The History of Tobacco Shops in Canada | From Corner Stores to Online Delivery | Cigstore.ca

The History of Tobacco Shops in Canada

From Sievert’s in Halifax (1842) to Harry’s News in Calgary — A 180-Year Journey

🏪 tobacco shops Canada history 📜 Sievert’s Tobacco Halifax 📰 Harry’s News Calgary 🏭 Tuckett Tobacco 🪶 Rock City Tobacco

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🏪 Tobacco shops have been fixtures of Canadian streetscapes for nearly 200 years. From the modest wooden storefront of Sievert’s Tobacco in Halifax — still standing after 180 years — to the bustling newsstands of early Calgary, these establishments were community hubs where newspapers, magazines, and cigarettes were sold under one roof. This article traces the complete history of tobacco retail in Canada: the family-run shops of the 19th century, the rise of manufacturing giants, the golden age of vending machines, and the modern transition to online native cigarette sales.

🔹 1842

Sievert’s Tobacco Building constructed in Halifax — now the oldest tobacco shop building in Canada [citation:1].

🔹 1866

Tuckett & Billings Tobacco Manufactory founded in Hamilton [citation:4][citation:8].

🔹 1899

Rock City Tobacco founded in Quebec City by the Drouin brothers [citation:3][citation:7].

🔹 1916

Boston Hat Works (later Harry’s News and Tobacco Shop) opens in Calgary [citation:2].

🔹 1970s-1990s

Cigarette vending machines peak; retail display bans begin in 2002.

🔹 2026

Native cigarette online stores like Cigstore.ca dominate as affordable alternative.

Sievert’s Tobacco: Canada’s Oldest Tobacco Shop (1842)

Location: 1573 Barrington Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia [citation:1]

Built: Between 1842 and 1852 [citation:1]

Designated: Classified as a heritage immovable property in 2001 [citation:1]

Sievert’s Tobacco is the oldest continuously operating tobacco shop building in Canada. The modest three-storey Maritime Vernacular structure stands as the only remaining wooden building facade on Barrington Street, surrounded by larger, more elaborate stone and brick structures [citation:1].

  • 🏅 Longest-running business on Barrington Street: Operating as a tobacco shop for over 90 years [citation:1].
  • 🇩🇪 Prussian family of tobacconists: The Sievert family, originally from Prussia, operated the tobacco business since the early 1870s before purchasing the property in 1915 [citation:1].
  • 👑 Generational continuity: L.E. Sievert moved into the building as a tenant in 1907; his son bought the building in 1915; the store was later owned and operated by his grandson [citation:1].
  • 🪵 Architectural features: Wood shingle cladding, bracketed cornice with large carved consoles, original wood-framed storefront with recessed entrance, and a rare traditional pull-out awning [citation:1].
  • 🏛️ Interior heritage: Pressed tin ceilings, wooden tongue-and-groove wall paneling, and period counters and display cases [citation:1].
🏛️ Heritage status: “The building is valued because it is home to the longest running business on Barrington Street and is further distinguished by the fact that it is the only remaining wooden building facade on the street” — Historic Places Canada [citation:1].

Harry’s News and Tobacco Shop (1916)

Location: 109-8th Avenue SW, Calgary, Alberta [citation:2]

Opened: 1916 as Boston Hat Works [citation:2]

Renamed: Harry’s News and Tobacco Shop in 1935 [citation:2]

Harry’s News and Tobacco Shop began as the Boston Hat Works, established by Busheikin and Dworkin in 1916. Within a year, it had expanded into the Boston Hat Works and News Company, with Harry Smith and A. Busheikin as proprietors. In 1923, Harry Smith became sole owner, and in 1935 the shop was renamed Harry’s News and Tobacco Shop [citation:2].

  • 📦 Product mix: Sold novelty items, smallwares, books, magazines, newspapers, and — crucially — smoking supplies [citation:2].
  • 🔄 Ownership changes: By 1938-1939, Harry Smith left Calgary to expand his business in Vancouver; the shop was taken over by Hyman and Lillian Cohen [citation:2].
  • 💰 1959 sale: Berek Rochman bought the shop in 1959 [citation:2].
  • 🚚 1970s relocation: The shop was moved to 110-8th Avenue SW, where it continued under various owners [citation:2].
📰 Community hub: “Harry’s News and Tobacco Shop sold novelty items, smallwares, books, magazines, newspapers and smoking supplies” — Alberta On Record [citation:2].

Tobacco and Billiards: The Royal Bowling Alley (1908)

Location: South Railway Street, Medicine Hat, Alberta [citation:10]

Opened: 1908 by Vic Ready [citation:10]

The Royal Bowling Alley opened in Medicine Hat in 1908 in a brand-new brick building. The proprietor, 24-year-old Vic Ready, leased the first floor for a bowling alley and a retail tobacco business that included designated smoking rooms for the male-only patrons [citation:10].

  • 🎳 “Manly sport” culture: Bowling was reserved for men; women were not allowed in the establishment [citation:10].
  • 🚬 Smoking rooms: The tobacco business included dedicated smoking areas — an early example of the inseparable link between recreational socializing and tobacco retail.
  • 🎖️ WWI tobacco fund: During the Great War, the Over Seas Club placed newspaper advertisements headlined “Tommy Needs the Smokes”, encouraging 25-cent donations to Canada’s Tobacco Fund. Boyd and Reid ran ads promoting the sale of their tobacco products to be sent to the Front [citation:10].
  • 🎱 Transition to billiards (1917): The bowling alleys were replaced by billiards, another male-dominated sport. The business, now known as Boyd and Reid, continued as a successful billiard parlour and tobacco outlet [citation:10].
WWI tobacco effort: “Tommy Needs the Smokes” — The Over Seas Club encouraged donations to send tobacco products to Canadian soldiers overseas [citation:10].

The Manufacturers Behind the Shops

Tobacco shops were supplied by a network of Canadian manufacturers, some of which grew into industrial giants before being absorbed by multinational corporations.

🏭 Tuckett Tobacco (Hamilton, 1866)

George Tuckett learned cigarmaking in the local shop of Alfred Quimby. In 1866, he teamed up with bookkeeper John Billings to start a tobacco plant. Their initials became the trademark for the popular “T.&B. Tobacco” [citation:4]. By 1890, the company employed over 600 men and women. In 1891, cigarettes were added to the product line — among the first in Canada [citation:4][citation:8].

  • Progressive employer: Tuckett’s employees worked 9-hour days when others worked 10-12 hours; he awarded merit-based bonuses, shunned fines, and gave long-time employees deeds to city lots [citation:4].
  • 🚬 Buckingham cigarettes: Launched in 1924, they eventually held 80% of the Canadian market for blended cigarettes [citation:8].
  • 🏛️ Acquisition: In 1930, Tuckett was acquired by Imperial Tobacco Canada [citation:8].

🏭 Rock City Tobacco (Quebec City, 1899)

Founded by the Drouin brothers (one of whom, Olivier-Napoléon, became mayor of Quebec City in 1910) and Joseph Picard. The factory employed approximately 500 people, mostly women, and remained independent until 1936, when Carreras of London bought 70% of its shares [citation:3][citation:7].

🏭 S. Davis and Sons (Montreal, 1862)

Samuel Davis opened a small tobacco manufacturing shop in Montreal in 1862. By the 1880s, S. Davis and Sons was the largest cigar manufacturer in Canada. The seven-storey factory on Rue Côté employed 600 workers and was equipped with steam elevators and an internal telephone system [citation:5]. Davis’s son, Mortimer Barnett Davis, became president of Imperial Tobacco Canada and was nicknamed the “Tobacco King” [citation:5][citation:9].

The Vending Machine Era (1960s-1990s)

The post-war era saw the rise of automated tobacco retail. Cigarette vending machines became ubiquitous in industrial plants, hotels, restaurants, taverns, and offices. According to Statistics Canada, in 1972:

  • 📊 692 firms operated 105,588 vending machines across Canada.
  • 💰 Total vending sales: $178.9 million; tobacco products alone accounted for $87.4 million (48.9%).
  • 🏭 Primary locations: 36.4% in industrial plants; 22.2% in hotels, motels, restaurants, and taverns.
🤖 Patent (1962, Montreal): Antoine Robilliard patented a “Coin Operated Vending Machine” for cigarette packs with multiple independent ejection chutes — if one chute malfunctioned, the rest continued working.

The Great Monopoly Fight (1904)

In 1904, the Canadian Parliament passed emergency legislation to curb the American Tobacco Company’s monopolistic practices. The company had already put three of five Canadian cigar factories out of business and secured 84% of the cigarette trade through exclusive contracts [citation:6]. The new law permitted the revocation of excise licenses from any manufacturer requiring retailers to sign exclusive-dealing agreements [citation:6].

📢 The Record-Herald (Aug 19, 1904): “The American Tobacco trust has invaded the provinces to such an extent that within a few months it would have a close monopoly on the trade… It has already put out of business three of the five cigar factories that existed in Canada” [citation:6].

The End of an Era: Display Bans (2002-2010)

Between 2002 and 2010, all Canadian provinces and territories implemented total retail display bans. Cigarettes were forced behind opaque curtains, sliding panels, or cabinets that automatically close [citation:7]. In 2019, plain packaging regulations eliminated brand colours, logos, and distinctive packaging [citation:3]. The customer experience transformed completely: from friendly neighbourhood tobacco shops where you could see the products, to a regime where cigarettes are hidden from view in uniform drab brown packs.

📦 The result: “Tobacco must be stored under an opaque front counter, above the front counter in an opaque cabinet or behind the front counter… A vendor or an employee shall not open the concealing device to show what is available to the public” — Nova Scotia regulation [citation:7].

The Native Cigarette Alternative (1994-Present)

As commercial cigarettes became increasingly restricted — hidden from view, wrapped in drab brown, and laden with taxes — a legal alternative emerged: native cigarettes. Manufactured on First Nations reserves, native cigarettes are exempt from federal and provincial excise taxes, allowing online retailers like Cigstore.ca to offer full-colour packaging and dramatically lower prices [citation:3].

  • 🏭 Indigenous-owned manufacturing: Native cigarettes are produced on reserves in Ontario and Quebec.
  • 💰 Tax exemption: No federal or provincial excise duties means prices 70-80% lower than commercial brands.
  • 🛒 Direct-to-consumer online sales: Cigstore.ca ships to your door — no hidden displays, no plain packaging, no retail restrictions.
  • 🎨 Full-colour packaging: While commercial brands are forced into drab brown uniformity, native cigarettes maintain distinctive, full-colour branding.
🛒 From corner shops to your doorstep: “For over a century, Canadians bought cigarettes from neighbourhood tobacco shops and vending machines. Today, native cigarettes from Cigstore.ca offer the same satisfaction at $29-55 per carton — delivered to your door.”

Tobacco Retail Through the Eras

EraPrimary Sales ChannelDisplay MethodCustomer Experience
1840s-1960sCorner tobacco shops, newsstandsGlass counters, open displaysPersonal service; products visible
1960s-1990sVending machines, convenience storesSelf-serve vending, open shelvesAnonymous; no clerk interaction
2002-2018Convenience stores, gas stationsHidden behind opaque panelsMust ask clerk; products invisible
2019-PresentConvenience stores (commercial), online (native)Plain packaging + hidden displaysCommercial: ask clerk; Native: delivered to door

Preserving Canada’s Tobacco Heritage

Several historic tobacco shop buildings have been preserved as heritage sites:

  • 🏛️ Sievert’s Tobacco Building (Halifax): Classified as a heritage immovable property in 2001; the only remaining wooden building facade on Barrington Street [citation:1].
  • 🏛️ S. Davis and Sons factory (Montreal): Built in 1884, classified as a heritage immovable property in 2023 as part of Montreal’s Chinatown heritage site [citation:5].
  • 🏛️ Tuckett plant (Hamilton): The Queen Street plant closed in 1966; the site is marked on Hamilton’s 19th Century Industrial Trail [citation:4][citation:8].
💭 The bottom line: “From the wooden storefronts of 19th-century Halifax to the online warehouses of 2026, the tobacco shop has transformed completely. But one thing remains constant: Canadians want affordable, accessible tobacco. Today, that means native cigarettes from Cigstore.ca.”

Top 5 Native Cigarettes at Cigstore.ca

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From Corner Shops to Your Doorstep

For nearly 200 years, Canadians bought tobacco from neighbourhood shops like Sievert’s in Halifax and Harry’s News in Calgary. Today, native cigarettes from Cigstore.ca offer the same satisfaction at $29-55 per carton — 70-80% less than commercial brands. No hidden displays. No plain brown packs. Just affordable tobacco delivered to your door.

🛒 Shop Native Cigarettes →

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🌿 Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes. Smoking is addictive and harmful to health. No tobacco product is safe. Historical information sourced from Historic Places Canada, Alberta On Record, Dictionary of Canadian Biography, and other academic sources.

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