The Bay is no more, so what’s Canada’s oldest company? Here are some contenders


Figuring out which Canadian company is the oldest now that Hudson’s Bay has closed its doors is a complicated feat. Many of the country’s earliest businesses have changed hands several times, been bought by more recently established or American firms and even stopped operating before later restarting.

The Hudson’s Bay Co. was founded in 1670; the businesses now in the running were formed decades later, in the 18th century. Their records tended to be less detailed, further obscuring matters.

Library and Archives Canada, The Canadian Press and other researchers have turned up several contenders for the title that range from household names to lesser-known companies.

Here’s a snapshot of how they stack up.

1752: The Halifax Gazette

John Bushell is credited with starting the Halifax Gazette in March 1752. After his former print shop partner Bartholomew Green died before the publication materialized, Bushell headed from Boston to Halifax to see out Green’s plans, the Nova Scotia Archives website says.

The paper was published under various names until 1867, when it became the Nova Scotia Royal Gazette, a government publication the province used to announce legislation.

1764: Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph

William Brown and Thomas Gilmore moved to Canada from Philadelphia and started printing the Quebec Gazette shortly after, in June 1764.

The paper had about four pages split in two columns to offer side-by-side French and English versions of international news, government ads, book reviews and occasionally, poems.

Newspaper publication was suspended at least twice in its early years. The first time was in response to the 1765 Stamp Act, when British parliament imposed a tax on printed materials in its colonies. The second pause came during a siege by American troops in the late mid-1770s.

While a French version of the Gazette was abandoned in the 1840s, when competition proliferated, the English Gazette merged with the Morning Chronicle in 1874 and then the Daily Telegraph in 1925.

The publication is now called the Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph. It publishes weekly and says it remains North America’s oldest newspaper.

1778: The Montreal Gazette

Trailing the Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph is another newspaper, the Montreal Gazette.

Its founder was Fleury Mesplet, a Frenchman who learned the trade from his printer father before heading to the U.S. and then Canada, where he published Montreal’s first newspaper, the French-language Gazette du commerce et litteraire.

The publication became a thorn in the government’s side and in 1779, governor Frederick Haldimand had Mesplet jailed for three years, according to a 1992 story from the paper. It wasn’t until August 1785 that he revived the Gazette, this time as a bilingual paper.



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