The Northern Store

 

 

The Northern Store in Attawapiskat Ontario on the James Bay coastThe Northern Store may sound like a satirical general store that operates in northern communities and is essentially the only game in town for shopping.  It’s no SCTV skit, it’s true - there really is something called the Northern Store that serves remote and northern communities in northern Ontario and across Canada.

 

Milk goes for $13 in the Northern Store in Attawapiskat, Ontario on the James Bay coastThe Northern Store rose from the ashes of the North West Company, a fur trading empire founded nearly 300 years ago by Scottish traders in Montreal.  The North West Company merged with the better known Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) in 1820.  In 1987 investors and employees bought out the most remote and northern HBC locations and rebreanded them the Northern Store.  This makes the Northern Store the oldest retailer on the continent.

 

Today the Northern Store operates 25 locations in Ontario.  The Northern Store is most prevalent in remote and fly-in communities that are so far north in Ontario that there is no road access. 

 

This means that the Northern Store is often the only game in town as far as shopping goes, so they offer everything that you could ever need to buy at all in a normal sized shop.  A typical store offers a super broad assortment of food, family apparel, housewares, appliances, outdoor products, bicycles, everything really, in addition to special services like cheque cashing, ATMs, catalogue ordering, money transfers and fast food outlets. All in one store.  You get the picture. The Northern Store also produces a line of frozen foods sold by Giant Tiger. I practically lived off those for one of my sints up north.

 

The Northern Store serves communities that are so remote that in most communities every single thing on sale has to be flown-in on small planes, meaning that prices can be high.

 

There are only two Northern Stores on Highway 11 – one in Hearst and another in Hornepayne.  There is also one in Wawa (southeast of White River) and one in Nakina (north of Geraldton.)

 

 

Back to the Highway 11 Homepage

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Highway11.ca (this website) is a light-hearted look at Highway 11 in Ontario and the communities along the way. This website is not and does not represent any region, district, municipality, government, or community in any manner, official or unofficial. Any comments made on this website reflect subjective opinion(s) and do not represent fact, or make any claim to being fact. The data and information made available on this website is for entertainment purposes only and are not represented to be error free or up-to-date. Opinions, advice and all other information expressed by participants in discussions or as comments submitted to this website are those of the author, not the website. You rely on any information on this website at your own risk. No responsibility is assumed for any errors. Nothing on this website constitutes or is intended to constitute any offer, promise, contract, or guarantee of any kind. This website may provide links to web pages, web sites, and various resources or locations on the internet. This website has no control over the information you access via such links, does not endorse that information, and is not be responsible for it or for the consequences of your use of that information.