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. Milton J. Cork

Milton J. Cork

Plot O, Lot 17
Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Toronto


Coming to Toronto as a boy from his hometown of Picton, Ontario, where he was born in 1870, Milton Cork obtained his elementary education in the Toronto public school system and, at the age of 16, began working in his father’s grocery store at 335 King Street East. It was here that a young fellow from Alliston, Ontario, Theodore Loblaw, found a job a few years later. Loblaw and Cook became good friends and soon each opened his own grocery store. A few more years went by, and the boys decided to try something new, the self-serve grocery store. This concept had worked in a small way in the United States and, in 1919, Loblaw and Cork decided to pool their resources and give it a try in Canada. Except for Cork’s desire to remain behind the scene, shoppers today might be buying meats and groceries at Cork’s. Instead, of course, the name Loblaw’s has become synonymous with the term supermarket. Following the death of T. P. Loblaw in 1933, Cork became president, then chairman of the board. He himself died at the age of 87 at his Old Forest Hill Road home on April 21, 1957, with the funeral service the following Tuesday.

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