Nottingham Post

Boots staff celebrate city store’s 50th anniversar­y

AND RECALL HOW SHOPPERS COULD ONCE BUY WHEELBARRO­WS AND PET FOOD

- By CAROLINE BARRY caroline.barry@reachplc.com

A LOT has changed over the decades at Nottingham’s Victoria Centre, with owners coming and going and a huge number of different stores and stalls opening to shoppers.

One of the constants during much of that time though has been its huge Boots store, which celebrated its 50th anniversar­y on May 12.

For Marie Booth, deputy manager, joining Boots as a make-up artist girl on the No.7 counter was a childhood dream come true.

She recalls that Boots was seen as a job for life and she started as a trainee on a scheme at the Broadmarsh store in 1984.

“I used to come into Boots with my granny and my mother. I would see the girls working on the make-up counters and I thought that’s what I want to do. My ambition was to get on a counter job and I was so proud when they offered me a job on No.7,” Marie said.

“I was a shy person and it gave me the confidence I needed. My granny used to say, ‘me duck, you’ll not go wrong working for Boots.’ God bless her, she was right.”

Marie said that her Boots colleagues have become a second family and when her father died, they were there to support her. She feels proud to be part of such a successful Nottingham brand.

“You feel really cared for here and we’ve all been through things in our careers here. I lost my dad suddenly and these guys were there for me to help me get through that, which has made me want to stay. I can’t imagine doing anything else after 37 years as Boots is Nottingham,” she said.

Jean Jones started on the shop floor and is now healthcare-trained.

She is originally from Somerset but Nottingham has become home for her and her husband. The friendship­s she has made over the years at the store with customers and colleagues alike have meant the world to her.

She said: “We get a lot of people coming in who have left or retired and you still speak to them. The friendship­s over the years have meant a lot to us.

“I started here on a part-time job while my children were at school in 1986. I’ve worked in every department since I arrived and I still enjoy coming to work in the morning.”

The department­s and the items that Boots sell have changed dramatical­ly over the years. The women recalled that Boots once sold pet food, wheelbarro­ws, game consoles, garden supplies and even had a record section in the corner of the store.

One of the biggest changes that the staff has faced is the threat posed by Covid and the fast adjustment­s they needed to make to stay safe during restrictio­ns.

Daxa Kotecha started in the music and electronic­s department in 1987.

She said: “I’ve been here over 35 and have worked with some great colleagues.

“I used to work in Leicester before I joined the music and video department here, which I loved. “It’s very difficult now because of Covid but you made it as easy as you could for customers. We had customers who came in shaking as they hadn’t been out in a while. They needed your support and help but it was a great support for us, too.” Marie added: “There was a loneliness among the customers. Some of us worked and others were furloughed but you felt really safe. Those were humbling memories to see the customers come back in to talk to us. It’s lovely to see things getting back to normal and the buzz is back in town again.”

The store is central for performanc­e hubs such as Theatre Royal and Playhouse whose performers, make-up artists and cast members stock up at the store.

She said: “We had actress June Brown, who played Dot Cotton in Eastenders, pop in some years ago then there was Joan Collins, Lady Diana’s parents, Susan Dando, snooker player, Dennis Taylor and Thora Hird to name a few. They are just regular shoppers when they come in here and you just get used to it.”

Julie Barrett, of Hucknall, recalls serving actor Shane Ritchie recently. She said: “He had a baseball cap over his eyes. He asked me where the door was and I thought, ‘I know that face from somewhere’ so I asked him if he was Shane Ritchie and he said yes. There was no one around with a phone to take a picture but he was absolutely lovely.”

Julie will have been working for Boots for 30 years in June after starting part-time in 1992. She feels the biggest change to Boots, aside from Covid, has been the switch to online shopping.

She said: “Online shopping has a lot of the business now. There are a lot of things we just don’t sell anymore, like gardening equipment or electrical things. We had a mini lab at one point to process film. Despite the move online, we are sold out of disposable cameras as the students keep buying them. It’s a novelty as they love passing around cameras on nights out and putting the photos into physical folders.”

Julie says that over the years her colleagues have become like family and it is this that has kept her at the store for so many years.

She said: “My best memories are with the colleagues that I’ve worked with for years as we share all of our problems. It’s like one big extended family.”

I’ve worked in every department and I still enjoy coming to work in the morning. Jean Jones, who started working at Boots in 1986

 ?? JOSEPH RAYNOR ?? General manager Sally Francis, centre and inset, celebrates the city store’s 50th anniversar­y alongside staff members, from left, Julie Barrett, Daxa Kotecha, Jean Jones and Marie Booth, who have all worked at Boots for more than 30 years
JOSEPH RAYNOR General manager Sally Francis, centre and inset, celebrates the city store’s 50th anniversar­y alongside staff members, from left, Julie Barrett, Daxa Kotecha, Jean Jones and Marie Booth, who have all worked at Boots for more than 30 years

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