Charles Harwood McKimm, M.C.

Male 1890 - 1943  (53 years)


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Timeline



 
 



 




   Date  Event(s)
1837 
  • 3 Nov 1837—1990: Distillery begins
    The distillery is added to the mill and production begins. With the exception of the war years, when acetone and ketone were produced, the distillery is in continuous production until 1990.
1842 
  • 1842—2015: Little Trinity Church
    William Gooderham and James G. Worts founded Trinity Church (known as Little Trinity) on King St E. They provided much of the land which even today, generates revenues to support the church. William was an Evangelical Anglican and served as warden for 35 years. His nephew James G. Worts met his wife, Sarah Bright through their activities at the church where he was a member for 39 years and also served as warden. William
1846 
  • 1846—1926: Gooderham Wharf
    The Gooderham Wharf was built in 1846. The 5 story grain elevator on the wharf could store 80,000 bushels of grain. Between 1926 and 1937 the wharf and elevators disappeared as the city expanded southwards.
1855 
  • 18 Mar 1855—1969: Bank of Toronto
    William Gooderham was instrumental in founding the Bank of Toronto to speed flour to market. Eventually merged with the Dominion Bank to become the Toronto Dominion Bank. Gooderham's served as directors until Henry S. Gooderham, George Gooderham's grandson, retired in 1969.
1875 
  • 1875—1892: RCYC
    George Gooderham joined the club in 1875; four of his brothers and three of his sons also joined the club between 1881 and 1886. And during the decade of 1883 through 1892, George Gooderham in Oriole I and II and his oldest son William George Gooderham in Aileen won an astonishing nine of ten Prince of Wales. George Gooderham acted as Commodore of the RCYC in 1888, a position also held by two of his descendents, son George Horace Gooderham and grandson Norman Gooderham.
1889 
  • 1889—1892: Waveney -The York Club
    George built Waveney at 135 St. George at Bloor (it became the York Club on his death)
1891 
  • 1891—1892: Flat Iron Building
    The flat-iron building called the Gooderham Building designed by Toronto architect David Roberts Jr.is built at Front and Wellington to house business headquarters
1895 
  • 1895: Mining investment
    With his son-in-law Thomas Gibbs Blackstock, George invests in two world-famous mines, the War Eagle and the Centre Star, in the Kootenay region of British Columbia (later, part of Cominco).
1903 
  • 1903: King Edward Hotel
    As Toronto expanded westward, George wanted to build a hotel to anchor Toronto's downtown close to the Distillery and the Gooderham Building. The planning for the hotel began in 1899 when the Toronto Hotel Company was founded by George Aemilius Jarvis, George Cox (of Canada Life and the Bank of Commerce) and George Gooderham (of Gooderham & Worts Distillery). The King Edward hotel, designed by Edward James Lennox, opened in 1903.
10 1905 
  • 1905: George Gooderham dies
    George dies and his eldest sons take over: Albert Edward as Managing Director and William George as President
11 1908 
  • 1908—1919: G.H.G. is an MPP
    George Horace Gooderham made an unsuccessful bid for mayor in 1905 and then served as an MPP 1908
12 1914 
  • 28 Jul 1914—11 Nov 1918: World War I
    World War I begins
13 1916 
  • 1916—1923: Prohibition
    Prohibition in Ontario against selling and possessing (but not manufacturing) alcohol. The government allowed numerous exceptions. Wineries were exempted from closure, and various breweries and distilleries remained open for the export market. The Ontario government ended prohibition in 1923 and created the Liquor Control Board of Ontario, permitting the sale of liquor in the province though under heavy regulation.
  • 1916—1918: British Acetones
    US price of acetone rises 75%. Government offers remuneration if G&W will make acetone. Instead they insist on doing it for free. Colonel Albert E. Gooderham and his son dedicate themselves and the distillery to production of acetone for the war under the name British Acetones.
14 1918 
  • 11 Nov 1918: World War I ends
    World War I ends
15 1919 
  • Aug 1919: HRH Prince of Wales
    HRH Prince of Wales (future Edward VIII) visited the RCYC in August 1919. And it was RCYC Commodore George Horace Gooderham who greeted him. At one point during the ball that evening, the prince excused himself. Eventually, he was discovered relaxing aboard the Oriole III, moored in a lagoon and surrounded by canoes and singing admirers.
16 1920 
  • 16 Jan 1920—5 Dec 1933: U.S. Prohibition
    The National Prohibition Act in the US came into effect on January 16, 1920. Drinking itself was never illegal, although manufacturing and sale of alcoholic beverages was outlawed. Repeal of Prohibition was accomplished with the ratification of the Twenty-first Amendment on December 5, 1933. Under its terms, states were allowed to set their own laws for the control of alcohol.
17 1923 
  • 1923: Distillery sold
    G&W sold to Harry C. Hatch who later merged it with Hiram Walker and Sons Limited. All efforts are focused on developing the successful Canadian Club brand so the bulk of operations shifts to the Walkerville plant in Windsor, Ontario. In 1957 Gooderham & Worts stop producing rye whiskey. It concentrates instead on the distilling of rum products. In 1986, the conglomerate Allied-Lyons, bought Hiram Walker
18 1927 
  • 1927: Prohibition ends
    Prohibition ended in Ontario