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Alfred Radley


Alfred Radley /ˈrædli/ (born 1924, London) is a former British clothing manufacturer best known for his association with the Quorum Boutique and fashion designer, Ossie Clark.

Alfred Radley was born in 1924 in the East End of London, the youngest of seven children. His father died when he was eighteen months old, and he was brought up partly at the Norwood orphanage.

During the Second World War he volunteered for the Navy and served in all theatres of war from the Atlantic Convoys to the Pacific. Towards the end of the war he served on ships taking returning Russian prisoners to Odessa and bringing back Jewish survivors from the death camps to Marseille. He also was on one to the first ships to enter Japan following the dropping of the atom bombs when he visited Hiroshima.

After the war he started his own company selling dresses and by the early 1960s was part of the Swinging London movement, specialising in party dresses. By 1965 Radley was one of the most important fashion houses in London, with its own fabric mills as well as factories producing gloves and handbags for many high street stores including Marks & Spencer.

In 1968 Radley acquired Quorum with its famous designers Ossie Clark, Alice Pollock and Celia Birtwell. While Ossie Clark flourished under the Quorum label, Radley promoted the careers of many designers including: Betty Jackson, Sheilagh Brown, Sheridan Barnett, Wendy Dagworthy, Rosemary Bradford and Terence Nolder (who in 1980 won the British Eveningwear Designer Award and The British Designer of the Year Award in 1981)


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