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CBL consolidated its brewing at its 1961 plant by the Toronto airport and moved its head offices into new buildings near St. Clair and Yonge Streets in Toronto. [35] In 1966, CBL opened a new Carling subsidiary in Hong Kong. It consisted of a CA$2.1 million plant that could produce 500,00 barrels annually. [36]
Molson Coors has continued to brew and sell Carling Black Label across Canada. Carling O'Keefe: Ontario: Toronto: 1930: Originally formed as Brewing Corporation of Ontario, became Canadian Breweries in 1936. One of the "Big Three" of Canadian brewing formed by buying or merging smaller competitors. Became Carling O'Keefe in 1973. Merged with ...
The business was renamed O'Keefe and Company. It was the first to produce lager beer in Canada, along with the traditional ale and porter. [1] In 1891, the company was incorporated as O'Keefe Brewing Company Limited. [1] In 1911 another new brewery was built with an annual capacity of 500,000 barrels. [1]
In 2011, the Toronto Festival of Beer also launched the Queer Beer Festival, a separate one-day event marketed toward Toronto's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community. [111] There is also the Lauder Beer Festival, which is a much smaller festival held in the north end of Toronto. A beer festival also took place in Ottawa in 2003. [112]
Union des Employes de Service, Local 298 v Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048 is a leading decision of the Supreme Court of Canada on judicial review in Canadian administrative law. In this decision the court first described the "pragmatic and functional approach" [ 1 ] to determining the standard of review for an administrative decision and ...
The ginger beer had been manufactured by David Stevenson, who ran a company producing both ginger beer and lemonade at 11 and 12 Glen Lane, Paisley, less than a mile away from the Wellmeadow Café. [6]: 6–7 The contact details for the ginger beer manufacturer were on the bottle label and recorded by Donoghue's friend. [6]: 11
Between 1916 and 1918, Calgary, Alberta's union density increased by 35%, making it the 8th most unionized city in the country. Industrial unionism over took craft unionism in the city, with the Building Trades Council, the Carpenters District Council, and the CPR Federated Trades Council becoming some of the largest of the city's 44 unions.
The One Big Union (OBU) was a left-wing industrial union based primarily in Western Canada. [1] Launched formally in Calgary on June 4, 1919, the OBU, after a spectacular initial upsurge, lost most of its members within a few years. It finally merged with the Canadian Labour Congress in 1956.