How 25 Canadian websites looked in the Internet’s early days

From big companies to government to media, here were some of the earliest stops on Canada's information superhighway

In December 1990 the world’s first website went online. Within the next six to eight years, a number of Canadian companies and government agencies made their first foray onto what everybody at the time was still calling the Information Superhighway.

Those early and rudimentary web pages have long-since been replaced, but thanks to the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, many early versions of those sites are at least partially preserved 20 years later. Below are screen captures of what they looked like at the time. These images might not show what the sites looked like on their very first day in existence, but are the earliest versions that were archived.

Let’s start with Canada’s big banks, which today face numerous challenges from financial technology companies. They were relatively quick to embrace the opportunities offered by the Internet—not to mention, clip art!

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Royal Bank, December 1996

TD Bank, October 1996

Bank of Montreal, December 1998

CIBC, December 1996

 

Scotiabank, November 1996

Canada’s telecommunications companies were there, too—with Telus sporting the same logo it still uses today.

Bell (BCE), October 1996

Rogers Communications, November 1996

Telus, November 1996

Here are some Canadian retail and restaurant chains, including Eaton’s, which is no longer with us—”Touch Tim’s toe as you enter the site”…

Eatons, December 1996

…and Tim Hortons, back when Canada’s favourite coffee chain was owned by an American burger giant. No, not that one, the other one.

Tim Hortons, June 1998

Canadian Tire, December 1998

Sears, December 1996

The Government of Canada site debuted online in 1996. That bland webpage was replaced by early 1997.

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Government of Canada, October 1996


Government of Canada, February 1997

In terms of government agencies, Statistics Canada was ahead of the curve, which is somewhat ironic given how plagued the agency is with shoddy technology today.

Statistics Canada, July 1997

The internet has brought massive change to Canada’s media landscape. Here were the first webpages of several news sites.

CBC, October 1996

Globe and Mail, October 1996

National Post, January 1999

Maclean’s, February 1998

Lastly, here are a few other early web pages from Canadian  corporations, including some that in their archived state outlived the companies that created them.

Blackberry (then Research in Motion), December 1998

Nortel, October 1996

Corel, October 1996

Molson, December 1996

Labatt, November 1996

Suncor, December 1996

Bombardier, January 1997

Toronto Stock Exchange, January 1998

This article was originally published August 2, 2016

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