What are the top 5 most missed shops from Manchester High Street?

You won't guess who topped the list!

Published 19th Nov 2021

Over the years many store have closed down on Manchester high street, leaving empty many spaces where once a beloved store stood.

A new study by Raisin UK has analysed the search volume and social media engagement with our favourite brands to find out which brands we really do miss the most, so get ready for a little bit of nostalgia as we analyse the past of our high streets.

The top 5:

1) Debenhams, closed in 2021

57% of people said that they reacted sadly to the new that the iconic department store had collapsed.

It was announced In December last year that all Debenhams stores were set to close after the failure of last-ditch efforts to rescue the failing store chain, after landing in administration for the second time in a year.

The retailer’s website crashed for days as shoppers attempted to grab bargains, with Debenhams stores reopening for a short period of time to clear stock.

Debenhams was a key part of the British high street, being one of the UK’s largest department store retailers after the earlier collapse of BHS.

The department store sold a range of goods from clothing to household items and furniture. It’s Blue Cross Sale and Debenhams Beauty Club was a fan favourite amongst high street shoppers.

Boohoo snapped up their online operations to bring Debenhams back online, selling a range of their usual concessions and beauty products that customers loved, with the reintroduction of the beauty club.

The Debenhams store at The Trafford Centre and the Market Street closed in May 2021 after selling off stock during a fire sale.

However, there is good news for Mancunians as Debenhams is set for a high street return in Manchester!

Debenhams have started rehiring ready to open a flagship Debenhams store in the city in an attempt to bring the brand back to the British high street, good news for shoppers!

2) Woolworths, closed in 2009

With 44% of people who reacted saying that they loved the news about the return of the brand on social media, it proves Woolies still has a place in all our hearts.

As the shutters closed on the chain’s final 199 shopfronts in market towns across the UK in 2009, a significant piece of high street history faded away.

Woolworths was the place to get the majority of things you needed, where else would the UK turn to in desperate times? If you needed a bag of pick ‘n’ mix, a wardrobe of children’s clothes and a new CD… Woolworths was the place!

The only real way to describe Woolworths is Poundland with a lot more ambition.

Woolworths’ had aisles full of affordable impulse items that had no business in being together. Your school stationery set next to bottles of perfumes and socks, Woolworths was just the place to be.

However, Woolworths hasn't always had such happy memories in Manchester after a devastating fire in 1979. The fire, one of Manchester's most significant tragedies, occurred in the middle of the day on Tuesday 8th May, 1979, as hundreds of customers filled the flagship store.

The fire broke out in the second-floor furnishing department and dense smoke quickly filled the building.

Sadly, nine customers and one employee lost their lives afternoon, and the numbers would have been much higher without the bravery of firefighters who carried out daring rescues.

3) British Home Stores (BHS), closed in 2016

With 51% of people reacting angrily to the collapse of the brand, blame was certainly pointed at Sir Philip Green’s management of the group.

British Home Stores, or mostly known as BHS, was one of our largest department store chains, selling clothing and household items. In its later years, BHS expanded into furniture, electronics, entertainment, beauty and even convenience groceries.

BHS was part of the Arcadia Group, managed by Sir Philip Green who later sold BHS for £1 in March 2015 to Retail Acquisitions Ltd led by the serial bankrupt Dominic Chappel, almost set for failure.

All BHS stores closed by late August 2016, being the biggest retail collapse after Woolworths.

Despite not being known for anything outstanding, it was a huge part of the British highstreet and was hugely missed as many of the city centre’s largest retail units were left empty.

The rest of the Arcadia Group suffered the same fate as BHS in 2021 as they collapsed, leading to the loss of Topshop, Burton, Dorothy Perkins and more. These brands were later moved online and bought by ASOS and Boohoo. The BHS brand was later bought and now operates online selling ceiling lighting.

The Manchester BHS store was located in Market Street, with the store closing in 2016 after the business collapsed.

4) Mothercare, closed in 2020

Mothercare is a huge retailer for parents across the UK, with it being part of many parent’s lives at such an important time. Therefore, it would come as no surprise that 55% of people engaged with a sad reaction to the brand’s collapse announcement on social media.

In November 2019, Mothercare announced it was to close it’s UK business after calling in administrators. The company, which opened its first store in 1961, had frequently struggled to compete with cheap supermarket clothing ranges and the rise of online shopping.

Many parents had huge emotional attachments to the brand, with Mothercare being the leading childrenswear chain in the UK.

Mothercare's Manchester Fort store closed in 2020 after the brand collapsed into administration, with huge sales for parents leading up to it's closure.

5) Blockbuster, closed in 2013

Blockbuster is still in a very well deserved place in our nostalgia list.

It collapsed into administration back in 2013, being a huge casualty to the high street with the closure of 528 stores!

Blockbuster was known for being a place of happiness, especially when going to rent a bunch of movies for a sleepover with your friends.

You could spend hours walking up and down the aisles, reading the back of every case trying to pick a selection to rent with your blue Blockbuster card.

Could we ever see a return of Blockbuster? Sadly, probably not. With online streaming services such as Netflix and Disney Plus, a revival of Blockbuster would be for pure nostalgia and zero convenience. Netflix doesn’t charge any late fees after all!

But with 3.6k searches every month for the brand, it’s clear to see we have never forgotten them!

The Blockbuster stores in Manchester closed by 2013, which saw the end to DVD rental stores.

Some quirky stories:

Whilst their owners have been adapting to life working from home, dogs have been able to increase their understanding of a host of new words through Zoom. Research has found that our furry friends have been able to learn words such as "meeting", "muted" and "boss".

A flying car has flown between two cities for the first time, leading its developers to talk of a "new era" of transport.

Travel company WeThrift has revealed the top 10 most Instagrammed places in the UK, with spots from Glasgow and Edinburgh down to London and Brighton making the list. If you want to give your friends and family travel envy, you need to visit all ten!

Nando's had to temporarily shut 50 of its 400 outlets after running out of chicken. The food chain says supply shortages were widespread across England, Wales and Scotland.

A Hertfordshire man completed 100 fancy dress work calls a day after raising nearly £10,000 for charity.

Out of the doom and gloom of the pandemic, Cambridge Dictionary editors chose their 2021 Word of the Year. Primarily space travel-related, the word has a meaning that also described the world's efforts to carry on as normal in uncertain times.

In Berkshire, a gardener had a smelly shock when 'human excrement' fell from the sky into their back garden.
His whole garden was splattered by 'toilet sewage' discharged from a plane landing at Heathrow airport.

Two new species of dinosaurs have been discovered, that may have once roamed what is now the Isle of Wight 125 million years ago.

Actor Hugh Jackman is hunting down the owner of a missing hat in London! The star of The Greatest Showman and Wolverine was mistakenly given the item when he picked up his laundry in Chiswick.

There are lots of different camera apps to check on your pets while you are at work, but now it's time for the pets to check up on you! New technology developed at the University of Glasgow means that dogs can call their owners from home. The call is made when the dog plays with a ball that, when movement is sensed, connects pet and owner.

Dartmoor Zoo allowed its visitors to name one of their cockroaches after an un-special (or special) someone in their life for Valentine's Day!

First for all the latest news from across the UK every hour on Hits Radio on DAB, at hitsradio.co.uk and on the Hits Radio app.