The Story of the Mail-order Catalogue
1914-1929: First World War and the Aftermath on the Homefront:
Expansion,
Growth, and Innovation
During the First World War, department store employees enlisted in
large
numbers. Rivals such as Eaton's and Simpson's collaborated to
support
the war effort. Many goods previously imported from Europe were no longer
available.
During and after the war, many companies initiated expansion programs.
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1914
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Simpson's builds an 11-storey mail-order warehouse in Toronto.
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1915
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Scroggie's sells its operations to Almy's Limited, a
company representing
American interests from New York and Massachusetts. Almy's keeps the
business
going, with a mail-order division occupying most of the sixth floor, until
1922
when it ceases activity.
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1915
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Eaton's and Simpson's expand in the East and West.
Eaton's
establishes a distribution centre in Saskatoon. Simpson's builds an
eight-storey
warehouse in Regina in 1916. Eaton's establishes a second
Saskatchewan
warehouse for heavy goods in Regina in 1917. In 1919, Simpson's
builds
a five-storey mail-order facility in Halifax.
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1919
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In response to the Canadian government's Soldier Settlement
Scheme,
Eaton's produces a booklet for soldiers planning to farm in the
West, containing
"the full requirements of a soldier."
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1920
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Eaton's opens a regional mail-order headquarters in Moncton.
Eaton's
mail-order business peaks at $60 million. Simpson's catalogue
business
is worth $13.1 million.
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1922
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Intending to cash in on the burgeoning French
Canadian
market in town and country Dupuis Frères, a Montréal
department
store established in 1868, issues a French catalogue. Dupuis Frères
uses
religious and nationalistic themes to sell its
merchandise.
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1923
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Simpson's receives permission from the Post Office to distribute
catalogues
to all post office boxes on rural routes. Rural
Mail
Delivery, first introduced in 1908, is responsible for the advent of
rural
home delivery to mailboxes located up and down country roads and key to
accessing
a good part of the rural market. The country can now be blanketed with
catalogues.
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1925
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Army and Navy, a Vancouver-based department
store
chain, opens a mail-order business headquartered in Regina.
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1928
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Eaton's introduces a fully automated mail-order processing
facility
in Montréal, but shuts it down just three years later.
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1929
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The first priority of Simpson's new owners and president Charles
Luther
Burton's is to overhaul the mail-order department.
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The 1930s: Corporate
Expansion, Customer
Cash Shortages
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