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  2. Sears Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sears_Canada

    Sears Canada Inc. was a publicly-traded Canadian company affiliated with the American-based Sears department store chain. In operation from 1952 until January 14, 2018, and headquartered in Toronto, Ontario, the company began as Simpsons-Sears—a joint venture between the Canadian Simpsons department store chain and the American Sears chain—which operated a national mail order business and ...

  3. Eaton's - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eaton's

    The cover of the first Eaton's catalogue, published in 1884. In 1869, Timothy Eaton sold his interest in a small dry-goods store in the market town of St. Marys, Ontario, and he bought a dry-goods and haberdashery business at 178 Yonge Street in the city of Toronto.

  4. Toronto Eaton Centre - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toronto_Eaton_Centre

    CF Toronto Eaton Centre, [ 2] commonly referred to simply as Eaton Centre, is a shopping mall and office complex in the downtown core of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is owned and managed by Cadillac Fairview (CF). It was named after the Eaton's department store chain that once anchored it before the chain went defunct in the late 1990s.

  5. Simpsons (department store) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simpsons_(department_store)

    The deal to create Simpsons-Sears Limited, a Canadian catalogue and department store chain separate from the Simpsons chain, was signed on September 18, 1952, and the terms were 50-50. Each company put up $20 million and had equal representation on the new company's board of directors. The new company was to have two main objectives.

  6. Timothy Eaton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timothy_Eaton

    The Toronto statue is now housed by the Royal Ontario Museum, and the Winnipeg statue sits in the city's arena, Canada Life Centre (formerly MTS Centre and Bell MTS Place), in almost exactly the same spot where it stood in the now demolished Eaton's store (albeit one storey higher). Museum-goers in Toronto and hockey fans in Winnipeg continue ...

  7. Merchandise Building - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merchandise_Building

    Merchandise Building. The Merchandise Building is a loft conversion of a former warehouse located in downtown Toronto on Dalhousie Street, near the campus of Toronto Metropolitan University and the Toronto Eaton Centre. Built in various stages from 1910 to 1949 for the Simpson's department store, and later owned by Sears Canada after Simpson's ...

  8. The rise and fall of Sears - AOL

    www.aol.com/2017-05-18-the-rise-and-fall-of...

    It restructured its operations to keep pace with modern consumerism, closing the traditional U.S. catalog operations and embarking on a $4 billion store upgrade. By 1997, Sears debuted its first ...

  9. Sears - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sears

    Sears, Roebuck and Co. (/ s ɪər z / SEERZ), [5] commonly known as Sears, is an American chain of department stores founded in 1892 by Richard Warren Sears and Alvah Curtis Roebuck and reincorporated in 1906 by Richard Sears and Julius Rosenwald, with what began as a mail ordering catalog company migrating to opening retail locations in 1925, the first in Chicago. [6]