Truro News

Ron Joyce was an internatio­nal business icon, but his heart belonged to Nova Scotia

- AARON BESWICK With files from Harry Sullivan and Steve Bruce

TATAMAGOUC­HE, N.S. – Even as a child, Ron Joyce knew he was poor and didn’t want to stay that way.

One day, his friend Jack Coulter had heard enough of it.

“I said, ‘ Well, we’re all poor,’” Coulter remembered Friday.

“There were only two families in Tatamagouc­he then that had any money. The rest of us were well fed and were warm in the winter – we just never had anything much else to speak of.”

Joyce died Thursday at his home in Burlington, Ont., with his family at his side. He was 88.

To most Canadians, Joyce will be remembered as the intrepid former police officer who joined with hockey player Tim Horton to build an iconic chain of coffee shops that now has over 4,000 outlets.

He was also a philanthro­pist, who as of 2017 had given $52 million to universiti­es and colleges in Atlantic Canada alone.

Then there are the thousands of children who likely don’t know Joyce was behind the network of seven camps for underprivi­leged children located between Tatamagouc­he, Alberta and Kentucky.

For Coulter, he’ll just be an old friend.

A friend that left Tatama- gouche for Ontario to make a new life at 15 years old, serving first in the navy as a wireless operator and then nine years as a police officer in Hamilton.

On one particular­ly memorable call with the police force, he helped deliver a baby.

During his early years in Hamilton, the old friends in Tatama- gouche didn’t hear much from Ron.

To be fair, he was rather busy. Tim’s king was once Dairy Queen man

Turning toward private business, he bought a Dairy Queen and wanted to add another but couldn’t get financing. That’s when he teamed up with Horton, the Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman who, with another businessma­n, had started a chain of coffee shops.

So now he was a cop who was also learning to make doughnuts.

In 1974, with the franchise 40 outlets strong, Horton died in car accident and Joyce bought out his widow for $1 million.

He sold Tim Hortons to Wendy’s Internatio­nal Inc. in 1996. It was later purchased by Burger King, and the two brands became Restaurant Brands Internatio­nal in 2014.

Despite the overall success of Tim Hortons, however, Joyce did not want to see one of his restaurant­s interfere with small-business interests in his home village and vowed there would never be a franchise in Tatamagouc­he.

“I heard that long ago, that there would never be a Tim Hortons in Tatamagouc­he as long as he lived,” said Mike Gregory, Colchester County councillor for the Tatamagouc­he area.

“He was a pretty generous guy, there was no doubt about it. He never forgot his roots, never forgot where he came from.”

A statement from Tim Hortons said: “Ron was a larger-than-life friend who not only helped create one of Canada’s most iconic brands but was passionate about ensuring Tim Hortons always gave back to the community.”

“He was always careful to give credit to Horton and his other business partner, Jimmy Charade,” said Douglas Hunter, who has written both the history of the franchise and about the life of its founder in the books Open Ice and Double Double.

Back to Tatamagouc­he Though he wanted to escape his youthful poverty, Joyce never wanted to leave Tatamagouc­he behind.

He founded the Fox Harb’r Golf Resort and Spa near Wallace, Cumberland County, and placed one his children’s camps on the outskirts of Tatamagouc­he.

He also was quietly generous in the community.

“If there were people he heard about in the community who needed help, he would do it in a quiet way,” said Ron Creighton, a lawyer with Truro firm Patterson Law who lives in Tatamagouc­he.

“The schools too. I know one day not too long ago he called the principal there and said, ‘What can we do to help the school?’”

Later in life, Joyce’s old ties to home became more pronounced.

Coulter started getting more regular phone calls, just to chat about growing up and the ailments of growing old.

“He was a good guy,” said Coulter, 89. “I’m sorry to hear that he’s gone.”

“My father had a big vision and a big heart,” Steven Joyce said in a statement on behalf of the family. “Through hard work, determinat­ion and drive, he built one of the most successful restaurant chains in Canada.

“He never forgot his humble beginnings.”

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO ?? With his great success in the business world, Ron Joyce was able to give back with donations to learning institutio­ns and through camps for under-privileged children, to name a few.
CONTRIBUTE­D PHOTO With his great success in the business world, Ron Joyce was able to give back with donations to learning institutio­ns and through camps for under-privileged children, to name a few.

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