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These appliance repair companies are friendly and fast to get in touch. All of them offer fair pricing. They are efficient, skilled service agents having lots of years in the industry. The repair companies can handle lots of sorts of appliance whiteware ranging from refrigerators , deep freezes, washing machines, clothes dryers and ovens.
The companies will aim to repair any types of domestic appliance and will hope to fix your job first time. The appliance repair services have a good reputation in the Somerfield so you will be able to count on them to provide good service.
We know that you will have a range of options for whiteware repair companies so we strive to do a good job. As a result you are able to count upon us to do the job as quickly as possible getting your domestic appliances operating once more. For appliance problems near Somerfield call now.
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More About Somerfield
Somerfield (originally Gateway) was a chain of small to medium-sized supermarkets operating in the United Kingdom. The company also previously owned the Kwik Save chain of discount food stores. The company was taken over by the Co-operative Group on 2 March 2009 in a £1.57 billion deal,[2] creating the UK’s fifth-largest food retailer. The Somerfield name was replaced by the Co-operative brand in a rolling programme of store conversions ending in summer 2011.[3][4][5]
The company has its origins in a Bristol-based grocer known as J H Mills which was founded in 1875 and which developed a self-service supermarket chain named Gateway Foodmarkets in 1960.[6] During the early 1970s Gateway operated primarily in the southwest of England with a few stores elsewhere. Ford and Lock stores and S&H Pink Stamp acquisitions took place during the period when loyalty stamps were prevalent and the first freezer centres were opened. Gateway Foodmarkets was taken over by the Linfood Holdings, a consortium which already owned the Frank Dee Supermarkets which operated over the north and east of England. At the time Frank Dee Supermarkets and the larger DEE Discount stores were a business larger than Gateway and had a chain of 79 supermarkets, in 1977.[6] In 1983 Linfood Holdings was renamed the Dee Corporation.[6] Initial plans were proposed to utilise the distribution depots on three main sites; the thriving Frank Dee’s purpose built facilities in Anlaby and Billingham, and the existing Gateway warehousing site in Bristol.