Advertisement
Retailers

Former F.Hinds chairman Eric Hinds dies aged 97

When their father Frank died in the early 1960s, Hinds and his brother ran the business together for several decades until the next generation joined in the 1980s

F.Hinds Jewellers has announced that its former chairman, Eric Hinds, has died at the age of 97.

Born in 1926, he briefly worked in the family business in 1943 and then joined the RAF until the end of WWII.

He re-entered F.Hinds on demobilisation in 1947,working first as an assistant in the Edgware Road shop.

Related Articles

Hinds was joined by his younger brother Roy three years later.

Advertisement

When their father Frank died in the early 1960s, Hinds and his brother ran the business together for several decades until the next generation joined in the 1980s.

He covered various roles from property to buying, including silver jewellery, silverware and general giftware, and was chairman for over three decades.

Hinds was president of the National Association of Goldsmiths from 2001-2003 and was a freeman of the Worshipful Company of Clockmakers for many years, which reflected the family’s roots as longcase clockmakers in Stamford in the early and mid-1800s before the first Hinds jewellery shop opened in London in 1856.

He also had a mix of passions throughout his life such as swimming, golfing, curling, classical music, photography and wine.

When Hinds joined the business, F.Hinds was a small chain with 16 branches; by the time he retired completely in 2018 it had been transformed into a national retailer with 116 stores, although he had stepped back from a day-to-day role several years earlier.

During his time, the head office relocated twice, first from Hammersmith to Shepherd’s Bush and then to Uxbridge.

The company also bought several of the freeholds of its shops and was one of the first retailers of any type in the UK to install computerised tills in the late 1970s. It also went online as early as 1997.

His brother Roy said: “I could not have wished for a better brother, both as a brother and to work with. Eric was invariably good humoured and was a great source of wisdom.

“We worked so well together for over half a century. His first thought was for the welfare of our staff and he was always quick to call a store to congratulate them when they’d had a good week. We will all miss him and his roaring laugh, but have innumerable fond memories.”

Back to top button