St. James-Assiniboia
Suburb in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Suburb in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
St. James-Assiniboia is a major community area in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.[1] As it encapsulates most of the city ward of St. James,[2] which includes the major St. James Street, the area itself is often simply referred to "St. James."[3]
St. James-Assiniboia | |
---|---|
Suburb | |
Coordinates: 49°53′09″N 97°14′34″W | |
Country | Canada |
Province | Manitoba |
City | Winnipeg |
Established as municipality | 1886 |
Named for | Parish of St. James and the Assiniboine River |
Government | |
• MP | Marty Morantz (Charleswood—St. James—Assiniboia—Headingley) |
• MLAs | |
• Councillors |
|
Area | |
• Metro | 5,306.79 km2 (2,048.96 sq mi) |
Population (2011) | 61,764 |
• Metro | 778,489 |
Located in the far western part of the city, it is bounded on the north by the Rural Municipality of Rosser and the Canadian National Railway's Oak Point line, on the south by the Assiniboine River, on the west by the Rural Municipality of Headingley, and on the east by the Canadian Pacific Railway's La Riviere line.[4]
The area today is composed of the several municipalities that existed prior to the amalgamation of Winnipeg in 1971/1972. It began in 1886 as the Rural Municipality of Assiniboia, parts of which broke off to form the RM of St. James in 1921 and the RM of Brooklands in 1922. In 1956, the RM of St. James was incorporated as the City of St. James, absorbing Brooklands 11 years later. In 1969, St. James and Assiniboia merged into the City of St. James-Assiniboia, remaining as such until the 1972 amalgamation.[5][6]
"St. James-Assiniboia" refers to the community area defined by the 2016 Canadian census,[1] and can be divided into the neighbourhood clusters of St. James-Assiniboia East and St. James-Assiniboia West.[7][8]
"St. James," on the other hand, is the electoral ward used by the Winnipeg City Council for local governing purposes. The 2018–2022 councillor for the St. James Ward is Scott Gillingham.[2]
Despite significant overlap, the geography of St. James differs slightly from that of St. James-Assiniboia; the latter extends more west/southwestward and reaches the Assiniboine River, but it does not extend as far east as the St. James ward does.[1][2] More specifically:
Located in the western section of Winnipeg, it is bounded on the north by the Rural Municipality of Rosser and the Canadian National Railway's Oak Point line, on the south by the Assiniboine River, on the west by the Rural Municipality of Headingley, and on the east by the Canadian Pacific Railway's La Riviere line.[4]
St. James-Assiniboia is composed of the following neighbourhoods: Airport, Assiniboia Downs, Birchwood, Booth, Bruce Park, Buchanan, Crestview, Deer Lodge, Glendale, Jameswood, Kirkfield, Heritage Park, Kensington, King Edward, Murray Industrial Park, Omand's Creek Industrial, Saskatchewan North, Silver Heights, St. James Industrial, Sturgeon Creek, Westwood, and Woodhaven.[7][8]
St. James is the electoral ward used by the Winnipeg City Council for local governing purposes.[2]
The ward includes the major St. James Street, as well the following neighbourhoods: Airport, Birchwood, Booth, Bruce Park, Buchanan, Crestview Deer Lodge, Heritage Park, Jameswood, Kensington, King Edward, Murray Industrial Park, Polo Park, Saskatchewan North, Silver Heights, St. James Industrial, Sturgeon Creek, West Wolseley, and Woodhaven.[2] Of note, although for census purposes the Polo Park neighbourhood is considered part of the Downtown area rather than St. James-Assiniboia,[10] it is considered part of the city ward of St. James.[2]
Located along Portage Avenue, the greater St. James area was one of the original districts of Winnipeg, with the Royal Canadian Air Force 17 Wing base located in its central hub.[3]
The ward boundary is legally described as the following:[11]
Commence at Sturgeon Road and Portage Avenue; Westward on Portage Ave to the Perimeter Highway; Northward on Perimeter Hwy to city limit (Perimeter Hwy and Saskatchewan Ave); Northward, following along the city limit to Brookside Boulevard; Northward on Brookside to north limit of Lot Z21 Plan 34260; Southward on North Limit of Lot Z21 Plan 34260 to Notre Dame Avenue; Eastward on Notre Dame Ave to CPR Lariviere; Southward on CPR Lariviere to the Assiniboine River; Westward on the Assiniboine River to west limit of Lot 30 Plan 20337; Northward on the west limit of Lot 30 Plan 20337 to the north limit of Lot 30 Plan 20337; Eastward on the northwest limit of Lot 30 Plan 20337 to Harris Boulevard; Northward on Harris Blvd to south limit of Lot 1 Block 1 Plan 599; Westward on south limit of Lot 1 Block 1 Plan 5996 and its easterly extension to the west limit of Lot 6; Block 1 Plan 5996; North on the west limit of Lot 6 Block 1 Plan 5996 and its northerly extension to the point of commencement.
Historically, the area was a farming community along the north bank of the Assiniboine River populated by an Anglo-Métis, or mixed Scottish/English and Indigenous population, compared to the French-speaking Métis people who settled further upriver at St. François Xavier, Manitoba and along the east banks of the Assiniboine River. Before the province of Manitoba was created in 1870, Assiniboia—named after the river that runs by it, itself named for the Assiniboine First Nation—was governed by the Council of Assiniboia (1835–1870).[12]
In 1853, the Church of England was given a grant of land from the Hudson's Bay Company from which they formed the Parish of St. James.[12] Following the creation of Manitoba, the area of the Parish of St. James was administered by the provincial government; municipal incorporation soon followed.[12] When Treaty 1 was signed in 1871 with the Chippewa (Anishinabe) and Cree Indigenous Peoples, settlement into the region increased and municipal development likewise accelerated.[12]
Within a decade, in 1880, the Province of Manitoba divided its entire area into municipalities, creating the Rural Municipality of Assiniboia and two other municipalities that surrounded the City of Winnipeg. The first council for the RM of Assiniboia met that year, with William Tait as warden.[13] This new municipality encompassed the former parishes of St. James, Headingley, St. Charles, and part of St. Boniface.[14]
The development of these communities as residential suburbs of Winnipeg began in the early 20th century and was greatly enhanced by the extension of streetcar service to Deer Lodge in 1903, the opening of Assiniboine Park in 1904 and its location along Portage Avenue, and proximity to downtown Winnipeg. In 1921, the RM of Assiniboia was partitioned, wherein it maintained its rural parts while its more urban area was incorporated as the Rural Municipality of St. James.[5][6][12] The first council for the RM of St. James met that year, with J. W. Godkin as reeve.[15] The following year, the RM of Assiniboia was further divided with the creation of the Rural Municipality of Brooklands.[16]
The area grew rapidly from 1945 to 1970 with the construction of the Silver Heights and Birchwood subdivisions in the 1940s and 1950s, and Westwood, Crestview, and St. Charles in the 1960s. In 1956, the RM of St. James became the City of St. James.[12] The first council for the new city met on that year on April 17, with T. D. Findlay as mayor.[16]
The late 1960s saw the three communities of Assiniboia, Brooklands, and St. James finally join together again: in 1967, Brooklands was merged into St. James, followed in 1968 by the RM of Assiniboia merging with St. James to form the City of St. James-Assiniboia.[12][15] The first council for the new City of St. James-Assiniboia met on 7 January 1969, with Alfred William Hanks as mayor.[5][15]
In 1972, the City of St. James-Assiniboia was dissolved and formally amalgamated with the City of Winnipeg and 11 other municipalities to create a unicity.[12]
As the community was developed, by the early 1970s, as far as the Perimeter Highway (Winnipeg's unofficial urban limit), St. James has seen very little development since that time. From 1971 to 2001, the population declined from 66,150 to 58,590 (as per Statistics Canada). The population further declined to 57,855 as of the 2006 census.[17] However, by the 2011 census, it had increased to 61,764.
The City of Winnipeg Archives holds the St. James-Assiniboia Fonds, which includes by-laws and minutes.[12]
Prior to the amalgamation of Winnipeg in 1971/1972, the St. James-Assiniboia area was its own municipality (City of St. James-Assiniboia), preceded by other smaller municipalities, all of which had their own reeves (for rural municipalities) or mayors (for cities).[5][6]
Term | Reeve/mayor |
---|---|
1886–88 | James Green (c. 1847–1892) |
1888–89 | John William Tait |
1890 | John Taylor (1834–1925) |
1891 | unknown |
1892–1900 | Alexander Murray (1839–1913) |
1901–03 | Charles George Caron (c. 1851–1912) |
1904 | William Bourke (1863–1943) |
1905 | Alexander Murray |
1906 | G. G. Caron |
1907–09 | Samuel Jacob Thompson (1845–1909) |
1909–11 | George Thomas Chapman (1861–1940) |
1912 | Joseph J. McMillan |
1913 | William Mactavish Bannatyne (1864–1931) |
1914 | D. Shelmerdine |
1915–16 | D. C. McColl |
1917 | Charles Holden |
1918–20 | Charles Leonard Richardson (1884–1939) |
1921–22 | James H. Black |
1923–24 | John Lawson McBride (1879–1959) |
1925–32 | John Bunting |
1933–39 | John Salmon Lamont (1885–1964) |
1940–41 | John B. Johnson |
1942–43 | Eric D. Bullock |
1944–45 | John B. Johnson |
1946–47 | B. Findlay |
1948–59 | Joseph Henry Sansome (1907–1983) |
1960–61 | W. H. “Harry” Morgan (c. 1899–1961) |
1962–67 | John Harold Belows (1914–2003) |
1968 | W. J. Turner |
1969 | Merged with St. James into St. James-Assiniboia |
Term | Reeve/mayor |
---|---|
RM of St. James (1921)
City of St. James (1956) | |
1921 | Joseph William Godkin |
1922–23 | John George Smith (1873–1947) |
1924 | Alexander “Alex” Christie (1878–1947) |
1925–29 | Joseph Henry Cotter (1872–1937) |
1930–32 | Alexander Christie |
1933–37 | Ronald Henry Hooper (1885–1969) |
1938–45 | David Alexander Best (1880–1949) |
1946–53 | Reginald Frederick Wightman (1899–1981) |
1954–61 | Thomas Burns Findlay (1902–1972) |
1960–69 | Alfred William "Bill" Hanks (1894–1985) |
City of St. James-Assiniboia | |
1970–71 | Alfred William "Bill" Hanks (1894–1985) |
Term | Reeve/mayor |
---|---|
1922–1923 | George Raymond Alexander Brown (1897–1968) |
1924–1925 | John Haddow (1855–1932) |
1926–1930 | John McLean (c. 1886–1953) |
1931 | William Leask (1910–1999) |
1931–1944 | John Reeves (1887–1964) (manager) |
1944–1950 | Crispin Oddy (1881–1972) |
1951 | Nicholas Solilak (1915–1991) |
1952–1953 | Stanley V. Bowers (1906–1997) |
1954–1955 | Daniel Harry Juba (1909–1986) |
1956–1957 | Walter Bannister (1920–1996) |
1958–1959 | Harry Stiller (1918–1987) |
1960–1966 | Walter Bannister |
1967 | Merged into City of St. James |
St. James-Assiniboia is primarily residential and is mainly a middle-class area but there are poorer pockets in the eastern part of St. James, and wealthier areas near the St. Charles Country Club, and along the Assiniboine River. Historically, the area was a farming community along the north bank of the Assiniboine River populated by an Anglo-Métis, or mixed Scottish/English and aboriginal population, compared to the French-speaking Métis people who settled further upriver at St. François Xavier, Manitoba, and along the east banks of the Assiniboine River.
There is some industrial development in the Murray Industrial Park in the north central part of the neighbourhood and near the Winnipeg James Armstrong Richardson International Airport, which is located in St. James. There is substantial commercial development along Portage Avenue, the area's main thoroughfare, and near the western edge of the community near the Perimeter Highway, where the Unicity Shopping Mall once stood.[4]
Team | Founded | League | Arena | Championships* |
---|---|---|---|---|
Winnipeg Saints | 1956 | MJHL | St. James Civic Centre (2011−2012) | 0 |
St. James Canucks | 1978 | MMJHL | St. James Civic Centre (1978−) | 1 |
St. James Canadians (defunct) | 1956 | MJHL | St. James Civic Centre (1967−2004) | 3 |
* refers to championships won while playing in St. James
The St. James Civic Centre is a public recreation complex that serves the western part of Winnipeg. The complex, which was built in 1967, features an indoor ice hockey arena, swimming pool, and auditorium, and is owned and operated by the City of Winnipeg. It is home to the St. James Canucks of the Manitoba Major Junior Hockey League and previously home to the St. James Canadians and Winnipeg Saints of the Manitoba Junior Hockey League.
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