heal, son of Anthony, joined Heal’s in 1971, working in various roles – from buyer manager of the stationery and toy departments to chairman of the retail subsidiary Heal & Son. He recalls: “There was something very special about working for the Heal’s organisation at Tottenham Court Road. It had a real sense of community and of purpose, with which we all identified and were committed.”

1980 - 1989

SIR TERENCE CONRAN

1983

HEAL'S RELAUNCH

POSTER 1984

Sir Terence Conran took over Heal’s in 1983, revamping the store.
This poster, by Helen Senior at the Design Group, was based on the original 1928 poster by R.P. Gossop.

1990 - 1999

COLIN PILGRIM

MANAGING DIRECTOR

1990-2004

PEOPLE

From lowly beginnings in 1971 as a graduate trainee, Colin Pilgrim rose all the way to the top in his 34-year career at Heal’s. He headed the management buyout in 1990, taking control from Sir Terence Conran’s Storehouse group, becoming managing director – a post he held until 2004. “What we set about doing was putting the best bits of its historical philosophy – exclusivity, quality and service – back into the business,” he recalls. Known for maintaining a close interest in the day-to-day running of the store – involving regular, if not daily, walks around the shop floor – Pilgrim had clear ideas on how products should be displayed to achieve maximum effect.

2000 - 2010

ANDREA WARDEN

HEAL'S CEO 2004

When Andrea Warden became chief executive of Heal’s, it was to combine two of her lifetime passions: home interiors and retail.

HEALS ADVERTISING

2005

Advertising agency Draft FCB was brought on board to create a campaign which played a part in launching the Louis console table - part of 2005 Heal's Discovers.

ORLA KIELY FOR HEALS

2008

Orla Kiely designed an exclusive range of furniture for the store in 2008.