Robert Young Eaton

Robert Young Eaton with his mother in the 1920s.

Robert Young (R.Y.) Eaton (1875–1956) was the nephew of Eaton's department store founder Timothy Eaton.

Eaton was born in 1875 to John and Margaret (née Herbison) Eaton and related to the department store founder as they shared the same grandfather John Eaton Sr (1784–1834).

R.Y. Eaton took over control of the department stores when his cousin Sir John Craig Eaton died of pneumonia in 1922. Sir John's children were too young to take over the company, so R.Y. Eaton filled in until one of the children reached an appropriate age to take over.

R.Y. Eaton proved to be an extremely capable president, and he expanded the company tenfold. His cousin-in-law, Lady Eaton, the widow of Sir John, never liked R.Y., and throughout her life she always referred to her branch of the family as the "owner Eatons" and R.Y.'s branch as the "worker Eatons".

R.Y. had a resort home, Ireton, built in Port Credit, Ontario and later in Georgian Bay.[1]

Lady Eaton's son, John David Eaton, at the age of 33, eventually took over the presidency of the company, and R.Y. Eaton retired from business life.

He also served as president of the Art Gallery of Ontario from 1924 to 1941.

R.Y. married Hazel Ireland (1889–1965) and had 5 children. Son John Wallace Eaton (1912–1990) also worked at Eaton's and ran the Montreal store.

His son Captain Erskine Robert Eaton (1915–1942)[2] graduated from the Royal Military College of Canada in 1934. At the outbreak of World War II, he was a member of the staff of the Montreal store of the T. Eaton Co. He died in the Dieppe Raid on Aug 19, 1942 at 27 years of age. His name is listed on the Memorial Arch at the Royal Military College of Canada.[3]

References

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