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Canadian Breweries Limited


Canadian Breweries Limited was an Ontario based holding company in the brewery industry. In 1969, the company was sold to Rothmans, and is now called Carling O'Keefe, with its brands currently owned by the Molson Coors Brewing Company.

Originally named Brewing Corporation of Ontario, E. P. Taylor created the company in 1930 by merging The Brading Breweries Limited, an Ottawa company Taylor had inherited from his grandfather, Capital Brewing of Ottawa, and Kuntz Brewery of Waterloo, Ontario. Soon afterward, Taylor acquired British American Brewing Company, a Windsor, Ontario brewery founded in 1882 and Carling Brewing Co., founded in London, Ontario in 1840. O'Keefe Brewery was added to Taylor's brewery interests in 1934.

Even when Canadian provinces prohibited alcohol consumption, federal law did not affect production for export. For some breweries, particularly those close to the U.S. border, a period of prosperity existed during Prohibition in the United States. E.P. Taylor also served as Vice President of Burmuda Export Co., a brewery industry company that aimed to control prices and exports of beer.

Taylor's expansion was aggressive and, during the 1930s and 1940s, his holding company acquired about thirty Canadian brewers. The company changed its name to the Brewing Corporation of Canada and then to Canadian Breweries Limited in 1937. One notable executive was George Montegu Black II, the father of Conrad Black. Canadian Breweries was headed by president J.G. (Jack) Campbell.

The company became part of the Argus Corporation when Argus was founded by Taylor, and others, in 1945.

In 1953, the Canadian Restrictive Trade Practices Commission launched an investigation into the company, later charging Canadian Breweries with being part of an illegal combine by its participation in a series of mergers that were a detriment to the public by lessening price competition.


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