Gore Mutual Insurance Company

Last updated

Gore Mutual Insurance Company
Company type Mutual Insurance
Industry Insurance
Founded1839;185 years ago (1839) in Brantford, Ontario
Headquarters,
Key people
Andy Taylor (President and CEO), Paul Jackson (Chief Operating Officer)
Increase2.svg 13,200,000 CAD  (Sept 2016)
Number of employees
450 employees across Canada (2014)
Website www.goremutual.ca

Gore Mutual Insurance Company is a Canadian insurance company that provides home insurance, vehicle insurance, and business insurance.

Contents

Gore Mutual was founded in 1839 and is Canada's oldest property and casualty insurer. As of 2014 it had over $475 million in premiums and over $1.1 billion in assets. Gore Mutual has three offices in Canada. The head office is located in Cambridge, Ontario, and has offices in Vancouver and Toronto.

The firm has a favorable reputation with the Insurance Brokers Association of Ontario (IBAO). [1] [2]

History

Pre-Canadian Confederation (–1867)

After a failed attempt in 1837, Gore Mutual Insurance, known at that time as "The Gore District Mutual Fire Insurance Company", was created by an unknown businessman from Brantford, Ontario, on June 18, 1839, after rediscovering the subscription book that was originally created in 1837. Gore Mutual began business with only one paid officer, William A. Walker, who also held the role of secretary-treasurer. In November 1839, William A. Walker was also given the title of traveling agent. He was responsible for traveling on horseback in order to expand Gore Mutual's operations across the Galt district. With the passing of the new legislature in 1842, mutual insurance companies were able to expand their business into districts where no mutual fire insurance provider existed. Gore Mutual took advantage of this by expanding into Toronto, Simcoe, Oakville, Port Dover, Colbourne, Yarmouth, and London over a two-year period. [3]

At the annual meeting in 1858, members authorized the board to reward fire companies that were called to assist with fires and those that successfully saved the property. This new legislation was the first step in developing more efficient firefighting methods in the Galt region. [4]

1860s modernization

The 1860s were a modernization period for Gore Mutual. Under new leadership in 1863, Gore Mutual moved the company to a new office building in Galt, Ontario. In 1865, Gore Mutual implemented a new structure for charging tariffs that allowed the company to charge higher premiums on policies that were deemed high-risk, a method that many insurance companies use today. In 1866, new agencies were established in Preston, St. Mary's, Wroxeter, Lucknow, Princeton, Plattsville, the County of Wentworth, the County of Halton, Embro, West Zorra, Woodstock, Brantford, and its surrounding counties. [4]

Post-Confederation (1870–1939)

By mid-1870, the number of active Gore Mutual policies had grown to over 6,000, and the company had expanded into Central and Eastern Ontario.

In the late 1870s, Gore Mutual started to cancel policies that were deemed too high a risk. Gore Mutual also began breaking ties with agencies that were in remote areas that were located too far from the head office in Galt. By the beginning of the 1880s, Gore Mutual had over 4,500 policies; by 1899, that number had grown to over 13,000 policies. Gore Mutual's portfolio was growing at a rate of 500 policies a year. The value of its insured properties during that time rose from $4,000,000 in 1880 to $15,670,000 in 1899. Meanwhile, British and American fire and casualty insurance companies began expanding into Canada during this time. [5]

In 1895, Gore Mutual's new building in Galt was completed. The building stands over 80 feet tall and was built with dark red bricks and sandstone trim. It is revolutionary with hot water heating as well as gas and electrical lighting. The building quickly emerged as a local landmark for the people of Galt. [5]

In 1914, Gore Mutual donated $50,000, which was the previous year's profits, to help aid the War Effort Patriotic Fund. [5] [6]

In 1936, Gore Mutual's current building was completed. Built by Scottish stonemasons using local, handpicked stone, it was built on a hilltop surrounded by gardens. Lieutenant-Governor Herbert A. Bruce officially opened the building. [5]

In 1939, Gore Mutual turned 100 years old and had over 2.4 million dollars CAD in assets. [5]

World War 2 and Post War

During World War II, Gore Mutual donated $100,000 of its profits to the government of Canada in order to aid the war effort. [6] This money was to be spent however the government saw fit. Not only did Gore Mutual donate to the cause, but every employee gave an additional portion of their income during the war to further aid the efforts of the Canadian troops. During this time, eight Gore Mutual employees served, all of whom survived; however, two of them were severely wounded during their time of service. By the end of the war, Gore Mutual had victory bonds amounting to a total of $525,000, which is worth roughly $7,297,550 today. [4]

In the early 1970s, Gore Mutual hired Brantford architects Mark Musselman, McIntyre & Combe to design a new building that was to be attached to the existing head office, built in 1937. The two buildings are connected by a glass passageway that extends 60 feet from the old to the new building.

In 1968 Gore Mutual purchased its first Honeywell Computer, becoming one of the first companies in Canada to use computerized policy handling for automobile insurance. The late 1970s were the age of computers for Gore Mutual. Cathode Ray Tube (CRT) systems were used in the claims department for the purpose of processing personal and commercial lines. In the 1990s, Gore Mutual introduced a 24-hour emergency claims service in order to help customers and brokers at all times. Also during this time, new estimating software was introduced to allow adjusters to prepare quotes with greater speed and accuracy. In 1998 Gore Mutual created the Gore Mutual Foundation. The foundation provides funding for hundreds of health, welfare, education, cultural, environmental, and charitable activities in communities across Canada. [5]

Paperless Office in 2002

In 2002, Gore Mutual Insurance implemented a paperless office objective. The quick success of the paperless movement was credited to Gore Mutual staff being under the age of 35. Gore Mutual's success in implementing a paperless office has inspired some insurance brokerages to also turn their offices into paperless offices. [7] [8]

Gore Mutual Insurance Foundation

Gore Mutual has been donating to charities in the communities where they do business for over 100 years. In 1998, Gore Mutual incorporated the Gore Mutual Insurance Foundation, registered as a private charity funding statute, which has the benefit of being tax-free and allowing for an increase in yearly donations.

Since 1998, the Gore Mutual Foundation has donated over $12 million to nearly 1,000 charities. In 2008, the Foundation donated $500,000 to the Cambridge Memorial Hospital. [9]

In 2011, the Gore Mutual Foundation donated $450,000 to nearly 120 charities across Canada. In 2012, Gore Mutual pledged $1 million to the Gore Mutual Foundation. In 2020, CanadaHelps, in partnership with the Gore Mutual Foundation, doubled the donations made by others towards COVID-19 relief efforts. Each donation to the CanadaHelps COVID-19 Cause Funds was doubled by the Gore Mutual Foundation, which committed $2 million in matching funds to be split between the COVID-19 Community Care Fund and the COVID-19 Healthcare and Hospital Fund.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cambridge, Ontario</span> City in Ontario, Canada

Cambridge is a city in the Regional Municipality of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada, located at the confluence of the Grand and Speed rivers. The city had a population of 138,479 as of the 2021 census. Along with Kitchener and Waterloo, Cambridge is one of the three core cities of Canada's tenth-largest metropolitan area.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">County of Brant</span> City in Ontario, Canada

The County of Brant is a single-tier municipality in the Canadian province of Ontario. Although it retains the word "county" in its name, the municipality is a single-tier municipal government and has no upper tier. The County of Brant has service offices in Burford, Paris, Oakland, Onondaga and St. George. The largest population centre is Paris.

The Independent Order of Foresters, operating as Foresters Financial, is a fraternal benefit society headquartered in Toronto, Ontario, Canada that provides life insurance and other financial solutions in Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States. As of 2022, Louis Gagnon has served as the company's president and CEO.

Saskatchewan Government Insurance (SGI) is a Canadian insurance company and a Crown corporation wholly owned by the Government of Saskatchewan. SGI's operations consist of the Saskatchewan Auto Fund, the compulsory public auto insurance program for Saskatchewan, and its property and casualty insurance division sells additional automobile and property insurance products in five Canadian provinces under the trade name SGI Canada.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Friends Provident</span> British life insurance company

Friends' Provident Insurance was a banking institution founded in 1832 to serve the needs of the Society of Friends (Quakers). Based in Bradford, Yorkshire, it concentrated on sickness and annuity policies until its life fund acquired Century Insurance in 1918, expanding into general insurance. The restriction to Quaker membership was an increasing constraint but the ties were substantially reduced by the Friends' Provident Institution Act 1915. Although Century's branch network enabled FPI to expand, the periodic underwriting losses strained the life fund's capital base and Century was sold in 1975. In the year 2000, Friends Provident demutualised and listed on the FT100 Index. After abortive takeover negotiations, Friends accepted a takeover bid from Resolution Limited in 2009.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zurich Insurance Group</span> Swiss insurance company

Zurich Insurance Group Ltd is a Swiss insurance company, headquartered in Zürich, and the country's largest insurer. As of 2021, the group is the world's 112th largest public company according to Forbes' Global 2000s list, and in 2011, it ranked 94th in Interbrand's top 100 brands.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sun Life Financial</span> Canadian insurance company

Sun Life Financial Inc. is a Canadian financial services company. It is primarily known as a life insurance company.

Galt is a community in Cambridge, Ontario, Canada, in the Regional Municipality of Waterloo, Ontario on the Grand River. Prior to 1973, it was an independent city, incorporated in 1915, but amalgamation with the village of Hespeler, the town of Preston and the village of Blair formed the new municipality of Cambridge. Being the largest constituent community in the city, it is commonly seen as the downtown core of Cambridge. The first mayor of Cambridge was Claudette Millar.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Unum</span> American insurance company

Unum Group is an American insurance company headquartered in Chattanooga, Tennessee. Founded as Union Mutual in 1848 and known as UnumProvident from 1999-2007. The company is part of the Fortune 500. Unum Group was created by the 1999 merger of Unum Corporation and The Provident Companies and comprises four distinct businesses – Unum US, Unum UK, Unum Poland and Colonial Life. Its underwriting insurers include The Paul Revere Life Insurance Company and Provident Life and Accident Insurance Company.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Manulife</span> Canadian multinational insurance company and financial services provider

Manulife Financial Corporation is a Canadian multinational insurance company and financial services provider headquartered in Toronto, Ontario. The company operates in Canada and Asia as "Manulife" and in the United States primarily through its John Hancock Financial division. As of December 2021, the company employed approximately 38,000 people and had 119,000 agents under contract, and has CA$1.4 trillion in assets under management and administration. Manulife at one point serviced over 26 million customers worldwide.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Waterford, Ontario</span> Community of Norfolk County, Ontario, Canada

Waterford is one of the Communities in Norfolk County, Ontario and had a population of 3,132 at the time of the 2016 Census.

Joseph Emm Seagram was a Canadian distillery founder, politician, philanthropist, and major owner of thoroughbred racehorses.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wawanesa Insurance</span>

Wawanesa Insurance—officially The Wawanesa Mutual Insurance Company, also known as Wawanesa Mutual or simply Wawanesa—is a Canadian mutual insurance firm, as well as among Canada's ten largest property and casualty insurers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wilfrid Laurier University</span> Public university in Waterloo, Brantford, and Milton, Ontario, Canada

Wilfrid Laurier University is a public university in Ontario, Canada, with campuses in Waterloo, Brantford and Milton. The newer Brantford and Milton campuses are not considered satellite campuses of the original Waterloo campus; instead the university describes itself as a "multi-campus multi-community university". The university also operates offices in Kitchener, Toronto, and Yellowknife.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Northwestern Mutual</span> American financial services company

Northwestern Mutual is an American financial services mutual organization based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The financial security company provides consultation on wealth and asset income protection, education planning, retirement planning, investment advisory services, Financial Planning trust and private client services, estate planning and business planning. Its products include life insurance, permanent life insurance, disability income, and long-term care insurance; annuities; investments; and investment advisory products and services. Northwestern Mutual ranked No. 90 on the 2021 Fortune 500 list of the largest United States corporations by total revenue and is in the top 30 by assets held. The firm distributes a portion of its earnings to eligible policyholders as annual dividends.

Economical Insurance, founded in 1871, is a Canadian Property & Casualty insurance company, offering automobile, property, liability, agriculture, and surety insurance. Its executive offices are located in Waterloo, Ontario, with regional offices across Canada. The company has a 4.02% market share, measured by direct written premium in the Canadian Property & Casualty Insurance market as of December 2012. As of 2014, it had about 1.6 billion in mutual policyholder's equity. It is the 9th largest property and casualty insurance company in Canada, by direct written premium and the 20th largest insurance company in Canada, by total assets.

Donald McQueen Shaver was a Canadian pioneer in the poultry industry, who founded a breeding company that achieved worldwide prominence. At its peak Shaver Poultry Breeding Farms was the world's largest, being one of only two "world class foundation breeding" companies in Canada. Shaver died in 2018 of age related causes.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Centre for Study of Insurance Operations</span>

CSIO, the Centre for Study of Insurance Operations, is the Canadian property and casualty insurance industry's nonprofit association of insurers, brokers and software providers. Much of its work is in the development of data standards, especially XML and EDI, for the transmission of insurance information throughout the Canadian P&C insurance industry.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sentry Insurance</span> American insurance company

Sentry Insurance is a mutual insurance company specializing in business insurance. The company’s home office is in Stevens Point, Wisconsin, where about half the company’s approximately 4,500 employees are located. Sentry offers property and casualty insurance, workers' compensation, life insurance, and other business insurance, as well as non-insurance products like annuities and retirement programs. Sentry provides specialized insurance programs to customers in specific industries as well as very large companies with complex risk.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lake Erie and Northern Railway</span> Former interurban railway in Ontario, Canada

The Lake Erie and Northern Railway was an interurban electric railway which operated in the Grand River Valley in Ontario, Canada. The railway owned and operated a north–south mainline which ran from Galt in the north to Port Dover on the shore of Lake Erie in the south. Along the way, it ran through rural areas of Waterloo County, Brant County, and Norfolk County, as well as the city of Brantford, where it had an interchange with the Brantford and Hamilton Electric Railway. Construction on the mainline began in 1913. The railway began operations in 1916 as a subsidiary of the Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR), which had purchased the line before construction had finished. In 1931, it was consolidated with the Grand River Railway under a single CPR subsidiary, the Canadian Pacific Electric Lines (CPEL), which managed both interurban railways, though they continued to exist as legally separate entities. Passenger service was discontinued in 1955 but electric freight operations continued until 1961, when the LE&N's electric locomotives were replaced by diesel CPR locomotives and the line was de-electrified. In the same year, service on the mainline from Simcoe to Port Dover was discontinued, but the remainder continued to operate as a branchline which as early as 1975 was known as the CP Simcoe Subdivision. The remainder of the line was officially abandoned in the early 1990s, ending almost seventy-five years of operation.

References

  1. "Gore Mutual Insurance Company – About Gore Mutual". goremutual.ca. Archived from the original on October 15, 2014. Retrieved October 18, 2014.
  2. "Gore Mutual CEO will leave company on high note". therecord.com. February 6, 2014. Retrieved October 18, 2014.
  3. Canada. Parliament. Legislative Assembly (1855). Journals of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada. p. 295. Retrieved October 18, 2014.
  4. 1 2 3 The Legacy of the Gore, Gore Mutual Insurance Company, Cunningham, Roderick. K, June 18, 1989
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "GORE MUTUAL CELEBRATES 175TH ANNIVERSARY" (PDF). June 18, 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 8, 2014. Retrieved October 18, 2014.
  6. 1 2 "At 175 years, Gore Mutual is older than Canada". therecord.com. Retrieved October 18, 2014.
  7. "Brokers need to go paperless". insurancebusiness.ca. Retrieved October 18, 2014.
  8. Thom Patterson. "Is the 'paperless' office here at last? - CNN.com". cnn.com. Retrieved October 18, 2014.
  9. "Gore Mutual Insurance Company – Gore Mutual Foundation". goremutual.ca. Archived from the original on October 16, 2014. Retrieved October 18, 2014.