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A corner of the Tea Room
Unknown, 1895, Photograph
A corner of the Tea Room
A corner of the Tea Room
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Location
Category
Library Item
Item no
21026
Title
A corner of the Tea Room
Description
The ornate tea room of Kennington and Jenner's store, Edinburgh. The room has parquet flooring and fretwork screens divide up the room. The plasterwork ceiling has a Tudor style of design featuring thistles and roses. In the centre of the room is a large table with an assortment of cakes and condiments displayed on it. Other tables and chairs are dotted round the room. Most of the tables have a potted palm on them. Low lying semi-circular windows light up one side of the room.
Artist / maker
Unknown
Date
1895
Size
22.0 x 27.0 cm
Type
Photograph
Location
Edinburgh and Scottish Collection
On 1 May 1838 Kennington & Jenner opened its doors for the first time. The business was founded by Charles Kennington and Charles Jenner, who had been dismissed by local drapers W.&R. Spence for taking the day off work to go to the Musselburgh races. Their advertisement in the Scotsman claimed that their establishment would offer the discerning customer, 'every prevailing British and Parisian fashion in silks, shawls, fancy dresses, ribbons, lace, hosiery, and every description of linen drapery and haberdashery'.
The original building that formed the department store was destroyed by fire on the 26 November 1892. In 1893 Scottish Architect William Hamilton Beattie was appointed to design the new store which opened in 1895. Charles Jenner became the driving force behind the reconstruction and it was at his insistence the building's caryatids - sculpted female figures - were to show symbolically that women are the support of the house, the new store also included technical innovations such as electric lighting and hydraulic lifts. Unfortunately, Charles Jenner died in 1893 and did not live see the new store completed.
The store continued to grow during the 1900s and by the 1920s it had cemented its reputation as the number one place to shop, becoming a local byword for extravagance and opulence.
In 2005 it was taken over by House of Fraser. While other acquisitions by House of Fraser have been renamed, Jenners kept its identity after the takeover, until it closed due to Covid-19 restrictions in December 2020 and did not reopen for business before House of Fraser officially closed it in May 2021. The Danish owner Anders Holch Povlsen, who bought the building in 2017, plans to restore it for use as a shop and hotel by 2025.
Exhibitions with this item
Whose Town? Florence Morham
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Related subjects
Architecture
>
Architectural features
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Ceilings
Architecture
>
Architectural features
>
Friezes
Business
>
Service industry
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Shops
Furnishings
>
Furniture
>
Chairs
Furnishings
>
Furniture
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Tables
Furnishings
>
Ornamentation
>
Tablecloths
Places
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Edinburgh areas
>
New Town
Places
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Scotland
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Edinburgh
Plants
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Trees
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Palms
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(55°57′11″N, 3°11′38″W)
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