Eaton_family_(Toronto)

Eaton family (Toronto)

Eaton family (Toronto)

Canadian family and department store owners


The Eaton family is a Canadian family of Scottish-Irish Methodist origin. Established in Toronto, the family dynasty began in 1869 when Timothy Eaton (1834–1907) founded Eaton's, which became a national chain of department stores. At its height, the family's net worth was around $2 billion. Although the Eaton's department store chain went bankrupt in 1999, the family still holds considerable wealth.

The Eaton family's mausoleum at Mount Pleasant Cemetery in Toronto, with lions by sculptor Eli Harvey

The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and author Rod McQueen have dubbed them as "Canada's royal family",[1] with the CBC describing the Eatons as "homegrown aristocracy", which drew comparisons to the influential Kennedy family.[2] The Eatons were well known for their lavish lifestyle and occasional philanthropy.

Notable family members

Timothy Eaton in 1903
  • John Eaton (1784–1834), m. Margaret Craig (1796–1848)
    • Robert Eaton (1816–1893)
    • Eliza Jane Eaton (1819–1861)
    • Mary Anne Eaton (1821–1841)
    • Margaret Eaton (1824–1900)
    • John Eaton (1827–1895), m. Margaret Herbison (1833–1907)
      • William Herbison Eaton (1873–)
      • (3) Robert Young Eaton (1875–1956),[3] m. Hazel Ireland (1889–1965)
        • Margaret Craig Eaton (1912—1988),[4][5] m. John Hubert Dunn (1897–)
        • John Wallace Eaton (1912–1990)[6] (twin brother of Margaret), m. Phyllis Finlayson (1915–1997)
        • Edith Elisabeth Nora Eaton (1913–2010),[7] m. Paul Robert van der Stricht (1908–2004)[8]
        • Erskine Robert Eaton (1915–1942) (died in Dieppe Raid)
        • Alan Young Eaton (1916–2000), m. Diana Fishleigh
    • Nancy Eaton (1829–)
    • Sarah Eaton (1831–)
    • James Eaton (1832–1904)
    • (1) Timothy Eaton (1834–1907),[9] m. Margaret Wilson Beattie (1841–1933)
      • Josephine Smyth Eaton (1865–1943), m. Thomas David Meldrum Burnside (1835–1900)
        • Iris Margaret Burnside (1894–1915) (died on the RMS Lusitania)
        • Allan Eaton Meldrum Burnside (1898–1937)
      • Margaret Elizabeth Beattie Eaton (1867–1952), m. Charles Eldridge Burden (1863)
      • Edward Young Eaton (1871–1900), m. Tillie Robinson (1869–1895)
        • Marjorie Tillie Eaton (1892–1952), m. Harold Simcoe Coulson (1884–1936)
        • Alice Eaton (1894–), m. Edward Browse
      • William Fletcher Eaton (1875–1935),[11] m. Gertrude Nora Cook (1877–)
        • Josephine Norah Eaton (1900–), m. George Edward Leishman (1897–)
        • Noel Beattie Eaton (1910–1996), m. Julia Isabell Fleming (1912–1989)
      • (2) Sir John Craig Eaton (1876–1922),[12] m. Flora McCrea (1879–1970), formally known as Lady Eaton
Notes
  • Not exhaustive – listing is generally restricted to siblings of Timothy Eaton, his children, their spouses, and significant descendants.
  • (#) – order of succession as the head of Eaton's.

Eaton properties and monuments

See also


References

  1. Rod McQueen (1998). The Eatons: The rise and fall of Canada's royal family. Toronto: Stoddart. pp. 320. ISBN 0-7737-3120-2.
  2. "Eaton's: Canadian royalty". CBC Digital Archives.
  3. President of Eaton's, 19221942
  4. (Director-General, Canadian Women's Army Corps, 19441945) Barbara Dundas and Dr. Serge Durflinger. "The Canadian Women's Army Corps, 1941-1946". Canadian War Museum. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  5. worked at Eaton's; managed Montreal store
  6. "van der Stricht, Edith Elisabeth Nora Eaton". The Globe and Mail. 7 August 2010. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  7. "Paul Robert van der Stricht". The New York Times. 14 August 2004. Retrieved 13 February 2013.
  8. President of Eaton's, 18701907
  9. "EATON, Nancy Leigh (Snubby) (nee Gossage)". The Globe and Mail. 27 August 2007. Retrieved 14 February 2013.
  10. worked at Eaton's; managed textile manufacturing plant (Oshawa 19031916)
  11. President of Eaton's, 19071922
  12. President of Eaton's, 19421973
  13. President of Eaton's, 19771988; High Commissioner of Canada to the United Kingdom, 19911994
  14. promoter of the Festival Express in 1970, as depicted in the 2003 film.
  15. President of Eaton's, 19881997
  16. "McEACHREN, Florence Mary (nee Eaton)". The Globe and Mail. 26 April 2012. Retrieved 13 February 2013.
  17. Rod McQueen (27 April 2012). "Florence Mary Eaton McEachren 1919-2012". Retrieved 11 February 2013.

Further reading


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