Primarily a
retail business, Jarrolds department store in
Norwich city centre, was designed by
George John Skipper between 1903 and 1905.
Sir Nikolaus Pevsner describes the
Jarrolds store as "baroque" in style. Jarrolds have several shops in Norwich, as well as in
Wymondham and
Cromer. Non-retail divisions of the Jarrold Group of Companies include Jarrold Properties, Jarrold Training, and St James Facility Management. In 2004 Jarrold and Sons announced its intention to sell off a 70% stake of its "Norwich-based magazine printer Jarrold Printing" whose portfolio at that time included "NatMags Esquire, Good Housekeeping, Harpers & Queen and Country Living" and which was also producing "IPC, Emap and the Financial Times". Jarold and Sons' "other business interests in retail, publishing, training and property" were to continue as before. Jarrolds sponsored the construction of a
new stand at
Norwich City F.C.'s
Carrow Road football ground; known as
The Jarrold Stand, the original sponsorship deal ceased in 2016.
Publishing activities John Jarrold Jr. diversified the firm into
publishing as early as 1823 and in 1877 it published the first edition of the children's classic,
Anna Sewell's
Black Beauty. Beginning in the 1920 the firm published
Discovery: The Magazine of Scientific Progress for several decades. In 1936 the firm entered the world of
paperback book series when it published the Jarrolds' Jackdaw Library and followed up in 1939 by launching its Jackdaw Crime Series.
Book series The following series were published by Jarrold Publishers (Jarrold & Sons Ltd, Norwich) or one of its imprints, such as Jarrold Colour Publications: ==See also==