Stewarts Supermarket Limited

Stewarts Supermarket Limited
Former supermarket chain
Fate Purchased by Tesco
Successor Tesco
Defunct 1997
Parent Associated British Foods
A Stewarts off licence in Holywood, County Down

Stewarts Supermarket Limited (traded as Stewarts and Crazy Prices) was a supermarket chain in Northern Ireland. The chain was purchased by Tesco in March 1997.

History

Stewarts/Crazy Prices

The company slogans were 'No one delivers value like Stewarts' and 'No one delivers freshness like Stewarts'. A television advertising campaign in the end of the 1980s included a cover version of the song Locomotion, with these slogans replacing 'Come on baby, do the Locomotion'. (The song was then popular because of Kylie Minogue's successful cover of 1998).

Crazy Prices' long time advertising theme was alternate lyrics set to the tune Tiger Feet by Mud.

Tesco

On 21 March 1997, Tesco agreed the purchase of the food retailing and related businesses of Associated British Foods in the whole of Ireland for £643 million.[1] The acquisition was completed in May, after regulatory approval was granted.

The Northern Ireland businesses were 19 Stewarts, 9 Crazy Prices and six other (Westside Stores and Bloomfields), 78 Stewarts Wine Barrel off licence stores, the sports goods retailer Lifestyle Sports & Leisure Ltd. (marketed as "Lifestyle Sports"), the meat processing and packing business Kingsway Fresh Foods Ltd. and the fresh fruit and vegetable distributor Daily Wrap Produce Ltd.

This was a major expansion of Tesco's presence in Northern Ireland, its only other presence in Northern Ireland being a Tesco Metro in the city centre of Belfast. Other Great Britain based retailers had entered the market in Ireland around the same time. Sainsbury's had opened two stores at Ballymena and Forestside by the time Tesco completed the Stewarts purchase, and would open seven more between then and 2003.

Safeway formed Safeway Stores Ireland along with Fitzwilton, taking over a number of former stores of Wellworths. The Republic of Ireland stores (Powers Supermarkets Ltd trading as Quinnsworth and Crazy Prices) became Tesco Ireland, while the Northern Ireland stores became part of the Tesco core business in the United Kingdom.

References

  1. "Tesco plc Annual Report and Financial Statements 1998" (PDF). Tesco. Retrieved 2014-03-25.


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