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Home · Lifestyle · Food · Tim Hortons: Coffee, Crullers and Canadiana

Topic spans: 1967 - 2007

Tim Hortons: Coffee, Crullers and Canadiana

Are the words "Timbit" and "double-double" part of your everyday vocabulary? If the answer is yes, you must be Canadian. Despite the fact that it was bought by an American company in 1995, Tim Hortons seems to have injected itself into the centre of our Canadian identity. Started as a small doughnut shop owned by hockey legend Tim Horton, there are now more than 3,000 Tim Hortons locations. From the tragically short life of Horton to the entrenchment of "Roll Up the Rim" into our collective culture, CBC Digital Archives looks at the evolution of Tim’s.

Photo of first Tim Hortons store in Hamilton, courtesy of Tim Hortons

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3 radio clips

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Who wants a Hockey Night in Canada jacket like the one Ward Cornell is wearing in this clip? Those were the days!

Submitted by: Elizabeth, CBC Archives writer


Tim Horton gets emotional in '67

Broadcast Date: May 2, 1967

"I think it was one of the happiest moments I can remember in hockey," says Tim Horton of the Toronto Maple Leafs. His team has just won the 1967 Stanley Cup. In a post-game interview with Hockey Night in Canada's Ward Cornell, Horton seems almost surprised at his own emotional reaction to the victory. "I actually thought I was going to start crying, there were tears starting to go down my cheeks, and it's never happened that way before."

Tim Horton gets emotional in '67

• Tim Horton was born in Cochrane, Ont., on Jan. 30, 1930.

• He was awarded a scholarship to St. Michael's College in Toronto in 1947 and began playing on their hockey team, which was actually a farm team for the Toronto Maple Leafs. That same year, he was put on the Leafs' reserve list.

• In 1949, Maple Leafs' owner Conn Smythe offered Horton a three-year contract to play with the Pittsburgh Hornets, the Leafs' American League farm team. By 1952, Horton was playing professionally for the Leafs.

• Known for his extraordinary physical strength, Horton was a Maple Leaf until 1970, when he was traded to the New York Rangers. The following year he began playing with the Pittsburgh Penguins, and then he was traded again in 1972 to the Buffalo Sabres. He was a Sabre at the time of his death in 1974.

• As a Toronto Maple Leaf, Horton won four Stanley Cups: 1962, 1963, 1964 and 1967.

• 1967 was the last time the Leafs won the Stanley Cup.

Tim Horton gets emotional in '67

Medium: Television

Program: Hockey Night in Canada

Broadcast Date: May 2, 1967

Guest(s): Tim Horton


Interviewer: Ward Cornell

Duration: 0:46

Last updated:
April 25, 2008


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