Skip Navigation
Mount Pleasant Group logo
  • Home page navigation iconHome
  • Info iconAbout Us
  • News iconCondolences & Services
  • Find A Grave search tool iconFind A Grave
  • Contact iconContact
  • About Us

    About usOur purpose, vision and values, governance, by-laws, etc.

  • Find a Funeral

    Find a FuneralCondolences & Services

  • Immediate Help

    Immediate HelpA Death Has Occurred

  • Direct Cremation

    Simple CremationCremation - No ceremony or services

  • Locations

    LocationsCemeteries & funeral centres

  • Plan Ahead

    Plan AheadPreparing for the future

  • Products

    ProductsExplore your options

  • News and Events

    News and EventsItems of interest

  • FAQs

    FAQsAnswers to your questions

  • Price Lists

    Price ListsCurrent cemetery and funeral prices

  • Multilingual services

    Multilingual InformationFor a diverse GTA

  • Cemetery Application

    Cemetery AppSearch for grave locations, historical people & our arboretum

  • Resources

    ResourcesBy-laws, support, brochures, maps and more

  1. Home
  2. Our Monthly Story
  3. Story Archives
  4. Mount Pleasant Cemetery
  5. Foster Hewitt

Foster Hewitt

Plot 3, Lot 7
Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto


Foster Hewitt was born on November 21, 1902. He was the son of William “Billy” Hewitt, sports editor for The Toronto Star where, after graduation from the University of Toronto, Foster obtained a job writing a weekly column on the newest wonder of the age, radio. One afternoon Foster was dispatched to Mutual Arena where he was to repair broadcast equipment installed by the newspaper’s radio station CFCA. He was also told to be ready to broadcast that evening’s OHA senior playoff hockey game between teams from Kitchener and Toronto if no-one else could be found. No-one was found, so on the evening of March 22, 1923 Foster Hewitt broadcast his first hockey game. Coining the never-to-be-forgotten words, “He Shoots, He Scores!”, Foster Hewitt remained Canada’s ”voice of hockey” for an incredible 56 years. In addition to hockey games, Hewitt also broadcast wrestling matches, football games, and marathon swims held off the CNE’s waterfront. Without doubt, the event that gave Hewitt his biggest thrill was the final game in the Canada - USSR hockey final in 1972 when Toronto Maple Leaf Paul Henderson scored the winning goal for Team Canada. Hewitt was also a shrewd businessman. In 1951 he purchased a small Toronto radio station, CKFH (the “FH” stood for Foster Hewitt), and sold it 29 years later for $4 million. He was also vice-president of CFTO-TV, part-owner of the Vancouver Canucks hockey team, and director of several mines in northern Ontario. Foster Hewitt died on April 22, 1985 at the age of 82.

Mike Filey
Mount Pleasant Cemetery: An Illustrated Guide
Second Edition Revised and Expanded

 Story Archives »

Copyright 2025 © Mount Pleasant Group

  • Seasonal Recall
  • Privacy Policy
  • Accessibility
  • Sitemap
  • Instagram Icon
  • Facebook link
  • Linked Icon
  • Twitter Icon
  • YouTube Icon
  • accessibility logo
  • BAO Consumer Information Guide