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Debenhams agreed to become the anchor store at the Riverside shopping centre in Shrewsbury. [61] By September 2012, the company announced that like-for-like sales had risen by 3.3% in the six months up to that date. [62] Debenhams, Bradford. Debenhams moved to a new headquarters in 2013, in Brock Street, London built by British Land.
Debenhams (formerly Debenhams.com), a trading name of Debenhams Brands Ltd, is an online retailer owned by Boohoo.com. The company was formed in 2021 after Boohoo purchased the website operations and rights to the name of the department store group Debenhams , which had entered liquidation .
Debenham is a village and civil parish located 11 miles (18 km) north of Ipswich [2] in the Mid Suffolk district of Suffolk, England. [3] The River Deben rises in the parish, and flows along a prolonged ford through the village. [4] In 1086, Debenham was a comparatively large village of 69 households in the hundred of Claydon. [5]
Debenham & Freebody was a department store at 27–37 Wigmore Street, London, which became part of the Debenhams chain. The building, first opened in 1908, [ 1 ] is now used by a variety of occupiers and is grade II listed by Historic England.
William Debenham (/ ˈ d ɛ b ən ə m /; 18 April 1794 – 24 September 1863) was the founder of Debenhams, once one of the largest retailers in the United Kingdom. Career [ edit ]
Debenham baronets; Alison Debenham (1903–1967), British artist; Ben Debenham (born 1967), English cricket umpire; Betty and Nancy Debenham (born c. 1906), British motorcyclists; Christopher Debenham (born 1953), English cricketer; Ernest Debenham (1865–1952), English businessman and politician; Frank Debenham (1883–1965), English ...
Sir Ernest Ridley Debenham, 1st Baronet (26 May 1865 – 25 December 1952), was an English businessman. [1] He was responsible for the considerable expansion of the family's retail and wholesale drapery firm between 1892 and 1927.
Sir Gilbert Debenham (junior) (1432–1500) was an English knight, politician and soldier who served briefly as Lord Chancellor of Ireland.Although, like his father before him, he had a notorious reputation for lawlessness, he flourished in the reign of King Edward IV, due in part to his loyalty to Edward during the great political crisis of the years 1469–71.