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Billionaire David Thomson interested in buying Hudson's Bay charter, donating it

TORONTO — New court filings show a holding company owned by David Thomson, of Thomson Reuters, wants to buy the royal charter that formed the Hudson's Bay retailer for at least $15 million and donate it to the Archives of Manitoba.
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The 1670 royal charter signed by King Charles II establishing Hudson's Bay, is shown on display at the Manitoba Museum where it was loaned to be displayed alongside its permanent collection of Hudson's Bay artifacts, in this 2020 handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Handout - Manitoba Museum (Mandatory Credit)

TORONTO — New court filings show a holding company owned by David Thomson, of Thomson Reuters, wants to buy the royal charter that formed the Hudson's Bay retailer for at least $15 million and donate it to the Archives of Manitoba.

The department store previously announced it would seek court approval next month to sell the charter for $12.5 million to a holding company belonging to the Weston family, which intends to donate it to the Canadian Museum of History.

An affidavit from a director at Thomson's holding company DRKT says he was taken aback by the Westons' purchase price because it is significantly lower than what David Thomson and experts expected the charter to fetch.

Rather than move forward with the sale to the Westons, the affidavit suggests the family's offer should serve as a minimum bid in an open auction.

If a court agrees to that approach, the affidavit says Thomson is willing to place bids beyond his initial $15 million offer.

The charter was issued by King Charles II in 1670 and gave the Bay rights to a vast swath of land spanning most of Canada and extraordinary power over trade and Indigenous relations for decades.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Aug. 21, 2025.

Tara Deschamps, The Canadian Press