Winnipeg (pronounced [wɪ.nɪ.pɛg] or [wɪ.nə.pɛg]) is the largest city and capital of
the Canadian province of Manitoba,
making it the seat of the provincial
Crown. Located at the eastern edge of the great plains of Western Canada, Winnipeg
plays a prominent role in transportation, finance,
manufacturing, agriculture and education. Because all rail and highway traffic between eastern and western Canada must travel through or near
the city, it is often called the "Gateway to the West".[3][4]
The city is located near the geographic centre of North America,[5] on a flood plain at the confluence of the Red and Assiniboine rivers, a point now commonly known as The
Forks.
Winnipeg lies in close proximity to hundreds of lakes, including Lake Winnipeg,
Canada's fifth largest lake and the world's eleventh largest, as well as Lake Manitoba and
Lake of the Woods.[6]
The city is one of Canada's major cultural centres and is home to the world famous
Royal Winnipeg Ballet. It boasts historic architecture, scenic waterways, numerous parks, and numerous distinctive neighbourhoods.
History
Before incorporation
Winnipeg lies at the confluence of the Assiniboine River and the Red River, which is known as The Forks, a
historic focal point on canoe river routes travelled by aboriginal peoples for thousands of years. The name Winnipeg is a transcription of a
western Cree word meaning "muddy waters".
Upper Fort Garry in the early 1870s
In 1738, the Sieur de la Vérendrye built the first
trading post on the site (Fort Rouge) which was ultimately abandoned.[7] Other posts were built in the Red River region.
Fort Gibraltar was built by the North West
Company in 1809 and Fort Douglas was built by the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) in 1812. The two companies fought fiercely over trade in the area with
each destroying the other's fort over the course of several battles. In 1821, Hudson's Bay and North West Companies ended their
long rivalry with a merger.
Fort Gibraltar, the site of present-day Winnipeg, was renamed Fort Garry in 1822 and
became the leading post in the region for the Hudson’s Bay Company. Fort Garry was destroyed in an 1826 flood, and rebuilt in
1835. It played a small role in fur trading, but remained the residence of the Governor of the company for many years.
In 1869 to 1870, Winnipeg was the site of the Red River Rebellion, a conflict
between the local provisional government of Métis leader Louis Riel and newcomers from eastern Canada. This rebellion led directly to Manitoba's entry into
Confederation as Canada's fifth province in 1870. On November 8, 1873, Winnipeg was incorporated as a city. In 1876, the post office
officially adopted the name "Winnipeg," three years after the city's incorporation.
Railway boomtown
The first locomotive in Winnipeg, the Countess of Dufferin, arrived via
steamboat in 1877. The Canadian Pacific Railway completed the first direct rail
link from Eastern Canada in 1881, opening the door to mass immigration and settlement of the Canadian Prairies.
Winnipeg experienced a boom during the 1890s and the first two decades of the twentieth century, and the city's population
grew from 25,000 in 1891 to more than 179,000 in 1921.[8]
Immigration increased during this period and Winnipeg took on its distinctive multicultural character. The Manitoba Legislative Building reflects the optimism of the boom years. Built of
Tyndall Stone and opened in 1920, its dome supports a bronze statue finished in gold leaf
titled "Eternal Youth and the Spirit of Enterprise" but commonly known as the "Golden
Boy". The Legislature was built in the neoclassical style that is
common to many other North American state and provincial legislative buildings of the nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries.
Winnipeg faced financial difficulty when the Panama Canal opened in 1914. The canal
reduced reliance on Canada's rail system for international trade, and the increase in ship traffic helped Vancouver surpass Winnipeg to become Canada's third-largest city in the 1920s.[9]
Winnipeg General Strike
-
As a result of appalling labour conditions following World War I, 35,000 Winnipeggers
walked off the job in May 1919, in what came to be known as the Winnipeg General Strike of 1919. The government broke the strike
through arrests, deportation and violence. The strike ended June 21, 1919, when the Riot Act
was read and a group of Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) officers
charged a group of strikers; two strikers were killed and at least thirty others were injured, resulting in the day being known
as Bloody Saturday. The lasting effect was a polarized population. One of
the leaders of the strike, J.S. Woodsworth, went on to found Canada's first major
socialist party, the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF),
which would later become the New Democratic Party.
Crowd gathered outside old City Hall during the Winnipeg General Strike,
June 21,
1919
Great Depression and World War II
The stock market crash in 1929 only hastened an already steep decline in Winnipeg. The Great Depression resulted in massive unemployment, which was worsened by drought
and depressed agricultural prices.
The Depression ended when World War II broke out in 1939. Thousands of Canadians
volunteered to join the forces. In Winnipeg, the old established armouries of Minto, Tuxedo (Fort Osborne) and McGregor were so
crowded that the military had to take over other buildings to increase capacity.
Winnipeg played a large part in the British Commonwealth Air Training
Plan (BCATP). The mandate of the BCATP was to train flight crews away from the battle zone in Europe. Pilots, navigators,
bomb aimers, wireless operators, air gunners, and flight engineers all passed through Winnipeg on their way to the various air
schools across Western Canada. Winnipeg served as a headquarters for Command No. 2. [10]
After World War II and the 1950 flood
The end of World War II brought a new sense of optimism in Winnipeg. Pent-up demand brought a boom in housing development, but
the building activity came to a halt due to the 1950 Red River Flood, the largest
flood to hit Winnipeg since 1861. The flood held waters above flood stage for fifty-one days. On May
8, 1950, eight dikes collapsed and four of the city's eleven bridges were destroyed. Nearly
70,000 people had to be evacuated. Premier Douglas Campbell called for federal
assistance and Canadian Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent declared a state of
emergency. Soldiers from the Princess Patricia's Canadian Light
Infantry regiment staffed the relief effort for the duration of the flood. The federal government estimated damages at
over $26 million, although the province insisted it was at least double that.[11]
To prevent future floods, the Red River Basin Investigation recommended a system of flood control measures, including multiple
diking systems and a floodway to divert the Red River around Winnipeg. This
prompted the construction of the Red River Floodway under Premier Dufferin Roblin.
Creation of Unicity to Present
Prior to 1972, Winnipeg was the largest of several cities and towns in a metropolitan area around the Red and Assiniboine
rivers. Unicity was created on July 27, 1971 and took effect with the first elections in 1972. The City of Winnipeg
Act incorporated the current city of Winnipeg: the municipalities of St.
James-Assiniboia, St. Boniface, Transcona, St. Vital, West Kildonan, East Kildonan, Tuxedo, Old Kildonan, North Kildonan, Fort Garry, and Charleswood were amalgamated with the Old City of Winnipeg.
In 1979, the Eaton's catalogue building was converted into the first downtown mall in the city. It was called Eaton Place but
would change its name to Cityplace following the controversial demolition of the
empty Eaton's store in 2002.
Immediately following the 1979 energy crisis Winnipeg experienced a severe
economic downturn in advance of the early 1980s recession. Throughout the
recession, the city incurred closures of prominent businesses such as the Winnipeg
Tribune and the Swift's and Canada Packers meatpacking plants. [12]
In 1993, feeling that their community needs were not being fulfilled, the residents of Headingley seceded from Winnipeg and officially became incorporated as a municipality.
Political History
The first elections for city government in Winnipeg were held shortly after the city was incorporated in 1873. On
January 5, 1874, Francis
Evans Cornish, former mayor of London, Ontario defeated Winnipeg Free Press editor and owner William F. Luxton by
a margin of 383 votes to 179. There were only 382 eligible voters in the city at the time but property owners were allowed to
vote in every civic poll in which they owned property. Up until the year 1955, mayors could only serve one term. City government
consisted of 13 aldermen and one mayor. This number of elected officials remained constant
until 1920.
Winnipeg panorama, from 1907
The inaugural Council meeting took place on January 19, 1874
on the second floor of Bentley's, a newly constructed building on the northwest corner of Portage and Main.
Construction of a new City Hall commenced in 1875. The building proved to be a structural nightmare and eventually had to be
held up by props and beams. The building was eventually demolished in favour of building a new City Hall in 1883.
A new City Hall building was constructed in 1886. It was a "Gingerbread" building built in Victorian grandeur and symbolized Winnipeg's coming of age at the end of the nineteenth century. The
building stood for nearly 80 years. There was a plan to replace it around the World War I
era, during the time that the Manitoba Legislature was under construction,
but the war delayed that process. In 1958, falling plaster almost hit visitors to the City Hall building. The tower eventually
had to be removed and in 1962 the whole building was torn down.
Winnipeg City Council embraced the idea of a "Civic Centre" as a replacement
for the old city hall. The concept originally called for an administrative building and a council building with a courtyard in
between. Eventually, a police headquarters and remand centre (the Public Safety Building) and parkade were added to the plans.
The four buildings were completed in 1964 in the brutalist style, at a cost of
$8.2 million. The Civic Centre and the Manitoba Centennial Centre were
connected by underground tunnels in 1967.
- See also: List of mayors of Winnipeg, Manitoba
Law and Government
-
Municipal politics
Since 1992, the city of Winnipeg is represented by 15 city councillors and a mayor elected every three years. The present
Mayor Sam Katz was elected to office in 2004 and re-elected in 2006. Katz is the first
Jewish mayor of Winnipeg. Winnipeg is a single-tier municipality governed by a mayor-council system. The structure of the municipal government is set out by the province of
Manitoba in the City of Winnipeg Act. The mayor is elected by direct popular vote to serve as the chief executive of the city. The City Council is a unicameral
legislative body representing geographical wards throughout the city.
Provincial politics
Winnipeg is represented by 31 provincial Members of the Legislative
Assembly (MLAs), and currently 25 of whom are members of the New
Democratic Party, four are members of the Progressive
Conservative Party and two are members of the Liberal Party. In the
provincial election in 2007, the NDP won two ridings from the
Conservatives, rising from 23 to its present 25 seats in the city. All three leaders of the provincial parties represent Winnipeg
in the legislature.
Federal politics
Winnipeg is represented by eight Members of Parliament: three
Conservatives, three New
Democrats and two Liberals. There are six Senators representing Manitoba in Ottawa. Only two list Winnipeg as the division they represent although all of them were residents of Winnipeg
when appointed to the Senate. The political affiliation in the Senate is three Liberals, two Conservatives and one
Independent.
Crime
In 2004, Winnipeg had the fourth highest overall crime rate among Canadian Census Metropolitan Area cities listed with 12,167 Criminal Code of Canada offences per 100,000 population. Only Regina, Saskatoon, and Abbotsford had higher crime rates. Winnipeg had the highest rate among centres with
populations greater than 500,000.[13] The crime rate was
50% higher than that of Calgary and more than double the rate for Toronto.
In 2005, Statistics Canada shows Manitoba had the highest decline of overall crime in Canada at nearly 8%. Winnipeg dropped
from having the highest rate of murder per capita in the country. That distinction now belongs to Edmonton. Manitoba did continue to lead all other provinces in auto thefts, almost all of it centered in
Winnipeg.[14]
To combat auto theft, Manitoba Public Insurance (MPI) established financial
incentives for motor vehicle owners to install ignition immobilizers in their vehicles, and now requires owners of high-risk
vehicles to install immobilizers.[15]
Winnipeg is protected by the Winnipeg Police Service, which has over 1350
members.
Geography and climate
-
Winnipeg is situated just east of the longitudinal centre of Canada (near the geographical centre of North America), and
approximately 100 kilometres (60 miles) north of the border with the United States. It is
near the eastern edge of the Canadian Prairies, and about 70 kilometres (45 miles) south of Lake Winnipeg. It is situated in the
flood plain of the Red River and is
surrounded by rich agricultural land. The closest urban area with over 500,000 people is the twin cities of Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota.
Winnipeg has an extreme humid continental climate (Koppen climate classification Dfb). In the summer months the climate is influenced
by low-pressure air masses originating in the Gulf of Mexico, often clashing with drier air masses in the north and west, which
results in hot and humid conditions and frequent thunderstorms. Temperatures exceed 35°C (95°F) numerous times each summer, and
the combination of heat and humidity can bring the humidex value to the middle forties, and the
dew point to the upper twenties (Celsius).
The summers in Winnipeg are similar to those experienced in cities in the Midwestern United States. Spring and autumn are highly variable seasons. In a typical year,
daily average temperatures range from -23°C to 26°C, recorded extremes are 40.6°C and -45°C (105.1°F and -49°F).[16] The weather is characterized by an abundance of sunshine
throughout the year. July is the sunniest month with 318 hours of bright sunshine, and November the least sunny, with 96.
Winnipeg is the second sunniest city in Canada in the winter and has the second clearest skies year-round.[17]
| Winnipeg Climatological Data |
| Temperature |
| Month |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
|
Mean |
| Record high °C (°F) |
8 (46) |
12 (53) |
23 (74) |
33 (94) |
37 (99) |
38 (100) |
38 (100) |
41 (105) |
39 (102) |
31 (90) |
24 (75) |
12 (53) |
|
|
| Average high °C (°F) |
-13 (9) |
-9 (17) |
-1 (30) |
10 (51) |
19 (67) |
23 (74) |
26 (78) |
25 (77) |
19 (65) |
11 (51) |
-1 (30) |
-10 (15) |
|
8 (47) |
| Mean °C (°F) |
-18 (-0) |
-14 (8) |
-6 (21) |
4 (40) |
12 (54) |
17 (63) |
20 (67) |
19 (65) |
12 (54) |
5 (42) |
-5 (22) |
-14 (6) |
|
3 (37) |
| Average low °C (°F) |
-23 (-9) |
-19 (-2) |
-11 (12) |
-2 (28) |
5 (41) |
11 (51) |
13 (56) |
12 (53) |
6 (43) |
-0.3 (31) |
-10 (15) |
-19 (-2) |
|
-3 (26) |
| Record low °C (°F) |
-42 (-44) |
-45 (-49) |
-38 (-36) |
-26 (-15) |
-11 (12) |
-3 (26) |
1 (34) |
0.6 (33) |
-7 (19) |
-17 (1) |
-34 (-29) |
-38 (-36) |
|
|
| Precipitation and Sunshine Hours |
| Month |
Jan |
Feb |
Mar |
Apr |
May |
Jun |
Jul |
Aug |
Sep |
Oct |
Nov |
Dec |
|
Total |
| Total mm (in) |
20 (0.8) |
15 (0.6) |
22 (0.9) |
32 (1.3) |
59 (2.3) |
90 (3.5) |
71 (2.8) |
75 (3.0) |
52 (2.1) |
36 (1.4) |
25 (1.0) |
19 (0.7) |
|
514 (20) |
| Rainfall mm (in) |
0 (0.0) |
3 (0.1) |
8 (0.3) |
22 (0.9) |
58 (2.3) |
90 (3.5) |
71 (2.8) |
75 (3.0) |
52 (2.0) |
31 (1.2) |
6 (0.2) |
2 (0.1) |
|
416 (16) |
| Snowfall cm (in) |
23 (9.1) |
14 (5.6) |
16 (6.2) |
10 (3.4) |
0.8 (0.3) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0 (0) |
0.4 (0.2) |
5 (2.0) |
21 (8.4) |
20 (7.8) |
|
111 (44) |
| Sunshine hours |
120 |
138 |
178 |
239 |
286 |
283 |
318 |
280 |
186 |
147 |
96 |
100 |
|
2372 |
| Data recorded at Winnipeg International Airport by Environment Canada. Data spans 1971 to 2000. |
Winnipeg lies exposed to numerous weather systems including bitterly cold Arctic high pressure systems during the winter
months, although people who live in Winnipeg claim their city's dry winter cold is more pleasant than the damper cold in Toronto.
According to Environment Canada, Winnipeg is the coldest city in the world with a
population of over 600,000.[18]
Winnipeg, like Chicago, is also known as a windy city. The average
annual wind speed is 16.9 km/h (10.5 mph), most frequently from the south. The city has experienced wind gusts of up to 129 km/h
(80 mph), with the strongest winds from the north-west. The windiest weather usually occurs during blizzards or thunderstorms. April is the windiest month, and July the
least windy. Tornadoes are not uncommon in the area, particularly in the spring and summer
months.
- See also: List of Winnipeg neighbourhoods
Transportation
-
Winnipeg has had a public transit system since the 1880s, starting with horse-drawn streetcars. Electric streetcars from 1891
until 1955, and electric trolley buses from 1938 until 1970. Winnipeg Transit now
operates entirely with diesel buses. For decades, the city has explored the idea of a rapid transit link, either bus or rail,
from downtown to the University of Manitoba's suburban campus.
The city is directly connected to the United States via Highway 75 (a northern continuation of I-29 and
US 75). The highway runs 107 kilometres to Emerson,
Manitoba, the 8th busiest border crossing.[19]
Much of the commercial traffic that crosses in Emerson either originates from or is destined to Winnipeg. Inside the city, the
highway is locally known as Pembina Highway.
Winnipeg's airport, recently renamed as Winnipeg James Armstrong Richardson International Airport, is
currently under redevelopment. A new terminal building is scheduled for completion by 2009. The plan is for three parallel
runways in the 18/36 heading direction. The field was Canada's first international
airport when it opened in 1928 as Stevenson Aerodrome.[20]
Winnipeg is unique among North American cities its size in that it does not have freeways
within the urban area. Beginning in 1958, the primarily suburban Metropolitan council proposed a system of freeways, including
one that would have bisected the downtown area. A modern four-lane highway called the Perimeter Highway was built in 1969. It serves as an expressway around the city (also known as a ring road) with interchanges and at-grade intersections that bypass the city entirely. It allows travellers on the
Trans-Canada Highway to avoid the city and continue east or west uninterrupted.
Winnipeg has also embarked on an ambitious wayfinding program erecting new signage at strategic downtown locations. [21] The intention is to make it easier for travellers,
specifically tourists to locate services and attractions.
Economy
Royal Canadian Mint in Winnipeg
- See also: Corporations based in
Winnipeg and List of hospitals in Winnipeg
Winnipeg is an important regional centre of commerce, industry, culture, finance, and government.
In 2003 and 2004, Canadian Business magazine ranked Winnipeg in the top 10 cities for business. In 2006, Winnipeg was ranked
by KPMG as one of the lowest cost locations to do business in Canada.[22] As with much of Western Canada, in 2007, Winnipeg experienced both a building
and real estate boom. In May of 2007, the Winnipeg Real Estate Board reported the best month in its 104-year history in terms of
sales and volume. [23]
Winnipeg has the third-fastest growing economy among Canada's major cities as of 2007 released by the Conference Board of
Canada with Winnipeg's real GDP growth at 3.7%. [24]
Approximately 375,000 people are employed in Winnipeg and the surrounding area. Winnipeg's largest employers are either
government or government-funded institutions: the Province of Manitoba, the City of Winnipeg, the University of Manitoba, the Health Sciences
Centre, the Casinos of Winnipeg, and Manitoba Hydro. Approximately 54,000 people
or 14% of the work force are employed in the public sector.
There are several large private sector employers, as well: Manitoba Telecom
Services, CanWest Global Communications, Palliser Furniture, Great-West Life Assurance,
Motor Coach Industries, Convergys,
New Flyer Industries, Boeing Canada
Technology, Bristol Aerospace, Nygård
International, Canad Inns and Investors
Group.
A number of large privately held family-owned companies operate out of Winnipeg. The most famous of these is James Richardson & Sons. The Richardson building at Portage and Main was the first skyscraper to grace that corner. Other private companies include
Ben Moss Jewellers, Frantic Films and
Paterson Grain.
Winnipeg is the site of Canadian Forces Base Winnipeg and the headquarters of
1 Canadian Air Division, as well as home to several reserve units. See #Military in this article.
The Royal Canadian Mint located in eastern Winnipeg is where all circulating
coinage in Canada is produced. The plant, established in 1975, also produces coins for many other countries in the world.
Winnipeg is also home to the National Microbiology Laboratory,
Canada's front line in its response to SARS and one of only 15
Biosafety level 4 microbiology laboratories in the world.
- See also: List of foreign consulates in Winnipeg
Demographics
Selected Ethnic
Origins, 2001[25] |
| Ethnic origin |
Population |
| English |
135,520 |
| Canadian |
131,095 |
| Scottish |
109,605 |
| German |
97,220 |
| Ukrainian |
90,985 |
| Irish |
81,910 |
| French |
81,905 |
| multiple responses included |
|
| Visible minorities, 2001[26] |
| Total |
81,915 |
| Filipino |
29,995 |
| South Asian |
12,165 |
| Black |
11,275 |
| Chinese |
10,890 |
| Southeast Asian |
5,030 |
| Latin American |
4,500 |
| Japanese |
1,560 |
| Arab |
1,065 |
| Korean |
945 |
| West Asian |
815 |
| Other |
1,960 |
| Multiple |
1,710 |
According to the 2006 Census, there were 633,451 people residing in Winnipeg
itself and a total of 694,668 inhabitants in the Winnipeg Census Metropolitan
Area on 16 May, 2006, making it Manitoba’s largest city and
the eighth largest CMA in Canada. [2] [27] Of the city population, 48.3% were male and 51.7% were female, and 24.3% were 19 years
old or younger. People aged by 20 and 39 years accounted for 27.4%, while those between 40 and 64 made up 34.0% of the
population. The average age of a Winnipegger in May 2006 was 38.7, compared to the average of
39.5 for Canada as a whole.[28]
Between the censuses of 2001 and 2006, Winnipeg's population increased by 2.2%,
compared to the average of 2.6 for Manitoba and 5.4% for Canada. The population
density of the city of Winnipeg averaged 1,365.2 people per square kilometre, compared with an average of 3.5 for
Manitoba.
Of Winnipeg’s total population, 61,217 citizens live in the city’s Census
Metropolitan Area,[29]
which apart from Winnipeg includes the Rural municipalities of East St. Paul, Headingley, Ritchot, Rosser, Springfield, St. Clements, St. François Xavier, Taché and West St. Paul, and the Aboriginal
community of Brokenhead.
- Ethnicity
Most Winnipeggers are of European or Canadian descent. Visible minorities make up
13.4% of Winnipeg's population. Winnipeg is home to 29,995 people of Filipino descent, the
highest concentration of persons of Filipino origin in Canada, and the second largest Filipino population in Canada after
Toronto, which has 86,460 persons of Filipino origin.
- Language
More than 20 languages are spoken in Winnipeg, the most common is English, in which
99.0% of Winnipeggers are fluent. In terms of Canada's official languages, 88.0% of Winnipeggers speak only English, and 0.1% speak only French. Eleven percent speaks both English and French, while 0.9% speaks neither English nor French.
Other languages spoken in Winnipeg inclue German (spoken by 4.1% of the population),
Tagalog (3.4%), Ukrainian (3.1%),
Spanish, Chinese and Polish (all three spoken by 1.7% of the population), as well as Aboriginal languages including
Ojibway (0.6%), Cree (0.5%),
Inuktitut and Micmac (both less than 0.1%). Other languages
spoken in Winnipeg include Portuguese, Italian, Punjabi, Vietnamese, Hindi,Russian,
Dutch, Non verbal languages, Arabic, Croatian, Greek, Hungarian, Japanese, Creoles, Danish, and Gaelic languages (all of which are spoken by
roughly 1% or less of the population).[30]
- Religion
The 2001 census states that 72.9 per cent of Winnipeg residents belong to a Christian
denomination, 35.1% of which are Protestant, 32.6% Roman Catholic, and 5.2% other following Christian denominations. 5.6% of the population follows a
religion other than Christianity—followers of Judaism make up 2.1% of the population, Followers
of Buddhism and Sikhism make up 0.9% of the population each,
while Muslims make up 0.8% of the population. Hindus account
for 0.6% of the population, while followers of other religions make up less than 0.5% of the population. 21.7% of Winnipeggers do
not follow a religion.[26]
Education
Education is a responsibility of the provincial government in Canada.
In Manitoba, education is governed principally by The Public Schools Act and The Education Administration Act, as well as
regulations made under both Acts. Rights and responsibilities of the Minister of Education, Citizenship and Youth and the rights
and responsibilities of school boards, principals, teachers, parents and students are set out in the legislation.
There are two major universities, a community college, a private Mennonite college and a
French college in St. Boniface
The University of Manitoba is the largest university of the province of
Manitoba, most comprehensive and only research-intensive post-secondary educational institution. It was founded in 1877, making
it Western Canada’s first university. In a typical year, the university has an enrollment of
24,542 undergraduate students and 3,021 graduate students.
The University of Winnipeg received its charter in 1967 but its roots date
back more than 130 years. The founding colleges were Manitoba College 1871, and
Wesley College 1888, which merged to form United College in 1938.
Winnipeg is also home to numerous private schools, both religious and secular.
|
School divisions
There are six public school divisions in Winnipeg:
|