The Telegram (St. John's)

Posie Row aids small retailers

‘They’re just trying to make a living for themselves’

- BY ROSIE MULLALEY

Anita Carroll was struggling to feed a young family on less than $10,000 a year when she made the decision to buy the business that became Posie Row & Co.

“I was penniless,” Carroll said Thursday while speaking at a Rotary Club of St. John’s meeting at the Sheraton Hotel. “I had no business plan, nothing.”

It was 1995 and Carroll had been working at Amos & Andes, a knitwear chain, at 210 Duckworth St. The owner was looking to get out of the business and, recognizin­g Carroll’s keen retail and managerial skills, wanted her to buy the business.

Carroll knew she couldn’t afford it, but having worked in retail her entire life, she wanted the chance to own her own business.

She managed to scrounge together $2,500 and walked into a Royal Bank of Canada branch to ask for a business loan and mortgage.

“They took a chance on me,” said Carroll, adding that such risky business ventures don’t get much financial support these days.

That gamble certainly paid off, as today Posie Row & Co. has grown to become one of the most popular, enduring and successful local businesses in the downtown core.

It’s one of the reasons why Carroll saw it was important to include smaller retail businesses in her expansion.

When Carroll purchased the neighbouri­ng Tobin building — a property built in 1894 that was previously occupied by the Polyanna Antique store and Hutton’s music store before that — a few years ago, she later developed the upper floors and rented the rooms to smaller retailers. The expanded store officially opened last year.

“They’re just trying to make a living for themselves,” said Carroll, who initially thought about developing the upper floors for high-end apartments.

Growing up in St. John’s, she said she remembers downtown retail space being predominan­tly owned by larger businesses, such as Bowring’s and John Murphy’s Arcade. These days, she said, it’s hard for small business owners to afford any kind of space.

“I knew there was a lack of space (in the downtown area) to open smaller businesses and I knew it was expensive for them. There are a lot of barriers,” Carroll told The Telegram after the meeting.

“The way I went about starting my business with so little money and getting a mortgage based on next to nothing, I knew those things don’t happen anymore. It’s harder now to get into business. It’s harder to get loans and mortgages as a business, so it was nice to be able to help people out because it’s very difficult to get a start.”

The co-operative effort has been a huge success, she said.

For example, since moving to the Posie Row building, one of the retailers, Cast On! Cast Off! — a wool and knitting store — has doubled its business, Carroll said.

Other retailers in the building are: Pinpoint Ink, which features illustrati­ons transferre­d to T-shirts and prints; Driven to Ink, which prints illustrati­ons on cards; Britaniola Artisan Soaps, which sells soaps, bath bombs and other cosmetic products; The Fabric Merchant, which sells designer fabrics and high-end quilting fabrics and supplies; the Dabber Hashery, offering specialty cannabis supplies; Baddy Vinyl, which produces and sells everything from glassware, T-shirts and pictures to Mario gold lamps; Kyle Callahan Photograph­y, where besides taking photos, Callahan creates imaginativ­e photos; and Dead Issue, a store specializi­ng in rock, punk and metal band merchandis­e and other accessorie­s.

 ?? ROSIE MULLALEY/THE TELEGRAM ?? Anita Carroll, owner of Posie Row & Co. on Duckworth Street, was guest speaker at a Rotary Club of St. John’s meeting at the Sheraton Hotel Thursday afternoon.
ROSIE MULLALEY/THE TELEGRAM Anita Carroll, owner of Posie Row & Co. on Duckworth Street, was guest speaker at a Rotary Club of St. John’s meeting at the Sheraton Hotel Thursday afternoon.
 ?? ROSIE MULLALEY/THE TELEGRAM ?? The stairs inside Posie Row & Co. at 210 Duckworth St. in St. John’s lead to several smaller retailers on upper floors that offer a wide array of products.
ROSIE MULLALEY/THE TELEGRAM The stairs inside Posie Row & Co. at 210 Duckworth St. in St. John’s lead to several smaller retailers on upper floors that offer a wide array of products.
 ?? ROSIE MULLALEY/THE TELEGRAM ?? Posie Row & Co. expanded next door last year, allowing space upstairs for several smaller retailers.
ROSIE MULLALEY/THE TELEGRAM Posie Row & Co. expanded next door last year, allowing space upstairs for several smaller retailers.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada