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Bertrams

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Bertram Trading Limited
Company typeLimited company
IndustryBook publishing
Founded1971
FounderElsie Bertram
Kip Bertram
Headquarters,
Key people
Mark Garrard
ServicesBookseller
Total assetsl
Number of employees
400
ParentBertram Group
Websitewww.bertrams.com

Bertrams was the second largest United Kingdom based wholesaler of books,[1] owned since 2018 by Aurelius Investments. It has 200,000 titles available for same-day despatch and has access to over 13 million books in print. The group includes Bertram Books, Bertram Publisher Services and Bertram Library Services.

The company was founded in 1971 by Elsie Bertram and her son Kip, based on a business which Elsie had been running since 1965 in a chicken shed in the garden of her Norwich home.[1] It had and still does have independent booksellers as its core customers.

Bertrams was bought by Woolworths Group in 2007. The acquisition was reviewed by the Competition Commission.

The retail business of Woolworths Group and its distribution firm Entertainment UK entered administration in November 2008, although Bertrams did not as it operated as a separate division within the group.[2] Woolworths Group entered into administration itself in January 2009.

Bertrams entered administration on 20 March 2009 and sold on the same day by Ernst & Young in a "pre-pack" deal to Smiths News (now Connect Group) for £8,611,622.[3] It was sold by Connect Group in 2018 and entered administration again on 19 June 2020.[4]

As of June 2020 many of the suppliers remain unpaid. Galley Beggar Press, based in Norwich, is owed £7,000, and its co-founder Sam Jordison said Bertrams has "quite a lot of stock of ours - we have printed the books, but don't know if we can get hold of them".[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b "Elsie Bertram". The Daily Telegraph. 10 November 2003. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  2. ^ Graeme Neill (27 November 2008). "Bertrams escapes as Woolies fails". The Bookseller. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  3. ^ Graeme Neill (22 March 2009). "Bertrams sold to Smiths News". The Bookseller. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  4. ^ Pringle, Eleanor (19 June 2020). "Hundreds made redundant as Bertram Books files for administration". Eastern Daily Press. Retrieved 2020-06-19.
  5. ^ "Bertram Books collapses with 450 jobs at risk". BBC News. 19 June 2020.
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