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From market stall to supermarket giant: the man who made Tesco

One hundred years ago, Jack Cohen started the market stall which grew into a vast supermarket chain. Jenni Frazer looks back on a colourful life

May 9, 2019 10:47
Jack Cohen makes a toast in 1973 -  with Tesco's bubbly, £1.75 a bottle
6 min read

At the end of his long life, it was difficult to get a sense of the hard-nosed and ruthless businessman “Tesco Cohen” must once have been in his heyday.

When I interviewed him for the JC back in 1978 on the occasion of his 80th birthday, Sir Jack Cohen’s home was a cluster of “me with” photographs; Sir Jack with the Queen, Sir Jack apparently exchanging memories of the East End with celebrities from television, Sir Jack and his wife, Lady Cissie (Sarah), with their two daughters, Irene and Shirley. And pride of place was given to a flower bowl to mark the couple’s Golden Wedding, inscribed “John Cohen, Sarah Fox, 1924-1974”.

He was not, by any measure, a good-looking man. But the minute he smiled — a wide grin which transformed his face — the ghost of the Jack Cohen of 1919 suddenly appeared, the Whitechapel boy whose market stalls and backchat lured in the shoppers of Hackney.  And it is the centenary of that barrow-boy initiative that the Tesco empire is celebrating this year.

He didn’t have much to sell: army surplus, fish paste and golden syrup, at first. But it was enough, five years later, to allow him to marry Sarah “Cissie” Fox — and the story goes that the money the young couple received as wedding gifts was ploughed back into the business. Just the same, the Fox family didn’t much take to Jack as a future son-in-law, because they thought that working the markets was common.  As for Cissie, in that 80th-birthday interview, Jack recalled that, before their marriage, she used to go out dancing with another man while he was working all hours. “And then it was me or the other fellow”, Jack growled, while Cissie chipped in that he had been “the best husband in the world”.