Harvester (restaurant)

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Harvester
IndustryHospitality
Founded1983
FounderCourage Brewery
Headquarters27 Fleet Street, Birmingham, B3 1JP
Area served
United Kingdom
Key people
CEO Phil Urban
Products230 restaurants
ParentMitchells & Butlers
Websitewww.harvester.co.uk

Harvester Restaurants is a family "farmhouse style" restaurant chain with over 230 outlets (as of December 2015) in the United Kingdom.

Bass[]

On 21 July 1995, Bass bought the seventy eight restaurants of Harvester for £165 million.[1] Whitbread had offered £150 million.[1] Most Harvesters were in the South East, and Bass had plans to rebrand other restaurants (such as the former Innkeeper's Fayre) elsewhere in England as Harvesters. When Bass divested its brewing division in 2000, the chain was looked after by the renamed company, Six Continents, until 2003.[2]

Mitchells & Butlers[]

On 15 April 2003, the chain Six Continents was taken over by the renamed company, Mitchells & Butlers plc, and had 127 outlets. By 2012, there were over two hundred hotels across the United Kingdom.[citation needed]

Return to television and radio advertising[]

For the first time in ten years, Harvester Restaurants spent nearly £20,000 on advertising on both television in the United Kingdom, and radio stations in July 2010. The advertising campaign was part of a general shift within Mitchells & Butlers plc, to focus on businesses that were food led.[3] As part of the marketing campaign, they also run "free ice cream vouchers when you order main meal" campaigns periodically.[citation needed]

Sustainability[]

In November 2015, the chain was one of seven restaurants surveyed[by whom?] that failed to meet a basic level of sustainability in its seafood.[4][needs update]

Harvester at Brayford Wharf, Lincoln.
Harvester in Fleet, Hampshire.

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b Shepherd, John (22 July 1995). "Forte sells Harvester pub chain". The Independent. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
  2. ^ Day, Julia (27 June 2001). "Bass to become Six Continents". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
  3. ^ Parsons, Russell (24 March 2010). "Mitchells & Butlers readies push for restaurant brands as it switches to food-led business". Marketing Week. Archived from the original on 7 December 2010.
  4. ^ Smithers, Rebecca (18 November 2015). "More than half of UK's family restaurant chains serving unsustainable seafood". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 16 March 2020.

External links[]

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