Aikenhead's Hardware Explained

Aikenhead's Hardware
Fate:acquired by The Home Depot and became its Canadian unit
Predecessor:Ridout's Hardware Store
Successor:Home Depot Canada
Foundation:1830
Founder:Joseph Ridout
James T.E. Aikenhead
Alexander Crombie
Defunct:1994
Location City:Toronto
Location Country:Canada
Location:Ontario
Locations:5
Area Served:Canada
Key People:Joseph Ridout
James T.E. Aikenhead
J. Wilfred Aikenhead
Thomas E. Aikenhead
Alexander Crombie
Industry:Service
Products:Hardware
Owner:Aikenheads family 1901-1971
Molsons 1971-1994
Parent:Aikenhead Hardware Company 1893-1901
Aikenhead Hardware Limited 1901-1971
Molsons 1971-1994

Aikenhead's Hardware was a chain of Canadian hardware stores located in Greater Toronto, Southern Ontario and northern Ontario. The original store was founded in Toronto in 1830 as "Ridout's Hardware Store" by Joseph Ridout and was located on the corner of King Street and Yonge Street.[1]

In 1868, two employees, James Aikenhead and Alexander Crombie, became partners in the company and renamed it "Ridout, Aikenhead, & Crombie". It became Aikenhead's in 1893, when Aikenhead bought out Ridout and Crombie.[2]

In 1971 the Aikenhead family sold their chain to Molson, which later started a warehouse in 1991 to head off American chain The Home Depot. Molson sold their 75% stake to Home Depot in 1994, and it became the Canadian unit.[3] (Molson exited the hardware business with the sale of Beaver Lumber in 1999 to Home Hardware, which they had acquired a year after the purchase of Aikenhead's.)

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Company . . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070516162218/http://www.angelfire.com/zine2/aikenheads/Sub/info.htm . 2007-05-16.
  2. Book: Kearney . Mark . Ray . Randy . I Know That Name!: The People Behind Canada's Best Known Brand Names from Elizabeth Arden to Walter Zeller . James Aikenhead: Aikenhead's Hardware . September 2002 . 21–23 . Dundurn . 9781550024074 . https://books.google.com/books?id=e3KE9KjwONEC&q=%22aikenhead's%20hardware%22%20Canadian&pg=PA4 . 2010-08-14.
  3. http://www.trentu.ca/admin/library/archives/89-014.htm{{failed verification|date=August 2012}}