reference: GOOGLE's image |
The company was founded by
Joseph Hepworth in Leeds in 1864 as a tailor under the name of Joseph Hepworth
& Son.
In 1982 Hepworth & Son
acquired Kendall & Sons Ltd, a Leicester based rainwear and ladies fashion
company from Combined English Stores. The intention was to redevelop the
Kendall's stores as a womenswear chain of shops. Terence Conran, the designer,
was Chairman of Hepworth's at this time and he recruited George Davies, who
went on to become Chief Executive of NEXT.
The first NEXT shops opened on
12 February 1982, with the Kendall's conversion complete by the end of 1983.
Made chief executive in 1984,
Davies then converted the 50 Hepworths stores to the NEXT format, extending the
total concept look at the same time to cover menswear. This allowed the
development mini department across the entire footprint, selling women's and
men's and clothes. This was added to by the introduction of NEXT interiors to
stores which were deemed in the "right demographical areas." In 1986,
Davies moved the groups headquarters from Leeds to Leicester, to be closer to
the main garment manufacturers. The groups name changed to NEXT plc.
In 1987, the group acquired
Combined English Stores and the Grattan catalogue company. Extending first to
introduce NEXT childrenswear, Davies then introduced the NEXT Directory.
By 1988, "after seven
years of growth, Next had over- expanded suicidally" .. "some stores
were not bringing in enough to pay the rent."Davies was sacked and the
share price fell to 7p. Chairman Sir David Jones, accused him of being
egotistical and taking Next to the verge of bankruptcy.
In Autumn 2009, Next launched
an online catalogue for the United States offering clothing, shoes and
accessories for women, men and children. (reference: Wikipedia)