Wise Stores
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Wise Stores was a department store chain located in Eastern Canada. It was founded in 1930 in Montreal by Alex Wise.[1]
By October 1988, the company had 28 stores and acquired 15 Continental outlets in eastern Quebec, New Brunswick and Ontario to bring to 43 the total number of Wise locations.[2]
In 1992, the company acquired the even longer running and competitor Peoples department stores from British retailer Marks & Spencer.[1] Under the terms of the purchase, the Wise and Peoples chains could not completely merge until the outstanding balance owed to Marks & Spencer for the transaction had completely been paid in full.[3] Because of this restriction, Peoples was instead operated as a subsidiary of Wise.[4]
Wise was basically a discount department retailer with store dimensions averaging those of Hart, Greenberg and Peoples; in contrast to the larger-sized Zellers, Woolco and Kmart.[5] Wise launched in June 1993 the chain Wizmart, a wholesale concept specialized in the sales of good derived from bankruptcies and closings.[6] At its peak, the company operated five divisions: Wise Stores inc. (48 stores), Peoples Stores inc. (178 stores), Wizmart, KLHR Liquidation, and NRMA.[7]
On December 15, 1994, the company announced the shuttering of 13 Wise and Wizmart stores.[8] The announcement would leave the Wizmart division with only location.[9]
Peoples declared bankruptcy on January 13, 1995, while Wise avoided it but would still get liquidated anyway.[10] Wise eventually went bankrupt too on January 31, 1995.[11] Wise's incapacity of paying the amount it owed Marks & Spencer for the Peoples acquisition was the main reason for the demise of both chains. There were 53 Wise and 73 Peoples stores in operation at bankruptcy.[10][12] The original Wise store operated throughout the entire 65 years of the company on the same address at 6751 Saint Hubert Street in the La Petite-Patrie neighbourhoud,.[13][14] Its founder Alex Wise was still chairman of the company as late as December 1994.[15] He died on January 12, 2004 at the age of 96 and one of his three sons who presided the company with him, Ralph, passed on October 21, 2015.[16][17]
29 of Wise and Peoples's vacated spaces became Hart Stores in August 1995.[18] Another 27 former locations of Wise/Peoples were acquired also in August 1995 by Winnipeg-based Gendis which used them to open mainly new Metropolitan Stores and to a lesser extend stores from its other banners such as Red Apple and Greenberg.[19] Six other stores (all Wise locations) had already been sold in March 1995 to Rossy by the liquidator in charge of disposing the bankrupt retail chain.[20]
Locations
Quebec
- Boucherville — Place Pierre Boucher
- Chandler — Rue Commerciale
- Chandler — Place du Hâvre (Peoples store)
- Chateauguay — Rue Anjou
- Delson — Plaza Delson
- Dolbeau — Promenades du Boulevard
- Gaspé — Place Jacques-Cartier
- Greenfield Park — Place Greenfield Park
- Joliette — Les Galeries Joliette
- Kenogami — Rue Ste-Famille
- Lachute — Carrefour Argenteuil
- LaSalle —Centre Le Cavalier
- Laval — Carrefour Laval
- Laval — Centre Saint-Martin
- Longueuil — Centre Jacques-Cartier
- Longueuil — Chemin de Chambly (Carrefour Super C)
- Montmagny — Galeries Montmagny
- Montreal — Iberville Street
- Montreal — Plaza Côte-des-Neiges
- Montreal — Plaza Saint-Hubert
- Montréal-Nord — Place Levasseur
- Paspebiac — Plaza Paspebiac.
- Pierrefonds — Pierrefonds Boul.
- Quebec — Carrefour Soumande
- Rouyn-Noranda — Les Promenades du Cuivre
- Saint-Félicien — Carrefour St-Félicien (Peoples store)
- Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu — Carrefour Richelieu
- Saint-Jérôme — Carrefour du Nord
- Sainte-Foy — Place Laurier
- Sainte-Foy — Place Sainte-Foy
- Saint Léonard — Jean-Talon Street East
- Sherbrooke — Carrefour de l'Estrie
- Victoriaville — Boulevard des Bois-Francs N. (Place Sogestec)
Nova Scotia
- Bridgewater — Bridgewater Mall
- Dartmouth — Mic Mac Mall
- Glace Bay — Commercial Street
- Liverpool — Main Street
- Truro — Truro Mall
New Brunswick
- Bathurst — Chaleur Centre Mall
- Tracadie — Rue Principale
- Shediac — Rue Main
Ontario
- Cornwall — Pitt Street
- Hawkesbury — Main Street
References
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See also
- Pages with script errors
- Pages with broken file links
- Companies based in Montreal
- Retail companies established in 1930
- Retail companies disestablished in 1995
- Defunct retail companies of Canada
- Department stores of Canada
- Privately held companies of Canada
- 1930 establishments in Quebec
- 1995 disestablishments in Quebec