The Society was founded as the Brightside and Carbrook Co-operative and opened its first shop in 1868,[1] in the Carbrook suburb of Sheffield.[2]
Castle House
The Co-op opened shops around the city, and set up its first branch in Sheffield City Centre in 1929, on the corner of Exchange Street and Waingate, on part of the former site of Sheffield Castle. In 1962, this moved to a new site named "Castle House", in tribute to the site of the old store.[2]
The Castle House department store was designed by G. S Hay of the Co-operative Wholesale Society and occupied a large site, with entrances on King Street, Angel Street and Castle Street. The store, which also housed the headquarters of the Brightside and Carbrook, featured a massive granite facade with a zigzag canopy. Inside, the focus was on a cantileveredspiral staircase connecting all the floors, under a partially glazed dome and a sculpture of a bird.[3]
In 2009 the building was granted Grade II listed building status.[4] In 2018 the National Videogame Museum opened on the ground floor.[5]
Members
Eleanor Barton, a prominent co-operative movement activist, was for many years the secretary of the Brightside and Carbrook's Hillsborough branch, and later became a director of the organisation.[6] Other prominent members included Michael Palin, who joined the Brightside and Carbrook Co-operative Players in the 1960s.[7]
Mergers
In the 1980s, the Brightside and Carbrook Co-op planned to merge with the Sheffield and Ecclesall Co-operative to form the Sheffield Co-operative Society. It never happened, but the name change went through.
[2]
In 2007, the Society voted to merge with the United Co-operatives, which itself merged with the Co-operative Group shortly afterwards.[8] All three of the former Society's department stores, including Castle House, were closed in 2008.[2]