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Timothy Eaton
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==T. Eaton Co. Limited== [[File:Eaton1.jpg|left|thumb|Plaque about Eaton in Toronto]] [[File:TimothyeatonstatueCommons.jpg|thumb|This bronze [[Timothy Eaton statue|statue of Eaton]] (photographed in 1919) sits in the [[Royal Ontario Museum]] in Toronto; a second casting sits in [[Bell MTS Place]] in Winnipeg]] In 1854, he worked for a short time in a haberdashery store in [[Glen Williams, Ontario]]. His sister married William Reid; they owned a farm in [[Georgetown, Ontario]], a short distance from Glen Williams. In 1865, with the help of his brothers, Robert and James, Timothy Eaton set up a bakery business in the town of [[Kirkton, Ontario]], which went under after only a few months. Undaunted, he opened a dry goods store in [[St. Marys, Ontario]]. In 1869, Eaton purchased an existing dry-goods and haberdashery business at 178 [[Yonge Street]] in Toronto. In promoting his new business, Eaton embraced two retail practices that were ground-breaking at the time:{{citation needed|date=March 2011}} first, all goods had one price (no haggling) with no credit given, and second, all purchases came with a money-back guarantee (a practice expressed in what would become the long-standing store slogan of "Goods Satisfactory or Money Refunded"). Starting in 1884, Eaton introduced Canada to the wonders of the [[mail-order catalogue]], reaching thousands of small towns and rural communities with an array of products previously unattainable. In these tiny communities, the arrival of Eaton's catalogue was a major event. More than clothing, furniture, or the latest in kitchen gadgetry, the catalogue offered such practical items as milking machines, in addition to just about every other contraption or new invention desirable. And, when rendered obsolete by the new season's catalogue, it served another important use in the outdoor privy of most every rural home. Eaton spawned a colossal retail empire that his offspring would expand coast to coast, reaching its high point during [[World War II]], when the [[Eaton's|T. Eaton Co. Limited]] employed more than 70,000 people. Although Eaton did not invent the department store, nor was he the first retailer in the world to implement a money-back guarantee, the chain he founded popularized both concepts and revolutionized retailing in Canada.
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