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For more than a century, department stores shaped everyday life in Ontario.
They were more than retail spaces — they were cultural landmarks, social hubs, holiday destinations, job creators, and symbols of urban identity. From Toronto to Windsor, from Thunder Bay to Ottawa, these stores defined childhood memories, seasonal shopping rituals, and the entire architecture of downtown life.
But between the 1980s and the 2010s, almost every major Canadian department store chain either collapsed, was absorbed, or vanished entirely.
Ontario — once home to dozens of proud retail names — became the epicenter of one of the largest retail wipeouts in North America.
This is the story of that rise and fall.
Perhaps the most iconic department store in Canadian history, Eaton’s was the brand that built Toronto’s retail identity. It launched the famous Santa Claus Parade, dominated mail-order retail, and created Toronto Eaton Centre — still one of the busiest shopping malls in North America.
But mismanagement in the 1980s and 90s, failed rebranding attempts (“Eaton’s: It’s Everything”), and intense competition caused the empire to fall into bankruptcy in 1999.
Why it mattered:
Eaton’s wasn’t just a store — it was part of Canada’s identity.
Simpson’s was Eaton’s greatest rival. The two battled for decades for Toronto consumers.
Simpson’s is also the origin of Simpsons-Sears, which later evolved into Sears Canada.
In 1991, the Hudson’s Bay Company absorbed Simpson’s entirely.
The flagship store at Queen & Yonge eventually became Hudson’s Bay + Saks.
Why it mattered:
Simpson’s was the elegant counterpart to Eaton’s, famous for upscale merchandise and its Christmas windows.
The company still exists, but the traditional Bay department store model is essentially gone, with dozens of Ontario locations closed and more planned closures underway.
The Bay no longer operates as a classic department store — it is now a downsized apparel/home retailer struggling to survive.
Although technically not “gone,” most Ontario locations have disappeared, and the era of the Bay as a department-store titan is effectively over.
Why it mattered:
HBC was the last survivor of Canada’s department-store era.
The descent of Sears Canada was one of the biggest collapses in Canadian retail history. From a household staple to bankruptcy, Sears left behind empty malls, empty plazas, and empty memories.
Why it mattered:
For decades, Sears was the “safe choice” for appliances, tools, and catalog shopping. Its absence left a massive gap.
The original Zellers — the one we grew up with — is gone.
The revival is more of a pop-up concept inside Hudson’s Bay stores.
Why it mattered:
Zellers was the Canadian version of Walmart before Walmart arrived.
A beloved mid-tier chain with 122 Canadian stores at its peak.
It was purchased by Zellers in the late 1990s.
Why it mattered:
Kmart was known for its Blue Light Specials, cafeterias, and accessible pricing.
Woolworth was the pioneer of the “five-and-dime” model.
Woolco (its department-store spinoff) was sold to Walmart, which effectively changed retail in Canada forever.
Why it mattered:
Woolco → Walmart. Enough said.
A totally unique Canadian model.
You ordered from a catalogue, filled out a slip, and waited at the counter.
It was Amazon before Amazon.
Why it mattered:
Its decline predicted the death of catalogue-based shopping.
These are the ones most people forget — but they were HUGE in Ontario.
Towers was a major discount chain across Ontario before being acquired by Zellers.
Its logo and storefronts were once everywhere.
Not a full department store, but a key part of Ontario’s discount-retail ecosystem.
Famous for bargain bins and no-frills pricing.
A Toronto landmark so iconic it became a cultural symbol.
Bizarre signs, chaotic aisles, and the annual turkey giveaway — a retail experience like no other.
A discount competitor to BiWay, with locations throughout Ontario.
Sayvette was a discount chain with large suburban stores.
Short-lived, but important in the evolution of Ontario’s big-box landscape.
Before Kmart, there was Kresge’s, a classic five-and-dime store that anchored many Ontario downtowns.
Morgan’s operated major department stores in Toronto and Montreal.
Many people forget it existed because it merged quietly into The Bay.
A short-lived but upscale Ontario department store chain.
Closed in the early 1990s due to high costs and competition.
Here is your definitive list — including everything mentioned plus the forgotten ones:
Eaton’s
Simpson’s
Sears Canada
Zellers (original chain)
Kmart Canada
Woolworth
Woolco
Consumers Distributing
Towers
Bretton’s
Morgan’s
Sayvette
Roses
Bargain Harold’s
BiWay
Honest Ed’s
Kresge’s
Miracle Mart / M (operated in Ontario until early 1990s)
Pascal’s (large hardware/department-style stores, eastern Canada but had Ontario impact)
Hudson’s Bay Company (traditional department store era is effectively over)
Zellers (revived in micro-format only)
Ontario once had more than 25 major department store brands competing for consumers.
Today, only a fraction remain — and none operate with the scale, prestige, or cultural weight they once held.
Several forces killed the sector:
Big-box giants like Walmart
The rise of online shopping
Mismanagement at legacy companies
Failure to modernize
High lease costs in malls and downtowns
A shift in consumer expectations
The result?
An entire chapter of Ontario history disappeared in one generation.
But the memories remain — Christmas trips to Eaton’s, bargain hunting at Zellers, the smell of Woolworth’s lunch counter, the blue-light special at Kmart, the catalogue at Consumers, and the flashing lights of Honest Ed’s.
Ontario didn’t just lose stores.
It lost a piece of its soul.
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Drive earnings and expand reach to include listing of your webinar on upto 6,000 + event calendars, blogs and social media groups.
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