How Just One Takeover Destroyed Canada’s Oldest Candy Empire
How Just One Takeover Destroyed Canada's Oldest Candy Empire Long before Canada had a flag of its own, it had Moirs. Founded in 1815 on the shores of Nova Scotia, Moirs was Canada's oldest candy factory, a Maritime institution that outlasted confederation itself. Its crown jewel, Pot of Gold chocolates, became the unshakeable standard of Canadian gift-giving, the box every household reached for at Christmas and every nervous suitor bought on Valentine's Day. In Halifax and Dartmouth, the factory wasn't just an employer, it was the beating heart of the local economy, sustaining generations of Atlantic Canadian families who took pride in the sweets that carried their province's name across the entire country. Then came the takeover that changed everything. American confectionery giant Hershey acquired the beloved Canadian brand, inheriting a business that was, by every measure, deeply profitable. Yet in 2007, Hershey executives made a decision that stunned an entire nation: they shut down the 192-year-old factory anyway, choosing to offshore production to Mexico in pursuit of cheaper labor. It was corporate greed at its most shortsighted, sacrificing two centuries of heritage and a thriving operation for the sake of trimming costs that were never broken in the first place. The fallout was immediate and humiliating. Chocolate meant to travel a few kilometers now melted in transit across international borders, quality collapsed, and the Pot of Gold that once symbolized Canadian pride became a punchline. Furious Canadians boycotted the brand in droves, refusing to forgive a foreign conglomerate for gutting one of their oldest institutions. This is the story of how a single act of corporate arrogance erased 192 years of Canadian candy-making history, and what it reveals about the quiet destruction of local industry in the age of global outsourcing.

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