An Ontario court has approved the auction of more than 4,400 items belonging to Hudson’s Bay, the historic retailer that collapsed earlier this year under the weight of billions in debt. The sale, authorized Thursday by Judge Peter Osborne, will see a trove of paintings, documents, memorabilia, and other artifacts head to auction in mid-November.
The court’s decision comes as part of Hudson’s Bay’s ongoing bankruptcy proceedings. Once the nation’s oldest and most storied retailer, the company filed for creditor protection in March after years of heavy financial losses and unsuccessful restructuring attempts. The sale is one of several efforts to raise funds for creditors and bring closure to a company that helped shape Canada’s economic and cultural identity.
The approved auction includes more than 1,700 pieces of art and about 2,700 artifacts. A lawyer for Hudson’s Bay confirmed that the collection being sold is drawn from the retailer’s “retail era,” rather than its early fur trading days.
Though the complete list remains under wraps, sources close to the process say the items include original paintings, historic paper documents, and even collectible Barbie dolls commissioned during Hudson’s Bay’s retail heyday.
Auction house Heffel Gallery Ltd. will handle the sale. The process will begin with online auctions on November 12, followed by a live, in-person sale in Toronto on or around November 19. Hudson’s Bay lawyers have said photographs and detailed descriptions of each lot will be published on Heffel’s website in advance.

Who Might Bid
Reflect Advisors, the firm overseeing the company’s financial wind-down, said it has already fielded interest from a wide range of potential buyers. Among them are museums, universities, government institutions, Indigenous organizations, and wealthy private collectors.
The National Gallery of Canada is one institution that could seek to acquire works. Yet historians and cultural advocates have voiced concerns that prized items may vanish into private hands if high-net-worth buyers outbid public institutions or community organizations.
Some also fear that escalating prices could make it difficult for Indigenous groups to reclaim objects tied to their cultural heritage. While Hudson’s Bay insists that the artifacts up for auction are not from its fur trade origins, questions linger over what remains in the collection and how it should be handled.
Indigenous Concerns and Removed Items
Those concerns were partly addressed when 24 objects believed to be of Indigenous origin were recently removed from the auction block. Hudson’s Bay has pledged to return or donate those items, though it has not disclosed specific details about the artifacts, the intended recipients, or the timing of their transfer.
Three of the pieces are currently on long-term loan to a museum, which the company has not identified. Lawyers for Hudson’s Bay emphasized that any further items found to have Indigenous origins will also be withdrawn.
The sensitivity of these issues reflects the retailer’s complicated legacy. For centuries, Hudson’s Bay traded across Indigenous territories, profiting from furs, resources, and land. The sale of its remaining cultural holdings therefore raises broader questions about reconciliation and the stewardship of Canada’s historical record.

The Royal Charter and Other Assets
Separate from the November sale, Hudson’s Bay has announced plans to sell its royal charter of 1670, the document that established the company under King Charles II of England. Reflect Advisors is preparing a dedicated process for that transaction, though court approval is expected to be sought early next week.
The charter is widely regarded as one of the most important documents in Canadian history. Its sale has sparked debate over whether it belongs in public hands or can rightfully be sold on the open market.
Hudson’s Bay also holds four war memorials at various store locations, along with two more in storage. According to company lawyer Ashley Taylor, these will be donated to organizations capable of preserving and displaying them in their original communities. Royal Canadian Legions and TD Bank Group have been named among the likely recipients.
The Company’s Archival Legacy
Much of Hudson’s Bay’s historic material was transferred long before its current financial troubles. In 1994, the company donated the majority of its archival records to the Archives of Manitoba, which today maintains the Hudson’s Bay Company Archives (HBCA). At the same time, more than 27,000 artifacts were gifted to the Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg.
Still, some archival records remain with the company. In court filings, Reflect Advisors managing director Adam Zalev noted that these documents are “under review,” with their future undecided. The uncertainty has fueled calls for these remaining pieces to be transferred to public institutions rather than sold.

Bankruptcy and Liquidation Context
The auction is one chapter in a broader saga of financial decline. Once a pillar of Canadian retail, Hudson’s Bay reported a net loss of $329.7 million for the fiscal year ending January 31, 2025. At the time of its bankruptcy filing, the company had just $3.3 million in cash, minimal liquidity, and more than 2,000 creditors.
Debt burdens exceeded $2 billion, including secured loans, unpaid rent, supplier obligations, and tax liabilities. Declining sales, the aftershocks of the COVID-19 pandemic, and falling store traffic left Hudson’s Bay unable to sustain operations. A last-ditch effort to secure new financing collapsed, prompting a decision to liquidate all remaining stores and assets.
The bankruptcy marked the end of a company that had survived centuries of economic transformation, wars, and recessions. Its disappearance has left thousands of employees without jobs and closed the chapter on one of Canada’s most recognizable retail brands.