'End of the road' for family-run store after 112 years
BBCA Cheshire department store which has served shoppers for more than a century will close its doors next month.
Hancock & Wood, currently owned by a fourth generation of the Hancock family and first opened in 1914, has stood on the same site in Bridge Street, Warrington ever since.
In a statement, the owners said the popularity of online shopping, a rise in business rates and growing pressure from retail parks had led to their decision.
Director Christopher Hancock, whose grandfather opened the store, admitted he had "sleepless nights" wondering how to break the news to staff, but felt the business had reached "the end of the road".
HANCOCK & WOODFrederick Samuel Hancock, Christopher's grandfather, enlisted to fight in World War One just months after opening the store - and came back "in one piece" in 1918, his grandson said.
Warrington's oldest-running department store also survived the 1993 Warrington bombing, which saw two IRA devices explode in the town centre, killing two boys and injuring 56 others.
Hancock said: "My brother got knocked over in the second blast. He wasn't injured but was fairly shaken.
"I remember seeing the two little boys who were killed in the street - it sort of stays with me after all those years - it was a very sad time for the town."
hancock & woodHancock said the high street is no longer what it used to be, while the business has struggled with rising operating costs ever since the coronavirus pandemic.
"Our costs have risen way above inflation and unfortunately, our turnover increase has been hard to come by," he said.
"Warrington is not what it used to be, it has certainly changed and not for the better
"We don't have any god-given right to exist here but with the growth of internet shopping and the strength of out-of-town retailing, life has become somewhat harder."
However, Hancock said it had been "a joy to serve" their many customers over the years.

Customers like Patricia Hulme, from Warrington suburb Padgate, who was saddened to hear news of the closure.
"It's one of my favourite shops. I came here as a baby, my mum always brought me here and I love this shop," she said.
"You get a nice meal in the cafe and they've always got some nice quality clothes."

Assistant manager Diane Oxley said she was not surprised by the closure.
"It's like an end of an era, there's going to be a lot of disappointed people," she said.
"But Bridge Street has definitely declined over the past few years so it wasn't a shock when we were told."
The department store will close its doors for the final time sometime next month, the shop confirmed.
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