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Lack Bros Drapery Store - Can you help ?
The
great grandson of a well known Thornton Heath businessman is hoping Heritage
readers will be able to help him piece together his fascinating family history.
Andrew Wyatt, 41, the great grandson of William Joseph Lack, joint founder of
famous Lack Bros drapery store in Thornton Heath, is eager to speak to former
employees and customers of the business in order to learn more about his late
relatives.
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The
Lack Bros drapery shop in
Thornton
Heath taken in 1935 |
Andrew
believes the story behind his family's successful business is a mirror
to British society and illustrates how an area like Thornton Heath
developed and grew. He has discovered his family's association with the
linen industry stretches back more than 250 years and some of his
earliest ancestors have been traced back to before the 1730s.
The
focus of Andrew's research centres around his great grandfather, William
Joseph Lack, a young, ambitious lower middle class entrepreneur who set
up the first Lack Bros drapery store in Walthamstow, east London, with
his brother George, in 1898.
William
had married a wealthy local girl and the couple had two sons, cementing
the businessman's aspirations of, building a family drapery dynasty.
Business
was so successful that William was able to send his sons to a private
boarding school and in 1906 the Lack brothers returned to their Croydon
roots to open another shop in Thornton Heath High Street.
William's
enterprise expanded to include a downstairs restaurant, with a modern
hairdresser's upstairs. |
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Very
soon, the store became a firm favourite with customers, with people
queuing from 6am on sale days. By 1927 the store had become a limited
company and had swallowed up the neighbouring buildings from 115 to 123
High Street opposite the clocktower. Business continued to boom
throughout the 1930s.
As
well as owning a large house called Silverleigh in London Road, Thornton
Heath, William, was also spending more time at another home on the Isle
of Wight.
It
was at the time of his retirement that William expected his sons to take
over the family business, but they had other ideas.
One
son moved to Canada and his remaining son Charles, Andrew's grandfather,
fought in World War One then aspired to be an engineer.
Andrew,
an illustrator from Stepney Green, east London, said: "My
grandfather, Charles, caused the family some upset because he never
wanted to carry on the family business. He wanted to be an
engineer." |

William
Joseph Lack and son Charles Lack in 1933 |
Charles'
marriage to a shop assistant, Andrew's grandmother, was further frowned upon, as
was his decision to open a garage in Thornton Heath, prompted by his love of
motor cars.
Andrew
believes the Lack Bros store closed in 1937, a year after the death of William
Lack.
Andrew
is particularly keen to hear from former customers and employees of the store
with their memories.
He
is also keen to find out if anyone has any photographs of the shop or old signs
taken from the business before it closed.
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