Kirkcaldie & Stains


Kirkcaldie & Stains was a mid-sized department store in Wellington, New Zealand. It was established in 1863 by John Kirkcaldie and Robert Stains with a capital of £700. The first store was opened on Lambton Quay. In 1868 Kirkcaldie & Staines moved to their final location at the corner of Lambton Quay and Brandon Street, expanding several times. There was a branch in Napier from 1897 until 1917, and a branch on Cuba Street, Wellington for seven years.
French luxury skincare brand Sisley was exclusive to the store in New Zealand.
Kirkcaldie & Stains announced on 4 June 2015 that the store would close in January 2016, when the site, after a multi-million dollar refit,will become a David Jones. Shareholders approved the plan on Friday 31 July 2015 in a special meeting. The store closed on Saturday 16 January 2016.
The main store on Lambton Quay reopened as 'David Jones Wellington' a branch of Australian department store chain David Jones Limited on Thursday 28 July 2016.

History

The business was founded in 1863 by Scotsman John Kirkcaldie, who had been apprenticed as a draper; and Englishman Robert Stains, who had a retail trade background. The men met in Sydney, Australia, and decided to pool their capital to establish a business in New Zealand. They settled on Wellington as the place, and their first store, 16 feet square was the hulk of the wrecked ship Inconstant known as Plimmer's Noah's Ark, at Lambton Quay. Kirkcaldie & Stains opened for business in 'Waterloo House' on Wednesday 9 December 1863.
In January 1865 Kirkcaldie & Stains held its first annual clearing sale,
and later in 1865 a new two storey store was built in the same location.
In 1868 it moved to new premises on land reclaimed from the harbour, at the corner of Lambton Quay and Brandon Streets. This site is part of the block of land occupied by the business until 2016. The 2 story wooden building was designed by C. J. Toxward. and opened on 24 October 1868, the first building on the block.
A branch store existed on the corner of Ghuznee and Cuba Streets, Wellington from 1871 to 1876.
Kirkcaldie & Stains issued their own Bronze Halfpenny token in 1875.
It was discovered in July 1885 that there had been a robbery at Kirkcaldie & Stains. Money and lengths of bulk silk had been stolen by a disgruntled ex-employee, John Cummings. He was sentenced to 3 years in prison.
The partnership was dissolved in 1886 when Robert Stains returned to England. The business remained in the hands of the Kirkcaldie family until the 1930s.