Dickins and Jones



of Regent street, London
1803 Established.
1866 Partnership change. '... the Partnership hitherto subsisting between us the undersigned, Charles John Dickins, Henry Francis Dickins, John Jones, and Jonathan William Morris, Linen Drapers, carrying on business at No. 232, Regent-street, in the county of Middlesex, under the style or firm of C. and H. Dickins and Jones, has been dissolved by mutual consent, so far as concerns the said Jonathan William Morris, as from the 1st day of January, 1866 ; and that all debts due to and by the said partnership will be received and paid by the undersigned Charles John Dickins, Henry Francis Dickins, and John Jones...'[1]
1914 Silk Mercers, Linen and Lace Warehousemen, and General Drapers, 226 to 244, Regent Street; 26 and 26A to 33, Argyll Street; and 6, 7, and 8, Little Argyll Street, London, W.; and 9, Rue du Faubourg Poissonniere, Paris. Established in 1803. The leading features of the business are Household Linens, Laces, Silks, Costumes, Mantles, Furs, Millinery, Lingerie, Boots, &c. Its departments include everything appertaining to ladies' dress. The business premises cover about an acre of ground in the finest shopping centre of the world. Staff: About 1,000.
1914 Acquired by Harrods