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The
first published announcements of Morgan's mail-order service coincided
with the opening of its new store facing Philip's Square in 1891.
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Having already established a reputation as a retailer
of quality
goods in Montréal, Henry Morgan & Company established its
mail-order
business around 1891. Through seasonal and speciality catalogues issued at
least
until 1910, the store offered discriminating shoppers the latest in
staples and
fancy dry goods as well as a variety of household furnishings and
accessories.
Founded in Montréal in 1845, Henry Morgan & Company was a
Canadian
pioneer in department-store merchandising before it formally launched its
mail-order
business some time around 1891. That year, the store relocated to spacious
new
quarters on St. Catherine Street in what was then the city's
"Golden
Square Mile." The building's impressive appearance and elegant
furnishings
were designed to entice the patronage of the district's affluent
shoppers,
while employees in the fourth-floor workrooms attended to orders from
out-of-town
customers.
Morgan's prided itself on the high quality of its goods, for
which customers
willingly paid higher prices. In calling attention to the superior lines
of merchandise
in its catalogues, Morgan's did not want to alarm customers about
high
prices but wished to assure them that, even for the many inexpensive
wares, "each
article placed on sale is the best to be procured of its kind."
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In keeping with its image
as a retailer of quality, Morgan's opened an art gallery on the top floor
of its new annex on Aylmer Avenue in the early 1900s. The store carried
oils and watercolours by some of the lesser masters - Corot, Fantin,
Poussin and others - and noted that "there are many advantages given
the public nowadays of obtaining really high-class works at figures
suitable
to all purses." Henry Morgan & Company Spring/Summer Catalogue, 1909,
p. 4.
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Following the example of other department stores, Morgan's issued
two
main catalogues each year, with its clothing lines and specialized goods
organized
seasonally for spring and summer and fall and winter. The catalogues
provided
itemized descriptions for the full range of the store's goods,
indicating
the price, available colours, sizes or other particulars as necessary,
frequently
supplemented by line drawings or, less often, photographs.
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In spring and summer,
Morgan's
customers could choose from among 500 to 1000 hat styles, representing
hats from Paris, London, and New York as well as its own workrooms. Henry
Morgan & Company Spring/Summer Catalogue, 1907, p. 11.
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Morgan's promoted the high
quality of its custom tailoring for civil, military, riding, or livery
garments. Henry Morgan & Company Spring/Summer Catalogue, 1909,
p. 68.
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Sporting
goods included an assortment of golf clubs, featuring hickory shafts
and hand-forged heads. Henry Morgan & Company Spring/Summer Catalogue,
1907, p. 125.
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New lines of merchandise became available to the mail-order shopper as
the
store itself expanded to accommodate them. By 1905, curtains, toys,
silverware,
trunks and valises, pictures and framing, sporting goods, sewing machines,
electrical
goods, and confectionery could all be obtained by mail order.
Morgan's offered a greatly expanded range of goods and services
after
establishing the Dominion Motor Car Company in 1906 and a factory in 1907.
Created
to maintain the store's transport fleet, the car division also
painted
and repaired clients' vehicles and built motorboats. The factory
manufactured
"all work required in the erection and furnishing of private and
public
buildings" and although mail-order customers could not make use of
all
of the available services, they were invited to place requests for
flooring,
electrical wiring and fixtures, plumbing, cabinetry, carpet cleaning,
upholstery,
and mattresses.
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Morgan's served as agents
for several local and European car manufacturers and briefly offered
cars for sale through its catalogue. Henry Morgan & Company Spring/Summer
Catalogue, 1907, p. 143.
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Through its Dominion Motor
Car Company, Morgan's also sold motorboats by mail order. Henry Morgan &
Company
Spring/Summer Catalogue, 1907, p. 144.
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The factory for Henry
Morgan & Company
was located in a separate building at the base of Beaver Hall Hill.
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Among the various services
it provided, the Morgan's factory installed bathroom fixtures, complete
with tiled floor, enamel bath, shower, wash basin, and the necessary
plumbing. Henry Morgan & Company Spring/Summer Catalogue, 1909,
p. 97.
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Hardwood flooring was
available
in various parquet patterns. Henry Morgan & Company Spring/Summer
Catalogue,
1909, p. 80.
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The staples of the dry goods business, such as ready-made women's
and
children's clothing and accessories that could be purchased
"to greater
advantage through the Mail Order Department," received the most
attention
in Morgan's catalogues. By 1910, the store published additional
listings
for motor boats, marine hardware, baseball equipment, sewing machines,
Kodak
cameras, baby carriages, china, camping equipment, and hardwood flooring,
to
assist the customer in buying more specialized items.
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Customers were invited to
request a special catalogue about the numerous lines of baby carriages,
only some of which were illustrated in the main catalogue. Baby carriages
were among the bulky items that the store did not ship for free. Henry
Morgan & Company Spring Summer Catalogue, 1909, p. 99.
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Recognizing the importance of Christmas sales, Henry Morgan &
Company
issued special catalogues annually from at least the end of the 19th
century.
The earliest extant catalogue (1897) was unusual because it devoted a
whole page
to a single item or class of items, whether it was for sewing machines,
French
opera glasses, portable gas lamps, a combination tea kettle and chafing
dish
that could be brought to the table, or a whole series of toys, from
rocking horses
to toy stoves to building blocks. It also featured a two-page colour
insert of
Christmas dolls that was exceptional for the period; colour was rarely
used in
catalogues and none of the other extant Morgan's catalogues featured
it.
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As this rare colour plate
demonstrates, Morgan's went to great effort to draw attention to its
assortment of dolls. Henry Morgan & Company Catalogue of Xmas Goods,
1897, between pp. 96, 97.
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An
assortment of Christmas toys for 50 cents. Henry Morgan & Company Christmas
Catalogue, 1908, p. 14.
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Later Christmas catalogues adhered to a more conventional layout, with
numerous
items being illustrated and described on a given page. Specific Christmas
or
New Year's goods, such as gift tags, greeting cards, calendars, and
other
seasonal novelties that the store hoped to move quickly, were presented in
the
first pages. The 1908 catalogue grouped selected toys, china, silver, and
miscellaneous
household items by price to assist budget-conscious shoppers with their
gift
choices.
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This
selection of gift suggestions for $7.50 included pearl-handled fish
carvers,
an eight-day travelling clock with a brass movement, and a Queen Ann
teapot of plate silver. Henry Morgan & Company Christmas Catalogue, 1908,
p. 46.
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The arrival of the telephone at Morgan's sometime around 1909 had
profound
consequences for the organization of the mail-order department. The last
extant
catalogue was issued in 1910, and, by the early 1920s, the department as
such
had ceased to exist, its functions absorbed by a new "shopping
service."
This service may have existed in embryonic form before 1923, but it was
undoubtedly
expanded and consolidated with the completion that year of Morgan's
new
Union Avenue annex, complete with its large telephone exchange.
The service was designed to make shopping as convenient as possible for
customers
who ordered goods by post or by telephone, as well as for in-store
customers
who required assistance with a complex purchase. Although the shopping
service
survived into the 1950s, Morgan's mail-order business itself was in
decline
after 1910 and seems to have largely disappeared after 1930.
Henry Morgan & Company embraced mail-order sales as one component
in an
evolving retailing strategy that included high quality goods, excellent
store
locations, and the adoption of different merchandising techniques to win
and
retain consumer loyalty in the competitive Montréal market.
Although the
mail-order division allowed the department store to reach customers across
the
country during the economic boom of the late 19th and early 20th
centuries, from
the 1920s Morgan's concentrated on its local market, making
extensive use
of newspaper advertising and encouraging shopping by telephone. In
addition,
it reduced its dependence on the success of the retail division by
diversifying
into non-retail areas that had initially spun off from the store's
activities,
such as real estate; packaging, storing and shipping goods; and, estate
management.
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