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The following information is based, in part, on the book Mosaic of Winnipeg Street Names which described the historical origins of some Winnipeg street names. It was published by the Canadian Institute of Onomastic Sciences (precursor to today’s Canadian Society for the Study of Names) in 1974, in commemoration of Winnipeg’s founding in 1874. Its compiler, the late scholar Jaroslav Bohdan Rudnyckyj, acknowledged prior efforts to document the history of Winnipeg street names, starting with Mary Hislop. Her book The Streets of Winnipeg, published in 1912, was the first of its kind in Canada. Rudnyckyj quoted Hislop extensively in his update. He also paid homage to Winnipeg historians Harry Shave and Vince Leah who wrote respectively for the Winnipeg Free Press and Winnipeg Tribune on the basis of city street names.
For a brief period from 1891 to 1893, Winnipeg streets were numbered rather than named. See a table of those names below.
Type
Direction
Avenues
East-west
Streets
North-south
There are corresponding lists for Brandon, Portage la Prairie, and Selkirk.
Street name
Notes
Year created
Abbot Avenue
Named for Sir John Joseph Caldwell Abbott, Prime Minister of Canada (1891-1892)
Abbotsford Crescent
Named after Abbotsford, British Columbia, a town about 80 kilometers east of Vancouver
Aberdeen Avenue
Named for the Marquis of Aberdeen, Governor-General of Canada (1893-1898) who visited Winnipeg in 1895 and 1915; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard; formerly Limit Street
1903
Harry Shave, Winnipeg Free Press January 1962
Abinojii Mikanah
Formerly Bishop Grandin Boulevard, it was renamed with an Ojibwa phrase meaning “children street”, referring to children lost in the Indigenous residential school system
2023
MHS
Academy Road
Named for St. Mary’s Academy, a Catholic school for girls, which is situated at the beginning of the street; formerly Godfrey Avenue and Bridge Street
1903
Mosaic, MHS
Adam Street
Renamed from Bray Street in 1963
1963
Adamson Street
Named for John Evans Adamson, Chief Justice of Manitoba (1955-1961)
Addis Avenue
Formerly Gunn Avenue
1963
Addison Crescent
Named for Joseph Addison (1672-1719), an English writer and member of Parliament
Adelaide Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen;” it may have been Adelaide Rowand, daughter of John Rowand and wife of John Balsillie
Harry Shave, Winnipeg Free Press 3 August 1963; MHS
Adele Avenue
Formerly a portion of Yarwood Avenue, renamed for Adele, the given name of the founder of St. Edward Catholic Convent
Mosaic, MHS
Admiral Avenue
Formerly Anderson Avenue
MHS
Agar Avenue
Named for Harry Agar, station agent at Bird’s Hill for the Canadian Pacific Railway during the early 1900s
Agassiz Drive
Named for 19th century Swiss geologist Jean Louis Rodolphe Agassiz, as was Lake Agassiz, a glacial lake which once covered much of Manitoba
Agate Bay
Streets were assigned certain letters of the alphabet for easier identification of a specific area by Ladco Developers of Windsor Park; here Agate because of the initial A
Agincourt Road
Battle of Agincourt, France, in 1415
Aikins Street
Named for James Cox Aikins, Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba (1882-1888); “Aikins Street for Governor Aikins” Hislop Streets of Winnipeg, page 32; formerly Walker Street and Jones Street
1872
Ainslie Street
Albany Street
A street in the north end, not the one in St. James, was renamed Leo Novak Street in March 1959
1959
Albert Street
Named for Prince Albert, the Prince Consort of Queen Victoria
1893
Alberta Avenue
Renamed Yukon Avenue in March 1959
Alexander Avenue
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Alexander Logan; see also George Street and Logan Avenue
1893
Alex Taylor Drive
Named for civil servant Alexander Taylor
MHS
Alfred Avenue
According to Mosaic of Winnipeg Street Names, named for politician Alfred Boyd, who is also commemorated in Boyd Avenue; however, Pioneers and Prominent Citizens of Manitoba indicates it was named for Alfred William Burrows, an early Winnipeg land developer, and uncle to lumberman Theodore Arthur Burrows
1893
Allan Street
Named for businessman William Rae Allan
1915
Allard Avenue
Named for missionary and cleric Joachim Allard
MHS
Allenby Crescent
Named for municipal employee Allenby Kitchener Ballendine (1924-2009)
Allen Rouse Cove
Named for community activist Allen Rouse
Alloway Avenue
Named for banker William Forbes Alloway
1898
Alverstone Street
Named for Richard Everard Alverstone (1842-1915)
1903
Amarynth Crescent
Former Amarynth Bay
1963
Amherst Street
The one not in St. James was renamed Avonherst Street in March 1959
1959
Anderson Avenue
Named for cleric David Anderson
before 1908
Mary Andree Way
Named for community activitist Mary Andree
MHS
Andrews Street
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Alfred Joseph Andrews
before 1908
Angela Street
Formerly Halls Street
1963
Annabella Street
Named for Annabella Duff, a young girl who lived at Higgins and Annabella Streets
Annabella was merged with Rachel in 1908 but the Annabella name was restored in 1913. In March 1952, a municipal decision to revert to Rachel Street was reversed a few weeks later. There were five residences on Rachel, with four residences and the J. R. Watkins Company on Annabella. The deciding factor was the volume of already-purchased corporate letterhead that would be obsoleted should the Rachel name be chosen. Council approved the Annabella name on 28 April 1952.
1874
Arbuthnot Street
Named for Winnipeg Mayor John Arbuthnot; formerly Aynsley Street
Renamed March 1959
Arby Bay
Formerly Brazier Street
1963
Archibald Street
Named for Adams George Archibald, the first Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba; see Montcalm Street
1908
Arctic Street
Originally named Bricker Street for ice merchant Delmond O. Bricker, renamed for his company Arctic Ice in 1959
1874 (renamed March 1959)
Arena Road
Renamed from Centre Street in March 1959
1959
Argyle Street
Named for the Duke of Argyll, also known as the Marquis of Lorne, son-in-law to Queen Victoria; see also Lorne Avenue, Louise Street and Princess Street
1873
Arlington Street
Formerly Brant Street, Brown Street, Eversley Street, Meader Street, River Street
MHS
Arnold Avenue
Formerly Louise Street
1893
Arthur Street
Named for businessman Arthur Wellington Ross
1873
Artillery Street
Formerly Queen Street
MHS
Art Miki Way
Named for community activist Art Miki
2016
MHS
Ash Street
Formerly Central Avenue
1881 (renamed 1893)
Ashdown Street
Named for businessman and Winnipeg Mayor James Henry Ashdown
Asquith Avenue
Formerly Beresford Avenue
MHS
Assiniboine Crescent
Assiniboine Drive
Renamed Wellington Crescent in 1959
Athlone Drive
Named for Alexander Augustus Frederick William Alfred George Cambridge, First Earl of Athlone and Prince Alexander of Teck (1874-1957), who served as Governor General of Canada from 1940 to 1946; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard
MHS
Atlantic Avenue
Formerly Crawford Avenue, Pacific Avenue
MHS
Atwood Avenue
Named for Second World War Flight Sergeant Bertram Edwin Atwood; formerly Princess Street
1963
Aubrey Street
Formerly Aubrey Avenue
1893
Austin Street
Named for businessman Albert William Austin
1872
MHS
Avonherst Street
Renamed from Amherst Street in March 1959
1959
Aynsley Street
Named for Donald Aynsley Ross, son of businessman Arthur Wellington Ross; renamed Arbuthnot Street in March 1959
1959
Ayr Boulevard
Street name
Notes
Year created
Balderstone Road
Formerly Ferry Road
1963
Baldock Street
Formerly Scotia Street
1963
Baldwin Street
Formerly Scotia Street
1963
Balmoral Place
Renamed Balmoral Street in March 1959
1959
Balmoral Street
Named for Balmoral Castle, a Scottish residence of Queen Victoria; see also Balmoral Place
1880
Baltimore Road
Formerly Florence Avenue
MHS, 42
Banfield Street
Renamed from Fairfield Street in March 1959
1959
Bannatyne Avenue
Named for Andrew Graham Ballenden Bannatyne; formerly Sinclair Avenue
1876
Named for George Bannerman (?-1885), first resident of the avenue and property owner
1881
Banning Street
Named for early pioneer William Ward Banning; formerly Banning Avenue
1893
Banting Drive
Named for medical researcher Frederick Banting, who discovered insulin; the street is near Best Street; formerly St. Charles Boulevard
1963
Barber Street
Named for pioneer businessman Edmund Lorenzo Barber; formerly Yonge Street
1893
Bard Boulevard
Barker Boulevard
Possibly named for Winnipeg plumbing businessman John Barker
Barnes Street
Formerly Nares Street
MHS
Bartlet Avenue
Probably named for agronomist James W. Bartlett
1904
Bates Avenue
Named for Transcona serviceman Arthur John “Jack” Bate, son of Arthur Thomas Bate
Bathgate Bay
Named for pioneer merchant Robert Dundas Bathgate
Battery Street
Formerly King Street
MHS
Beatrice Street
Formerly Counter Street
MHS
Beauty Avenue
Formerly Perth Avenue
1963
Bedson Street
Named for Samuel Lawrence Bedson; formerly Whittier Street
1963
Belcourt Bay
Named for cleric Georges Antoine Belcourt
1874
Belfast Street
Formerly Dublin Street (1917)
Before 1941
Bell Avenue
Named for William Robert Bell
1898
Bellavance Street
Formerly Walker Street
1963
Belvidere Street
Bender Avenue
Formerly McArthur Avenue
1963
Ben Hewak Bay
Named for judge Benjamin Hewak
MHS
Benson Avenue
Named for physician Edward Benson; formerly St. Anthony Avenue
1963
Bernardine Avenue
Formerly Stafford Avenue
1963
Bernier Bay
Named for politician Thomas Alfred Bernier
Berry Street
Named for businessman and politician Thomas Berry
Besant Street
Named for early settler and East Kildonan councillor Arthur Besant
MHS
Best Street
Named for medical researcher Charles Best, who discovered insulin; the street is near Banting Drive; formerly Queen Street
1963
Betournay Street
Named for judge Louis Betournay
1920
Bishop Grandin Boulevard
Named for cleric Vital Justin Grandin; see also Grandin Street and St. Vital Road; renamed Abinojii Mikanah (“children street” in Ojibwa) in 2023
1978
Mosaic, MHS
Keith Black Bay
See Keith Black Bay
MHS
Blechner Drive
Named for municipal official John Stephan Blechner
Blostein Bay
Named for businessman Joseph Blostein
MHS
Bole Street
Named for druggist and Winnipeg alderman David Wesley Bole; formerly Rose Street
MHS
Borebank Street
Named for real estate developer John James Borebank, who perished in the sinking of the RMS Titanic; see also Fortune Street
MHS
Boreham Boulevard
Named for journalist Bruce Boreham
Borrowman Place
Named for LeRoy Franklin Borrowman, long-time assessment commissioner for the City of Winnipeg
Bourget Street
Formerly St. Joseph Street
1963
Bower Boulevard
Named for Tuxedo municipal councillor Perry Bower
Boyce Street
Formerly Boyce Avenue
1893
Boyd Avenue
According to Mosaic of Winnipeg Street Names, was named for politician Alfred Boyd
before 1908
Bray Street
Renamed to Adam Street in 1963
Brazier Street
Named for gardener Albert Brazier
1904
Bredin Drive
Named for municipal official Albert Ryerson Bredin; renamed from Hamilton Place in 1913
1913
MHS
Brereton Road
Named for engineer Wilfred Proctor Brereton
Bricker Avenue
Named for pioneering ice merchant Delmond O. Bricker; renamed to Arctic Street in March 1959
1959
Bridge Street
Renamed from Park Street in March 1959
1959
Broadway
Named by the Hudson’s Bay Company as the primary east-west thoroughfare through its Reserve in Winnipeg; Interestingly, several towns in Manitoba have main streets named Broadway; Note that the name should be appended with neither Street nor Avenue; it is just Broadway
1873
MHS
Brock Street
Named for General Isaac Brock (1769-1812), who fought the 1812 battle of Queenston Heights, near Niagara Falls, Ontario; see also Niagara Street and Queenston Street
1906
Brookside Boulevard
Formerly named Sharp Boulevard for Winnipeg politician Charles Wallace Sharp
Bryce Avenue
Named for educator and cleric George Bryce; renamed in July 1882 to avoid confusion with Tache Avenue in St. Boniface
1881
Buchanan Boulevard
Not to be confused with Buchanan Street
MHS
Buchanan Street
Renamed Rutherford Street in March 1959
Buckingham Road
Named for pioneering newspaperman William Buckingham
Buller Street
Probably named for British general Redvers Henry Buller (1839-1908)
MHS
Burnell Street
MHS
Burns Road
Named for cattle dealer and meat packer Patrick Burns (1856-1937); see also Patrick Street; formerly Prairie Road
Burrows Avenue
Named for pioneer lumberman Theodore Arthur Burrows or possibly his uncle, real estate developer Alfred William Burrows
before 1908
Byars Bay
Named for Peter Ferguson Copland Byars, Secretary-Treasurer of East Kildonan from 1956 to 1961
MHS
Byng Place
Named for Julian Hedworth George Byng, First Viscount Byng of Vimy (1862-1935), who served as Governor General of Canada from 1921 to 1926; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard
MHS, Mosaic
Byrd Avenue
Named for American explorer Richard Byrd (1888-1957)
Street name
Notes
Year created
Cambridge Street
Formerly Cambridge Avenue; named for Cambridge University; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Harvard Avenue, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Mount Allison Bay, Oxford Street, Purdue Bay, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
1882, 1893
Camden Place
Cameron Street
Named for fur trader Duncan Cameron
1905
Campbell Street
Named for former Winnipeg alderman Christopher Campbell
1906
Canora Street
It derives its name from the Canadian Northern Railway, predecessor of today’s CNR, taking the first two letters of each of the words in the railway name; formerly Lendrum Street (northernmost portion), Mable Street
1905
MHS, Mosaic
Carlton Street
Named for the Hudson’s Bay Company trading post Fort Carlton, which was burned and abandoned in 1885; see also Edmonton, Ellice, Fort, Garry, Qu’Appelle, York
1881
Carriere Avenue
Named for voyageur and early settler André Carriére Sr. (1779-1861) along whose land the road ran; formerly Third Avenue
1983
Carruthers Avenue
Named for George Frederick Carruthers
Carter Avenue
Named for builder William Henry Carter; formerly Carlaw Avenue
1913
Cathcart Street
Named for John Holmes Cathcart
1962
Cathedral Avenue
Named for nearby St. John’s Cathedral, which was named in 1853 by cleric David Anderson; formerly Grove Avenue
1882 (renamed 1893)
Caton Street
Named for Edwin Victor Caton, former executive of the Winnipeg Electric Company
Cauchon Street
Named for Manitoba Lieutenant-Governor Joseph Edouard Cauchon
before 1908
Cavell Drive
Formerly Munro Street
MHS
Centre Street
Renamed to Arena Road in March 1959
Century Street
Formerly Bradford
MHS
Charles Street
Named for Charles J. Brown, city clerk for Winnipeg (1883-1923); formerly named for Rev. John West, the first Anglican cleric in Western Canada; formerly West Street, Market Street
1876 (renamed 1906)
Charles Hawkins Bay
Named for Knowles Centre Superintendent Charles J. Hawkins
MHS
Charlotte Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen,” possibly Winnipeg Mayor Alexander Logan
Chataway Boulevard
Named for surveyor Charles Clifton Chataway, who surveyed much of the land in the Charleswood area
1911
Cherrier Street
Named for cleric Alphonsus Avila Cherrier
Chestnut Street
Formerly Maple Avenue, Shore Street
1893 (renamed 1892, 1910)
Chevrier Boulevard
Named for politician Noé (Noah) Chevrier
1912
Chochinov Avenue
Names for farmers Jacob and Tuba Chochinov
Chornick Drive
Named for community activist Steve Chornick
MHS
Christie Road
Named for William John Christie, owner of the property on which the street was developed
Church Avenue
Named for nearby St. John’s Cathedral, which was named in 1853 by cleric David Anderson
1881
Churchill Drive
Named for British politician Winston L. S. Churchill (1874-1965)
1942
Cindy Klassen Way
Named for athlete Cindy Klassen
MHS
Clarke Street
Named for Manitoba attorney general and premier, Henry Joseph Clarke
1874 (named 1883)
Clifton Street
Formerly Munroe Avenue, Clifton Avenue
1893
Cochrane Street
Renamed from Semple Street in March 1959
1959
Cockburn Street
Named for city alderman John Wesley Cockburn (1856-1924); formerly named for a relative of businessman Arthur Wellington Ross (1846-1901) who was visiting at the time the road was laid down; formerly Helen Street
renamed 1915
Code Street
Named for William “Billy” Code, fire chief for the City of Winnipeg from 1874 to 1914
1966
Colgate Road
Formerly Buckingham Avenue
1963
Colish Drive
Named for municipal councillor Isaac Colish
MHS
Colleen Street
Renamed Deacon Street in March 1959
College Avenue
Named for St. John’s College
before 1908
Colony Street
Named for Colony Creek which, in the early days of Winnipeg, drained a section of the prairie from near what is now Notre Dame Avenue to the river
before 1908
Colvin Avenue
Named for John Colvin, Secretary of the East Kildonan School District in 1923 and from 1926 to 1946
MHS
Comdale Avenue
Formerly Camrose Avenue
1963
Conway Street
Copeland Street
Formerly First Street
1963
Cork Avenue
Named for banker Samuel Lawrence Cork
1914
Cornell Drive
Named for Cornell University in Ithaca, New York; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Harvard Avenue, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Mount Allison Bay, Oxford Street, Purdue Bay, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
MHS
Cornish Avenue
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Francis Evans Cornish
before 1908
MHS
Corydon Avenue
Named for Corydon Partlow Brown; in 1950, Jackson Avenue was renamed the westward extension of Corydon Avenue; formerly Jackson Avenue (part)
before 1908
Coulter Avenue
Renamed from Lynn Avenue in March 1959
Coutts Avenue
Formerly Young Avenue
1963
Coventry Road
Cox Boulevard
Named for Herbert R. Cox, who sold the land for it to the City of Winnipeg for $1
1963
Craig Street
Named for politician Richard W. Craig
1905
Crofton Bay
Named for John Folliott Crofton
Crozier Avenue
Named for North Kildonan municipal councillor G. Crozier; formerly Norman Street
1963
Cunnington Avenue
Named for butcher Charles Cunnington, who owned the land on which the street was developed
Curtis Street
Formerly Annie Street
1876
Cusson Street
Named for Joseph Arthur Cusson, alderman for the City of St. Boniface from 1903 to 1904, and from 1906 to 1908
Cuthbertson Avenue
Street name
Notes
Year created
Daer Boulevard
Named for James Dunbar, the Sixth Earl of Selkirk (1809-1885), son of Lord Selkirk; formerly Park Boulevard
1963
MHS, 14
Dafoe Road
Named for newspaperman John Wesley Dafoe; see also Macklin Avenue, McCurdy Street and Richardson Avenue
MHS
Dagmar Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen”
before 1908
Dalgleish Bay
Named for the L. Dalgleish Developments Limited owned by Laverne Dalgleish
Dalhousie Drive
Named for Dalhousie University in Halifax, Nova Scotia; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Harvard Avenue, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Mount Allison Bay, Oxford Street, Purdue Bay, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
MHS
Named for judge Thomas Mayne Daly; formerly John Street
1910 (renamed 1913)
formerly Nathaniel Street
1963
Dan H. Young Bay
Named for Knowles Centre Superintendent Daniel H. “Dan” Young
MHS
Named for Toronto architect Frank Darling (1853-1923), who designed the Union Bank building in Winnipeg
1904
Named for British scientist Charles R. Darwin (1809-1882)
Davidson Street
Named for businessman John Andrew Davidson
Named for civil engineer Simon James Dawson; formerly Lamont Street
1963
Named for Arthur Day, Transcona school trustee from 1949 to 1952, chairman from 1952 to 1962; formerly Oxford Street
1963
Deacon Street
Renamed from Colleen Street in March 1959
1959
Formerly Oakdale Place
1963
Delmar Street
c1912
Formerly Machray Street
MHS
Formerly Thurso Street
1963
Named for Swiss mercenaries hired by Lord Selkirk to protect colonists at the Red River Settlement
MHS
Devon Street
Renamed to Dorset Street in March 1959
Named for Victor Christian William Cavendish, Ninth Duke of Devonshire (1868-1938), who served as Governor General of Canada from 1916 to 1921; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard
MHS
Named for Edgar Dewdney (1835-1916), who served as Indian Commissioner and Lieutenant-Governor of the North West Territories, before parts were partitioned off as Saskatchewan and Alberta in 1905; he was later appointed Lieutenant-Governor of British Columbia
1881
Mosaic, MHS
Named for journalist Alexander Grant Dexter; formerly Fourth Street
1906
Dieppe Road
Named for a disastrous battle during the Second World War
MHS
Formerly McLean Avenue
1963
Named for Benjamin Disraeli, First Earl of Beaconsfield (1804-1881), British politician and novelist, who served as prime minister in 1867 and 1870 to 1880; see also Gladstone Street
1873
Named for municipal official David Morton Dobbie; formerly Larsen Avenue
1963
Dohaney Crescent
Named for teacher Catherine Annie Dohaney, who taught at the nearby Kirkfield Park School in the 1910s and 1920s
MHS
Formerly Hospital Boulevard
MHS
Dominion Street
Formerly Dominion Avenue
1893
Named for Donald Alexander Smith, an official of the Hudson’s Bay Company
before 1908
MHS
Donald McClintock Bay
Named for Knowles Centre Superintendent Donald McClintock
MHS
Named for Donalda Elizabeth Munroe (1906-1921)
Donnelly Street
Named for cleric Walter Edward Donnelly; formerly Metro Street
?
MHS
Dorchester Avenue
Formerly Gertrude Avenue West
Formerly Harriet Street
MHS
Dorset Street
Renamed from Devon Street in March 1959
1959
Named for Thomas Douglas, Fifth Earl of Selkirk (1771-1820); see also Point Douglas Avenue and Selkirk Avenue
Downing Street
Formerly Dufferin Avenue
Named for businessman and St. Boniface Mayor Francis Robert “Frank” Dowse
Formerly Dumas Street
1963
Formerly Shelley Place
1963
Named for politician and judge Joseph Dubuc
before 1908
MHS
Ducharme Avenue
Named for Fort Garry councillor Wilfrid Joseph Ducharme
MHS
Named for Guildford Dudley; formerly Dufferin Avenue
Named for Frederick Temple Hamilton-Temple-Blackwood, First Marquess of Dufferin (1826-1902), who visited Winnipeg during his tenure as Canadian Governor General from 1872 to 1878; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard
1872
MHS
Duffield Street
Dufresne Avenue
Formerly Dufferin Avenue
1893
Named for cleric and author Georges Dugas
Named for builder and politician Joseph Pierre Dumas
MHS
Named for Father Dumoulin, priest of St. Boniface during the time of Louis Riel
before 1908
Duncan Street
Named for lawyer Derward Alton Duncan, renamed from Harold Street in March 1959
1959
Formerly Brock Street
1963
Formerly Broad Avenue
1963
Named for judge Andrew Knox Dysart
Dyson Avenue
Renamed from Murray Avenue in March 1959
1959
Street name
Notes
Year created
The street name commemorates the gates that were erected at its entrance; see also Middle Gate and West Gate; formerly Assiniboine Avenue
1910
MHS
Named for the Eaton family, headed by patriarch Timothy Eaton (1834-1907), which established a national chain of department stores
1903
Formerly Arnold Avenue, Louise Avenue
MHS
Named for American inventor Thomas Alva Edison (1847-1931)
Named for the Hudson’s Bay Company trading post Fort Edmonton, which later became the city of Edmonton; see also Carlton, Ellice, Fort, Garry, Qu’Appelle, York
1881
Edna Perry Way
Named for educator and cleric Edna Lenora Perry
Named for land developer Bert Egesz
MHS (J. A. Burns)
Named for Elaine Quiring, daughter of the street’s developer; see also Quiring Bay and Karen Street
Originally named for Jemima Ross, a daughter of HBC employee and historian Alexander Ross; formerly Jemima Avenue
1894 (renamed 1906)
Ellen Street
Named for Ellen Ross, daughter of William Ross; formerly Cathedral Street
1893
Vince Leah (Tribune 29 Jan 1969)
Named for the Hudson’s Bay Company trading post Fort Ellice in southwestern Manitoba which, in turn, was named for HBC investor Edward Ellice; see also Carlton, Edmonton, Fort, Garry, Qu’Appelle, York; formerly Nellie Avenue
1881
MHS
Elm Street
Renamed to avoid confusion with Euclid Avenue in Point Douglas; formerly Euclid Street
1881 (renamed 1893)
Elmwood Street
Renamed to Molson Street in March 1959
Emily Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen”
before 1908
Empress Street
Formerly Queen's Street
1893
Emslie Street
Named for John Emslie, an accountant at Ashdown Hardware Company, and first clerk of Knox Presbyterian Church (1873); formerly Cochrane Street
1882
Erin Street
Formerly West McPhillips Street, St. Patrick Street
1893
MHS, 50
Named for Samuel Robert Henderson; his initials were spelled phonetically to make this street name
Mosaic, MHS
Named for the Greek mathematician Euclid who developed geometry; the street is so named because it is a straight line bissecting other streets through the Point Douglas area of Winnipeg
1898
MHS
Named for Winnipeg Mayor William Sanford Evans
Named for William Henry Evanson, comptroller for the City of Winnipeg in the early 1900s; formerly Horne Street, Wood Street
1911
Named for politician Evelyn Foster Shannon
MHS
Street name
Notes
Year created
Fairfield Avenue
Formerly Stonewall Avenue
MHS
Fairfield Street
Renamed to Banfield Street in March 1959
Fairmont Road
Fanta Street
Formerly Forrest Street
1963
Farlinger Bay
Named for Eveline Partidge Farlinger and her husband David Edmund Farlinger (1890-1970)
Fennell Street
Named for municipal official Leslie Raymond Fennell
Fernbank Street
Formerly Jaffray Street
1963
Ferry Road
At one time, the street led to a ferry across the Assiniboine River
Fidler Avenue
Named for fur trader Peter Fidler
Finkelstein Road
Named for David R. Finkelstein, Mayor of the Tuxedo area of Winnipeg from 1914 to 1950
Fisher Street
Formerly Park Place
MHS
Fitzgerald Crescent
Named for artist Lionel LeMoine FitzGerald
Fleet Avenue
Formerly Lizzie Avenue
MHS
Fleming Avenue
Named for Sandford Fleming (1827-1915), chief engineer for the Canadian Pacific Railway
Fletcher Crescent
Named for civil servant Robert Fletcher
Flora Avenue
Historian Harry Shave gives two versions of the name’s origin; in one, it is named for the wife of early land surveyor George McPhillips; in the other, it commemorates the second given name of the wife of businessman Arthur Wellington Ross
Foley Avenue
Named for farmer Richard D. Foley
Forbes Road
Named for James Wallace Forbes
Fordham Bay
Named for Fordham University in New York State; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Harvard Avenue, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Mount Allison Bay, Oxford Street, Purdue Bay, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
Mosaic, MHS
Forrest Avenue
J. B. Rudnyckyj suggested the street is named for pioneer Samuel Forrest; the basis for this conclusion is unclear, as Forrest, who homesteaded near Mowbray, appeared not to have a connection with Winnipeg warranting commemoration
Mosaic, MHS
Fort Street
Named for the Hudson’s Bay Company trading post Fort Garry which, in turn, was named for Nicholas Garry (c1782-1856), a director of the company; see also Carlton, Edmonton, Ellice, Garry, Qu’Appelle, York
before 1908
MHS
Fortier Avenue
Named for early resident Jean Fortier (1854-1931)
Fortune Street
Named for businessman Mark Fortune, who lost his life in the sinking of RMS Titanic; see also Borebank Street
MHS
Foster Street
J. B. Rudnyckyj suggested the street is named for pioneer James Foster; the basis for this conclusion is unclear, as Fraser, who homesteaded near Manitou, appeared not to have a connection with Winnipeg warranting commemoration
1903
Mosaic, MHS
Fowler Street
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Frank Oliver Fowler
Franklin Bay
Named for explorer John Franklin (1786-1847), whose expeditions tried but ultimately failed to find a North West Passage through Arctic Canada
Frances Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen”
before 1908
Frederic Avenue
Renamed to Taylor Avenue in March 1959
Freedman Crescent
Named for judge Samuel Freedman, former Chancellor of the University of Manitoba
French Street
Named for George Arthur French (1841-1921), first commissioner of the North West Mounted Police, precursor to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Frog Plain Avenue
Formerly Bell Street
1963
Furby Street
Formerly Margaretta Street (part)
1874
MHS
Street name
Notes
Year created
Gaboury Place
Named for pioneer Marie-Anne Gaboury; see also Lagimodiere Boulevard
1956
Gagnon Street
Named for Ernest Gagnon (1884-1954), assistant city clerk of St. Boniface (1911), city clerk (1918-1933), manager of St. Boniface Hospital (1934-1951); formerly Langevin Street
1963
Gallagher Avenue
Named for pioneer Patrick Gallagher, who homesteaded on the present William Avenue (1880), later becoming a well-known meat merchant
1903
Galloway Street
Named for pioneer farmer John Galloway, who owned land in the vicinity of this street
1881
Galt Avenue
Renamed from Robert Avenue in March 1959
1959
Gamble Place
Named for Bertin C. Gamble (1898-1986), Board Chairman of Gamble-Skogmo Incorporated of Minneapolis, Minnesota
MHS
Gareau Street
Named for the Gareau brothers, who were realtors in St. Boniface between 1910 and 1925
1912
Garfield Street
Named for American president James Abram Garfield (1831-1881)
1882
Garrioch Avenue
Named for cleric Alfred Campbell Garrioch
1950
Garry Street
Named for the Hudson’s Bay Company trading post Fort Garry which, in turn, was named for Nicholas Garry (c1782-1856), a director of the company; see also Carlton, Edmonton, Ellice, Fort, Qu’Appelle, York
before 1908
MHS
Garton Avenue
Named for pioneer Cannon J. Garton (1855-1936)
1959
Garwood Avenue
Named for Mrs. Garwood Lewis, wife of J. A. Lewis, who was appointed to the Canadian Senate in 1920; formerly Wood Avenue
1893
Gateway Road
Renamed from Wolfe Street in March 1959
1959
Gauvin Street
Named for Antoine Gauvin, Mayor of St. Boniface in 1906
Gendreau Avenue
Named for physician and coroner L. S. Gendreau (1869-1939), who served as treasurer of the St. Norbert school board from 1905 to 1937
George Avenue
Named for George Logan, son of Alexander Logan; see also Alexander Avenue and Logan Avenue
1898
George Barone Bay
Named for sculptor George Barone
MHS
George Lawrence Bay
Named for bagpiper George Lawrence
MHS
George Suttie Bay
Named for municipal official George Nordland Suttie
MHS
Gerard Street
Historian Harry Shave suggests the street was named for Manitoba Premier Marc Amable Girard, with a misspelling; an alternate version given by J. B. Rudnyckyj is that it commemorates Max Gerard, first Manitoba provincial treasurer (1870)
1881
Gertie Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen.” Rudnyckyj suggests it commemorates The Gertie H, a small steamboat on the Assiniboine and Red Rivers that was named for Gertie Hall, daughter of its owner
before 1908
Gertrude Avenue
Named for a daughter, who died in childhood, of businessman Arthur Wellington Ross
before 1908
Gilbert Avenue
Named for physician Thomas Walter Gilbert
1962
Gillson Street
Named for Albert Henry Stewart Gillson, President of the University of Manitoba from 1948 to 1954
Giroux Street
Named for cleric Louis Raymond Giroux (1841-1911), director of St. Boniface College (1869)
1909
Girton Boulevard
Gladstone Street
Named for William Ewart Gladstone (1809-1898), who served as British Prime Minister from 1868 to 1874, 1880 to 1885, 1886 to 1892, and 1892 to 1894; see also Disraeli Street and Morley Avenue
1882
Glendale Avenue
Renamed to Pelly Avenue in March 1959
Ed Golding
Named for community activist Ed Golding
MHS
Gomez Street
Named for William Gomez da Fonseca; see also Higgins Avenue
before 1908
MHS
Good Street
Named for physician James Wilford Good
1882
Goodyear Avenue
Named for Charles Goodyear (1852-1943), who owned a general store in Transcona in 1910, performed with Buffalo Bill in his Wild West Show
1959
Gordon Avenue
Named for livestock dealer and politician James Thomas Gordon
1906
Gorham Street
Named for Walter Gorham (1868-1952), secretary-treasurer of St. Paul from 1911 to 1916, secretary-treasurer of East St. Paul from 1916 to 1923
Gosford Avenue
Named for Archibald Acheson, Second Earl of Gosford (1776-1849), governor-in-chief of British North America from 1835 to 1838
Goswell Road
Named for builder Egvard A. Goswell (1883-1971), who promoted the Kirkfield Memorial Park
Goulding Street
Named for pioneer Walter Llewellyn Goulding
1910
Goulet Street
Named for Maxime Goulet, employee of the Hudson’s Bay Company, a member of the provincial legislative assembly (1878) and cabinet minister in 1880
1891
Gowler Road
Named for pioneers of the Headingley area Oliver Gowler and wife Mary Gowler (1812-1866)
Graham Avenue
Named for fur trader James Allan Graham
before 1908
Grandin Street
Named for cleric Vital Justin Grandin; see also Bishop Grandin Boulevard and St. Vital Road
before 1908
Grant Avenue
Probably named for Cuthbert James Grant. The original street was quite short, from Oak to Waterloo Streets; in 1896, it was extended west to Lindsay Street, then to Lanark Street in 1910, to Cambridge by 1916, and to Kenaston Boulevard by 1929; between 1952 and 1957, it was widened and extended east, reaching Pembina Highway in the mid 1960s; see also Semple Avenue, Seven Oaks Avenue, and Hedley Avenue
1881
Mosaic, Harry Shave, MHS
Granville Street
Named for George Levenson-Gower Granville (1815-1891), secretary of state for colonies, 1868-1870 and 1886, secretary of foreign affairs, 1870-1874 and 1880-1885
1882
Grassie Boulevard
Named for real estate investor William Grassie
Greenway Crescent
Named for Manitoba Premier Thomas Greenway
Greenwood Place
Named for farmer Greenwood Briercliffe; formerly Boyce Street
MHS
Grenfell Boulevard
Named for Wilfred Grenfell (1865-1940), an English Protestant medical missionary to Labrador and Newfoundland in the early 1900s; formerly Granville Boulevard
MHS
Grey Street
Named for Albert Henry George Grey (1851-1917), Governor-General of Canada from 1904 to 1911, whose donation of a cup for football is recognized by the Grey Cup; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard; formerly Minto Street
1906
Grierson Avenue
Named for Elizabeth Grierson (1894-1984) who owned the land on which the street was subsequently developed; formerly St. Georges Avenue
1959
MHS
Grosvenor Avenue
Named for A. G. Grosvenor, an early merchant in Winnipeg (1876); a portion was renamed from Haskins Avenue in March 1959
1909 (renamed 1913)
Grove Street
J. B. Rudnyckyj suggested the street was named for author Frederick Philip Grove; this is improbable because the street was named before Grove came to prominence
before 1908
Mosaic, MHS
Guay Street
Named for Abraham Guay
Guelph Street
Named for a town in Ontario 59 miles west of Toronto, founded in 1827 by John Gault and named by him in honor of the British royal family; formerly Victoria Street
before 1908
Guilbault Street
Named for contractor and alderman Joseph Edouard Zepherin Guilbault
1912
Guildford Street
Guy Savoie Drive
Named for businessman Guy Marcel Savoie
MHS
Street name
Notes
Year created
Haddow Street
Named for municipal official John Haddow
Haggart Avenue
Named for lawyer Alexander Haggart
MHS
Haig Avenue
Named for Earl Douglas Haig (1861-1928), a British military commander during the First World War
Hall Road
Named for lawyer Gavin Allan Hall
Hallet Street
Named for William Hallet (1811-1872), acknowledged leader of the English Plainsmen
before 1908
Halliday Bay
Named for Daniel Cameron Halliday, Mayor of St. Boniface in 1934, who died in office
Ham Street
Named for journalist George Henry Ham
Hamel Avenue
Named for Ovid Hamel who owned and farmed the land through which this street now passes
Hamelin Street
Named for politician Joseph Hamelin
Hamilton Avenue
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Charles Edward Hamilton
Hamilton Place
Renamed to Bredin Drive in 1913
MHS
Handsart Boulevard
Haney Street
Named for Michael John Haney (1854-1927), the civil engineer who was in charge of laying the Canadian Pacific Railway line through the Fraser River canyon, from 1883 to 1885
Hansford Road
Named for St. Boniface Mayor Edwin Arnold Hansford (1953-1954) and alderman (1932-1945)
1971
Hargrave Street
Named for Joseph James Hargrave; formerly Charlotte Street
before 1908
Harkness Street
Named for Peter Harkness, first alderman of the City of Winnipeg
1883
Harmon Avenue
Named for fur trader Daniel William Harmon
Harold Street
Renamed to Duncan Street in March 1959
Harriet Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen,” believed by Vince Leah to be Harriet Jane Barber Graham (1863-1962), daughter of Edmund Lorenzo Barber
before 1908
Harris Boulevard
Named for Alanson Harris (1816-1894), the first farm implements agent on the prairies, in 1879
Harrow Street
Named for a town 11 miles northwest of London, England; formerly Amelia Street, Louise Street, Mitchell Street
Harstone Road
Named for fuel dealer Frederick Stevenson Harstone
MHS
Hart Avenue
Named for cleric Thomas Hart; formerly Stewart Avenue
1904
Harvard Avenue
Named for Harvard University; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Mount Allison Bay, Oxford Street, Purdue Bay, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
MHS
Haskins Avenue
This road that ran westward from Cambridge Street was renamed to Grosvenor Avenue in March 1959
Haultain Crescent
Named for Frederick William Gordon Haultain (1857-1942), early Commissioner of the North West Territories
Hay Street
Named for politician Edward Henry George Gunter Hay
Hayes Street
Named for the Hayes Island Post, second trading post of the Hudson’s Bay Company, established by Charles Bayly in 1672-1673 at the mouth of the Moose River on James Bay
Headmaster Row
Named for headmasters of the nearby Knowles Centre
MHS
Hearne Avenue
Named for explorer Samuel Hearne
Rue Hebert
Named for businessman Joseph Pierre Hébert (1853-1934)
MHS
Hector Avenue
Named for the sailing ship Hector which brought the first Scottish immigrants to Nova Scotia in 1773; formerly Hetherington Avenue
Hedley Avenue
Renamed Grant Avenue
MHS
Henday Bay
Named for explorer Anthony Henday who was sent by the Hudson’s Bay Company into the continental interior in 1754, becoming the first white man to see the Canadian Rockies
Henderson Highway
Named for automotive pioneer Samuel Robert Henderson; formerly Kelvin Street, East Kildonan Road
Henry Avenue
Possibly named for William Alexander Henry (1816-1888), Father of Canadian Confederation and judge of the Supreme Court of Canada from 1875 to 1888
before 1908
Hertford Boulevard
Later renamed Lamont Boulevard
MHS
Hervo Street
Named for Mathurin Hervo (1880-1852), who immigrated to Winnipeg from France in 1900, served as alderman in Fort Garry in the 1940s
Hespeler Avenue
Named for William Hespeler
1906
Higgins Avenue
Named for pioneer merchant John Higgins; formerly Victoria Avenue
1876
Hill Street
Named for railwayman James Jerome Hill; see also Hill Street, Shaughnessy Street, Stephen Street and Van Horne Street
Hillhouse Road
Named for lawyer Thomas Paterson Hillhouse
Hind Avenue
Named for explorer Henry Youle Hind
Hindley Avenue
Named for Elizabeth Hindley, wife of Thomas Berry
Hoban Street
Named for Irish immigrant James Patrick Hoban (1887-1957) who worked for the Municipality of Brooklands; formerly Herbert Street
1964
Hoddinott Road
Named for early settler Edwin Hoddinott; the original road led to his farm (1883)
Holland Boulevard
Holt Drive
Named for Herbert Samuel Holt (1856-1941), financier, superintendent of the Canadian Pacific Railway from 1883 to 1884, contractor 1884 to 1892, and banker 1902 to 1941
Home Street
Named for Manitoba sheriff Robert Henry Home
Honeyman Avenue
Named for lawyer Egbert Douglas Honeyman, Winnipeg alderman from 1929 to 1939; formerly part of Broadway
1967
Hopwood Drive
Named for businessman Warren Jackson “Jack” Hopwood
Hosmer Boulevard
Named for Edward Arthur Christopher Hosmer; formerly Park Row West
MHS, Mosaic
Howard Avenue
Named for politician Thomas Howard
Howden Road
Named for politician John Power Howden
Howe Avenue
Named for Nova Scotia journalist and politician Joseph Howe (1804-1873)
Hudson Street
Named for explorer Henry Hudson (?-1611)
Hugo Street
Named for John Hugo Ross, early real estate developer who lost his life in the 1912 sinking of the RMS Titanic, son of businessman Arthur Wellington Ross
before 1908
Harry Shave, Winnipeg Free Press 16 February 1965
Humboldt Avenue
Named for German explorer and scientist Baron Friedrich Heinrich Alexander von Humboldt (1769-1859)
Hunt Avenue
Named for lawyer and writer Frank Larned Hunt
1959
Hunter Street
Renamed to McKenzie Street in 1894
MHS
Huntington Drive
Named for lawyer and politician Lucius Seth Huntington (1827-1886)
Huntleigh Street
Formerly Vicar Street
MHS
Hurst Way
Named for engineer William Donald Hurst
MHS
Husky Avenue
Formerly Watt Avenue
1963
Hutchings Street
Named for businessman Elisha Frederick Hutchings
Hutton Street
Formerly Arlington Street
1963
Hyde Street
Formerly Highland Street
1964
Street name
Notes
Year created
Ian Place
Named for Ian Barry, son of North Kildonan councillor Charles Barry
Ike Kraut Place
Named for Charleswood businessman Ike Kraut
MHS
Ingersoll Street
Named for Major Thomas Ingersoll, father of Laura Secord, who fought in the War of 1812
1881
Inglis Street
Named for physician Maxwell Stevenson Inglis
MHS
Inkster Boulevard
J. B. Rudnyckyj says the street is named for John Inkster, whereas historian Harry Shave believes it is named for sheriff Colin Inkster; formerly Sharp Boulevard
1903
Irene Street
Formerly Maud Street
1882 (renamed 1893)
Isabel Street
Named for Isabella Ross, daughter of HBC employee and historian Alexander Ross; formerly Prairie Street
1874 (renamed 1893)
Isbister Street
Named for lawyer and educator Alexander Kennedy Isbister
Isbister Place
Renamed to Webb Place in March 1959
Street name
Notes
Year created
Named for Jack Oliver Blick; formerly Rapelje Avenue
2010
Jack Hawthorn Bay
Named for Knowles Centre Superintendent Jack Hawthorn
MHS
Named for John A. Kolt
MHS
Formerly James Road
1963
Jackson Avenue
Named for physician Frederick Jackson, renamed from Mason Avenue in March 1959
Formerly Shaughnessy Avenue
1963
Named for journalist James Ross
before 1908
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Richard Willis Jameson
Named for Edward Worrell Jarvis
1881
Jefferson Avenue
Formerly Randolph Avenue
Named for the wife of businessman Arthur Wellington Ross
1882
Named for cleric and educator John Black
Formerly Bruce Road
1963
Named for John Steven Hirsch
MHS
Johnson Avenue
Named for Red River recorder Francis Godschall Johnson; formerly Jackson Avenue
1906
Named for French Canadian explorer Louis Jolliet (1645-1700)
Named for cleric David T. Jones; formerly Norman Street
Formerly Gordon Street
1963
Named for Daniel Juba, Mayor of Brooklands in the 1950s; formerly Eric Street
MHS
Commemorates the 60th anniversary (Diamond Jubilee) of the reign of Queen Victoria, in 1897
Named for Monseigneur Jubinville, parish priest in St. Boniface from 1917 to 1940
Juno Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen”
before 1908
Street name
Notes
Year created
Kane Avenue
Named for artist Paul Kane
Kapelus Drive
Named for West St. Paul municipal councilor Teofil Kapelus (1903-1999)
MHS
Karen Street
Named for Karen Quiring, daughter of the street’s developer; see also Quiring Bay and Elaine Place
Kate Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen”
before 1908
Kavanagh Street
Named for cleric Francois Kavanagh
Kay Crescent
Named for W. Kay, alderman in St. James-Assiniboia from 1958 to 1972
Keating Avenue
Named for pioneer geologist William H. Keating (1799-1840) who accompanied a US expedition to the Red River Valley in 1823, and who later postulated the existence of Lake Agassiz on much of the North American interior during the last glaciation
Mosaic, MHS
Named for lawyer William Keenleyside, employed by the Swift Canadian Company in 1912
1906
Formerly Dundas Street
MHS
Named for fur trader George Keith
Keith Black Bay
Named for Knowles Centre Superintendent Keith Black
MHS
Named for explorer Henry Kelsey (1670-1728)
Kelvin Boulevard
Named for English physicist and mathematician William Thomson Kelvin (1824-1907); formerly Birds Hill Road
1909
Named for Frederick Eugene Kenaston who was President of the Tuxedo Park Company which developed the Tuxedo part of Winnipeg
1907
MHS
Named for Winnipeg Mayor William Nassau Kennedy
1881
Named for W. Kenny, alderman of St. Boniface from 1911 to 1914, and from 1916 to 1919
Formerly Crescent Road
1963
Kildonan Drive
Formerly East Kildonan River Drive
?
Formerly Killarney Avenue, Killarney Street
1963
Named for American journalist and poet Alfred Joyce Kilmer (1866-1918)
Formerly Melrose Avenue
1963
Named for cleric John Mark King
1881
Kingsbury Avenue
Formerly Kildonan Avenue
1959
Named for engineer William Kingsford (1819-1898), who was employed as a civic engineer on the Hudson Bay Railway
Formerly Colquhoun Street, Ethel Street
MHS
Named for the birthplace of entrepreneur William Mackenzie, whose son Roderick John Mackenzie developed the area of Kirkfield Park in which this street is located
Formerly Wellington Avenue
1963
Named for Stephan A. Kisil, an early East Kildonan storekeeper and one of the founders of Holy Eucharist Ukrainian Catholic Church
Named for businessman Norman Wolfred Kittson
before 1908
Knowles Avenue
Named for William Alfred “Wilfred” Knowles, namesake of the Knowles School for Boys (Knowles Centre) at the junction of Henderson Highway and Knowles Avenue; see also Wilfred Knowles Bay; formerly Henderson Avenue
1963
Probably named for carpenter Thorwald Knudsen who built houses on the street
c1904
MHS
Named for municipal official Chaim Nachman Kushner
MHS
Street name
Notes
Year created
Formerly Beliveau Street
1963
Named for pioneer Jean Baptiste Lagimodière; see also Gaboury Place
1971
Laidlaw Boulevard
Named for lawyer and municipal councillor Thomas Walter Laidlaw
Formerly Osborne Street
1963
Named for physician Joseph Honore Octave Lambert
Lamont Boulevard
Named for grain industry executive Cecil Alexander Ralph Lamont; formerly Hertford Boulevard
MHS
Formerly St. Joseph Road
1963
Named for Lanark, the county town of Lanarkshire, Scotland; see also Renfrew Street
1910
Named for Quebec judge Pierre Amand Landry (1846-1916)
Named for cleric Louis Philippe Adelard Langevin
MHS
Named for James A. Lang; formerly Ness Street
1874
Named for Henry Charles Keith Petty-Fitzmaurice, the Fifth Marquis of Lansdowne (1845-1927), who served as Governor General of Canada from 1883 to 1888. Other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard
1903
Larche Avenue
Named for Second World War Flight Sergeant Joseph Armand Larche (1918-1942)
Named for politician Alphonse Alfred Clement LaRivière
Named for municipal official Walter Peter Larsen; formerly Montrose Avenue
1963
Named for a pioneering Bird’s Hill storekeeper who made bread using local flour, in the 1870s
Named for Canadian Prime Minister Wilfrid Laurier (1841-1919)
Named for Laval Drive; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Mount Allison Bay, Oxford Street, Purdue Bay, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
Lavallee Avenue
Named for community activist Louis Lavallee and other members of the Lavallee family
Named for humorist and educator Stephen B. Leacock (1869-1944)
Named for Richard Lee, long-time resident of Fort Garry; formerly Lancashire Boulevard
Named for Jules Léger (1913-1980), who served as Governor General of Canada from 1973 to 1978; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard
MHS
Leighton Avenue
Named for Thomas Henry Leighton (1864-1924), an early market gardener in East Kildonan
Named for Leila Neil, neighbor to developer Robert N. Lower; see Lowery Bay
Possibly named for lawyer and politician Lendrum McMeans; see Canora Street
before 1908
MHS
Named for boot and shoe merchant George Gilmour Lennox
Named for Lenore McMeans, daughter of lawyer and politician Lendrum McMeans; see McMeans Avenue
Leon Bell Drive
Named for musician and pharmacist Leon Bell
Leo Novak Street
Renamed from Albany Street in March 1959 to commemorate a young medical technician who died rescuing two boys from the Assiniboine River on 23 March 1958
Named for Metis leader Ambroise Dydime Lepine; formerly Provencher Avenue
1963
Named for soldier, merchant and politician James Leslie (1786-1873)
1907
Named for Francois Gaston Duc de Levis (1720-1787), who succeeded Marquis de Montcalm at Quebec, 1759
1881
Named for American judge Abner Lewis; formerly Lark Street
1882 (renamed 1893)
Formerly Wallace Road
1963
Formerly Lillie Street
renamed 1898
Lily Street
Believed by Vince Leah to be named for Lillie (Lily) Barber Sparrow (1870-1959), daughter of Edmund Lorenzo Barber
Named for the family name of the Earls of Crawford who were chiefs of the Scottish Lindsay clan
1906
Linwood Street
Named for William Linwood, early public works inspector in St. James
Lipton Street
Named for British tea merchant Thomas Lipton (1850-1931)
1903
Lisgar Avenue
Named for John Young, Baron of Lisgar (1807-1876), who was Governor-General of Canada from 1869 to 1872; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard
before 1908
Lismer Crescent
Named for Canadian painter Arthur Lismer (1885-1969)
Lizzie Street
Formerly Montefiore Street
MHS
Lock Street
Formerly Louis Street
MHS
Lockston Avenue
Renamed from Roblin Avenue in March 1959
1959
Lockwood Street
Formerly Fisher Street
MHS
Lodge Avenue
Named for Deer Lodge, the home of fur trader and politician James McKay
MHS
Logan Avenue
Named for Robert Logan. According to Mary Hislop, the street was named for Winnipeg Mayor Alexander Logan; see also Alexander Avenue
1872
Lombard Avenue
1898
Lombardy Avenue
Formerly Lorse Avenue
1893
London Street
Renamed from Wallace Street in March 1959
1959
Lord Avenue
Named for John Keast Lord (1818-1872), soldier and member of the Boundary Commission that mapped the border between Canada and the USA
Lorette Avenue
Formerly Lorne Avenue
MHS
Lorne Avenue
Named for John George Edward Henry Douglas Sutherland Campbell, the Duke of Argyll, also known as the Marquis of Lorne, son-in-law to Queen Victoria, who served as Governor General of Canada from 1878 to 1883; see also Argyle Street, Louise Street and Princess Street; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard
1881
Loudoun Road
Formerly University Street
1960s
MHS
Rue Louis Riel
Named for Louis Riel, whose actions led to the formation of Manitoba, in 1870
Louise Street
Named for Princess Louise, daughter of Queen Victoria and wife to the Marquis of Lorne; see also Argyle Street, Lorne Avenue and Princess Street; renamed to Martha Street in March 1959
1874
Lowery Bay
Named for Robert N. Lowery, an early 1900s developer in East Kildonan; see Leila Avenue
Lusted Street
Named for carriage maker Thomas Lusted
1876
Luxton Avenue
Named for William Fisher Luxton; formerly Athole Avenue
1882 (renamed 1915)
Lydia Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen”
1873
Lyle Street
Formerly Berlin Street, the name was changed in the early days of the First World War due to anti-German sentiment of its residents
1914
Lynn Avenue
Renamed to Coulter Avenue in March 1959
Lyon Street
Named by land developer Geoffrey Hitzler Walton for his wife’s family, who had arrived in Manitoba in the early 1880s
Street name
Notes
Year created
Macaulay Crescent
Named for Angus Macaulay, Secretary-Treasurer of North Kildonan from 1945 to 1962
1967
Macdonald Avenue
There are two versions for this street name; J. B. Rudnyckyj claims it is named for Canadian prime minister John A. Macdonald (1815-1891) whereas historian Harry Shave says it commemorates cleric Robert Macdonald
1873
Machray Avenue
Named for cleric Robert Machray; formerly Charlotte Avenue
1876
Macklin Avenue
Named for early newspaperman Edward Hamilton Macklin; see also Dafoe Road, McCurdy Street, Payne Street and Richardson Avenue
Mager Drive
Named for Victor Mager, first Mayor of St. Vital
Magnus Avenue
Named for farmer Magnus Brown
1894
Mandeville Street
Manley Avenue
Named for George H. Manley, chief accountant in the Winnipeg comptroller’s office; formerly Newall Avenue
1966
Maple Street
Named for the maple trees growing along its course, planted there by the Logan and Fonseca families; formerly Maple Avenue
1876, 1893
Marion Street
Named for Roger Marion, reeve of St. Boniface in 1888, and 1889 to 1890
Market Street
The street that once ran past the Winnipeg market near City Hall; formerly Alexander Street
1876 (renamed 1898)
Named for University of Manitoba educator Edgar Kenny Marshall
Named for Mary Logan; formerly Mary Street
1893
Named for surveyor Alphonse Fortunat Martin
before 1908
Paul Martin Drive
Named for municipal official Paul Emile Martin
MHS
Originally Boundary Street because it was the western boundary of Winnipeg; formerly Boundary Street
1874 (renamed 1891)
Mason Avenue
Renamed to Jackson Avenue in March 1959
Named for judge Thomas Graham Mathers
1898
Mosaic, MHS
Named for cleric Alexander Matheson; formerly Armetta Avenue
Formerly Sinclair Street
1963
May Street
Formerly Margaret Street
1876
Maybank Drive
Named for politician Ralph Maybank
MHS
Mayfair Place
Formerly Elswood Place, named for judge Albert Elswood Richards
MHS
McAdam Avenue
Formerly Dunfra Avenue, McArthur Avenue
MHS
Named for banker Duncan McArthur
1882
Named for pioneer Alexander McBeth
Named for early school inspector H. D. McCalman
1906
Named for Winnipeg Mayor William Forsythe McCreary
Named for pioneer newspaperman Wesley McCurdy; see also Dafoe Road, Macklin Avenue, Payne Street and Richardson Avenue
Named for businessman Andrew McDermot; formerly Owen Avenue
1873
Named for lawyer William McDougall
McFarlane Street
Formerly King Street
1876
Named for journalist and politician D’Arcy McGee (1825-1868); formerly Portland Street
1893
Named for McGill University; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, Mount Allison Bay, Oxford Street, Purdue Bay, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
Named for provincial highway commissioner Archibald McGillivray; formerly Macdonald Road
1965
MHS
Named for Manitoba Lieutenant-Governor James Duncan McGregor
1874
Named for market gardener Thomas McIntosh (1833-1913), on whose property the street was laid
1904
Named for James McIvor, one of the first school teachers in Kildonan
There are two alternate explanations of the name; according to J. B. Rudnyckyj, the street commemorates Angus McKay, who arrived at the Red River Settlement in 1813; another possibility is that it recognizes early politician Angus McKay
McKelvey Street
Named for Howard McKelvey (1909-?), alderman for Winnipeg ward 2 from 1947 to 1958; renamed from Thompson Street in March 1959
1959
McKenzie Street
Named for lawyer Frederick McKenzie; renamed from Hunter Street in 1894
1881 (renamed 1894)
McLaughlin Avenue
Believed to be named for fur trader John McLaughlin
MHS
McLean Street
Named for Daniel McLean
1882
McLeod Avenue
Named for pioneer Donald McLeod, whose original cabin site was at the intersection of McLeod and Henderson Highway
McMahon Place
Named for municipal councillor Louis Albert “Bert” McMahon
MHS
McMeans Avenue
Named for lawyer and politician Lendrum McMeans; see also Lenore Street and Lendrum Street
McMicken Street
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Alexander McMicken
1876
McMillan Avenue
Named for Manitoba Lieutenant-Governor Daniel Hunter McMillan
before 1908
McNaughton Avenue
Named for Canadian Lieutenant General A. G. L. McNaughton (1887-?); see also Montgomery Avenue and Wavell Avenue
1942
McNichol Street
Named for Andrew Robert McNichol
1912
McNulty Crescent
Named for physician Patrick Herman McNulty, who once had a home in the area
MHS
McPhail Street
Mosaic suggests it was named for Alexander James McPhail, President of the Saskatchewan Wheat Pool from 1924 to 1931; alternatively, it may commemorate local realtor Wildrick Kenneth McPhail
1906
McPhillips Street
Named for land surveyor George McPhillips; the street was formerly the two mile limit of the Selkirk Settlers’ lots, which started at the Red River and extended from it for four miles; the first two miles were reserved for buildings and residential pursuits; beyond the limit was pasture land
1876
McQuaker Drive
Named for W. M. McQuaker, owner of property west of the Odd Fellows Home, who resided on this street
McTavish Street
Named for William McTavish (?-1870), governor of Rupert’s Land when it was transferred to Canada, 1870
1872
McWilliam Avenue
See Pacific Avenue
1881
Meade Street
Named for Rollin Pierce Meade, editor of The Nor’Wester newspaper when Louis Riel siezed it, 1869
1876
Memorial Boulevard
The street that passes Winnipeg’s Cenotaph commemorating the dead of the First World War
1926
MHS
Rue Messier
Named for Catholic cleric Father Messier (?-1880), who assisted Archibishop Tache in the funeral mass of Louis Riel
Mickle Avenue
Named for lawyer Charles Julius Mickle
Middle Gate
The street name commemorates the gates that were erected at its entrance; see also East Gate and West Gate; formerly Central Avenue
1910
MHS
Midland Street
Named for the Midland Railway tracks which ran close to this street
1911
Midmar Avenue
Named for a pioneer family of the Brooklands area
Midwinter Avenue
Named for Charles Midwinter; formerly Vaudreuil Avenue
MHS
Mighton Avenue
Named for early landowner and market gardener Samuel Robert Mighton (1857-1945)
1905
Mosaic, MHS
Miller Road
Named for James Andrew Miller
Milton Street
Apparently named for William Milton, proprietor of Milton’s Bakery in the 1920s
1881
Minto Street
Named for Governor-General of Canada Gilbert John Elliott Murray, Fourth Earl of Minto (1845-1914); other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard; formerly John Street (1878-1883), Thomas Street (1883-1904)
1904
Moir Avenue
Named for educator James Hilton Moir, who in the 1930s was Principal of East Kildonan Collegiate (now Lord Wolseley School)
Mollard Road
Named for Minnie Bell Mollard (1871-1965, wife of Alfred Mollard), who at 93 years of age was its oldest resident when the street was named
1964
Free Press, 26 December 1964
Molson Street
Originally Elmwood Street, renamed in March 1959 for F. W. Molson (1860-1929), early director of the Canadian Pacific Railway
1959
Monck Avenue
Named for Charles Stanley Monck, Fourth Viscount Monck (1819-1894), who was Governor-General of Canada from 1867 to 1868; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard
MHS
Moncton Avenue
Named for General Robert Moncton, who served with General James Wolfe, and died on the Plains of Abraham, 1759; see also Montcalm Crescent
Montcalm Street
Renamed to Archibald Street in March 1959
Montcalm Crescent
Named for General Louis Joseph de Montcalm (1712-1759), who defended Quebec against the English, dying on the Plains of Abraham, 1759; see also Moncton Avenue
Montgomery Avenue
Named for British military commander Bernard Law Montgomery, First Viscount Montgomery of Alamein (1887-?)
1948
Montrose Street
Named for David Lindsay, Duke of Montrose, Fifth Earl of Crawford (1440-1495)
1906
Moore Avenue
Named for Canadian labour leader Thomas Moore (1878-1946)
1944
Moorgate Street
Morier Avenue
Named for Oscar Morier, an early 20th century resident of St. Vital
Morley Avenue
Named for Arthur Willans Morley; formerly Gladstone Street
1893
Moroz Street
Named for brothers who were casualities in the Second World War: Flying Officer Hrykory “Harry” Moroz (1917-1944) and Trooper Michael ”Mike” Moroz (1916-1942)
23, MHS
Morrison Street
Named for municipal official Robert Farthing Morrison
MHS
Mountain Avenue
Honours the first Anglican Bishop to visit Western Canada, George Jehoshaphat Mountain (1789-1863), in 1844
Harry Shave, Manitoba Pageant, The Cradle of Winnipeg History, Volume 3, Number 1, September 1957
Mount Allison Bay
Named for Mount Allison University; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Oxford Street, Purdue Bay, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
Mountbatten Avenue
Mount Royal Road
Named for a property near this street owned by Donald Alexander Smith (Lord Strathcona)
Named for fur trader Edward Mowat
1961
Named for businessman Robert Muir
1966
Named for Stewart Mulvey; formerly Mary Avenue
1893
Street is located on land donated by Archibald Pritchard in the late 1800s
Named for George Fraser Munroe, long-time lawyer and secretary for the municipality of Kildonan
Named for Nova Scotia historian and politician Beamish Murdock (1800-1876); formerly Lorette Road
1959
Murray Avenue
Named for Donald Murray, who arrived with Selkirk settlers in 1815; renamed to Dyson Avenue in March 1959
1892
Street name
Notes
Year created
Nairn Avenue
Named for Stephen Nairn; formerly Lemoine Avenue
1906
MHS
Nanton Boulevard
Named for banker Augustus Meredith Nanton; formerly Pipe Boulevard
MHS
Nassau Street
Formerly Llewellyn Street, Henry Street (1873)
1908
MHS
Nathaniel Street
Formerly Boyd Street
MHS
Named (with a misspelling) for farmer Thomas Naven (1858-1947)
MHS, 43
This is a former block of Smith Street north from Assiniboine Avenue to Broadway, commemorating HMCS Chippawa along its length
1985
Neil Place
The street runs through land brought in 1841 by Neil Campbell from the Hudson’s Bay Company
Mosaic, MHS
Named for lawyer Morton H. Nemy (1925-?)
Named for financier Arthur James Nesbitt (1875-?)
Ness Avenue
Named for the Ness family, likely Frank Ness, an early settler in this area of Winnipeg; family members Garnett Valentine Ness (?-1915) and V. W. Ness were veterans in the First World War
1898
Mosaic, MHS
Netley Avenue
Formerly Selkirk Avenue
1893
Named for English cleric John Henry Newman (1801-1890)
Newton Avenue
Rudnyckyj suggested the street was named for businessman Charles Henry Newton but Vince Leah, in his history of West Kildonan, indicated it was named for Josiah Newton, who in the early 1920s lived at the corner of Main Street and Newton; formerly Plessis Street
1881 (renamed 1906)
Commemorates the 1812 battle of Queenston Heights, fought by General Isaac Brock, near Niagara Falls, Ontario; see also Brock Street and Queenston Street
1906
Nicklin Street
Named for Winnipeg Blue Bomber football player Jeff Albert Nicklin (1914-1940), who was killed in action during the Second World War
1959
Mosaic, MHS
Named for explorer Jean Nicolet (1598-1642)
Alleged to be named for Donald A. Nightingale, councillor in East Kildonan from 1962 to 1963, and 1969 to 1970
Named for explorer Joseph Claude Boucher, Chevalier de Niverville (1715-1804)
Named for Winnipeg alderman Thomas Nixon
MHS
Named for Manitoba Premier John Norquay
before 1908
MHS
Named for Manitoba Premier Tobias Crawford Norris
1971
Named for a Roman Catholic girls’ school which once occupied a site on the street until it moved to a new location on Academy Road
1891
Notre Dame Avenue East
Renamed to Pioneer Avenue in March 1959
Named for the Nye family that settled in the Middlechurch area; formerly Marjorie Street
1963
Street name
Notes
Year created
Oak Street
Formerly Oak Avenue
1893
Oakdale Drive
Oakwood Avenue
Formerly Parkview Avenue
MHS
Oakwood Place
Renamed to Riverview Place in March 1959
Oberlin Road
Named for Oberlin College. Other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Oxford Street, Purdue Bay, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
Oddy Street
Named for Crispin Oddy, Mayor of Brooklands when it was a rural municipality; formerly Don Street
1959
Olive Street
Oliver Avenue
Formerly Boyle Avenue
1963
Olivia Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen”
before 1908
O’Meara Street
Named for cleric James Dallas O’Meara
Ormiston Road
Named for William Ormiston, alderman in St. Boniface from 1947 to 1952
Osborne Street
Named for soldier William Osborne Smith; formerly Pembina Street
before 1908
Oxford Street
Named for Oxford University; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Purdue Bay, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others; formerly Oxford Avenue
1882, 1893
Street name
Notes
Year created
Pacific Avenue
The street was originally named McWilliam Avenue for a person who represented a Toronto firm, purchasing a land parcel extending from the north side of the Ross estate; the name was changed due to confusion with nearby William Avenue; present name probably commemorates the nearby switching yards of the Canadian Pacific Railway
1881 (renamed 1892)
Mosaic, MHS
Palk Road
Named for Lawrence Palk, former comptroller of the Winnipeg Electric Company; renamed from Park Road in March 1959
1959
Palliser Avenue
Named for explorer John Palliser
Palmer Street
Named for politician George Hastings Palmer
Palmerston Avenue
Named for Henry John Temple, Third Viscount of Palmerston (1784-1865), British Prime Minister from 1855 to 1858, and 1859 to 1865; formerly Ida Avenue
1915
Pandora Avenue
Includes a former portion of Nairn Avenue from Regent Avenue to King Street (1963)
Panet Road
Named for Quebec cleric Bernard C. Panet (1753-1833)
1909
Parent Street
Named for politician Jacques Parent
1882
Park Boulevard
Park Road
Renamed to Palk Road in March 1959
Park Street
Renamed to Bridge Street in March 1959
Park Lane Avenue
Formerly Vopni Avenue
1982
MHS
Parker Avenue
Named for journalist Elizabeth Fulton Parker, who assisted in founding of the YWCA in Winnipeg, the Women’s Canadian Club, and the Alpine Club of Canada
1882
Parkin Avenue
Named for municipal official Arnold Parkin
MHS
Parnell Avenue
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Edward Parnell; renamed from Raymond Avenue in March 1959
1959
Parr Street
Formerly Comloden Street
MHS
Partridge Avenue
Named for market gardener Edmund Partridge
Paterson Street
Named for Manitoba Lieutenant-Governor James Colebrooke Patterson
Patrick Street
Possibly named for cattle dealer and meat packer Patrick Burns (1856-1937); see also Burns Road; formerly Annie Street
1876
Paulley Drive
Named for politician Andrew Russell Paulley
Payne Street
Named for Walter Frederick Payne, member of the East Kildonan school board, 1925 to 1925 and journalist at the Winnipeg Free Press. See also Dafoe Road, Macklin Avenue, McCurdy Street and Richardson Avenue
Peake Avenue
Named for 1960s provincial health inspector Dr. Henry Peake; formerly Maple Avenue
1959
Pearl Street
According to historian Harry Shave, named “after the daughter of a prominent citizen”; formerly Penelope Street
Peary Crescent
Named for American explorer Robert Edwin Peary (1856-1920)
Peguis Drive
Named for Saulteaux chief Peguis
MHS
Pelly Avenue
Renamed from Glendale Avenue in March 1959
1959
Peltier Avenue
Formerly Sargent Avenue
1963
Pembina Highway
Named for Fort Pembina established in North Dakota (then unorganized territory of the United States) in 1801; a trail from Winnipeg leading to the fort became this street
before 1908
Pennefather Bay
Named for physician John Pyne Pennefather; formerly James Street
1963
Penrose Place
Named for pioneer photographer James Penrose
Pentland Street
Named for pioneer Thomas Harry Pentland
Pepperload Crescent
Philip Lee Drive
Named for Lieutenant Governor Philip S. Lee
MHS
Picardy Place
Named for Picardy Confectionary Shop which had headquarters in this area; renamed from St. James Place in March 1959
1959
Pike Crescent
Named for George James Pike (?-1957), school trustee (1928-1931) and councillor (1932-1934) in East Kildonan
Pilgrim Avenue
Named for Ernest Pilgrim (1886-?), early Winnipeg interior decorator, circa 1906
Pinewood Drive
Pioneer Avenue
Commemorates early Winnipeg pioneers who arrived by boats that docked at the foot of nearby Water Avenue; renamed from Notre Dame Avenue East in March 1959
1959
MHS
Playter Street
Formerly Hamilton Street
1963
Plessis Road
Named for cleric Joseph Octave Plessis (1763-1825)
before 1908
Plinguet Street
MHS
Point Douglas Avenue
Named for an area of Winnipeg which, in turn, was named for Thomas Douglas, Fifth Earl of Selkirk, who brought settlers to the Red River area in 1812; see also Douglas Avenue and Selkirk Avenue
MHS
Polson Avenue
Named for farmer Hugh Polson
1882
Poole Crescent
Formerly Shelley Crescent; named for surveyor John Poole, who immigrated from England in 1911
1963
Poplarwood Avenue
Named for poplar trees that are abundant in the area; formerly Hack Avenue
1924
Portage Avenue
Named because it was the road to the town of Portage la Prairie, west of Winnipeg
MHS
Powell Street
Named for Lord Baden Powell (1857-1941), founder of the Boy Scout movement
1882
Prevette Street
Named for Cyril Prevette, East Kildonan school trustee from 1949 to 1950
Prince Street
Named for aboriginal guide William Prince (?-1918)
1874
Prince Edward Street
Formerly Edward Street
MHS
Prince Rupert Avenue
Named for Prince Rupert, the first governor of the Hudson’s Bay Company; see also Rupert Avenue and Rupertsland Avenue
Princess Street
Named for Princess Louise, daughter of Queen Victoria and wife to the Marquis of Lorne; see also Argyle Street, Lorne Avenue and Louise Street
1881
Principal Bay
Named for principals of the nearby Knowles Centre
MHS
Pritchard Avenue
Named for early settler John Pritchard
1875
Prosper Street
Named for Belgian immigrant Prosper Gevaert (1877-1957), who helped to organize the Club Belge; was a St. Boniface alderman (1922-1925)
Provencher Boulevard
Named for cleric Joseph Norbert Provencher
before 1908
Pulford Street
Named for Winnipeg alderman Alfred Henry Pulford, renamed from Royal Street in March 1959
1881 (renamed 1959)
Purdue Bay
Named for Purdue University; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
Street name
Notes
Year created
Qu’Appelle Avenue
Named for the Hudson’s Bay Company trading post Fort Qu’Appelle, located in what is now eastern Saskatchewan; see also Carlton, Edmonton, Ellice, Fort, Garry, York
before 1908
MHS
Queen Street
It was alleged by Mosaic to be named for Winnipeg Mayor John Queen but the name existed before Queen came to prominence
before 1912
Queenston Street
Commemorates the 1812 battle of Queenston Heights, fought by General Isaac Brock, near Niagara Falls, Ontario; see also Brock Street and Niagara Street
1906
Quiring Bay
Named for developer Frank Quiring (1925-2006); see also Karen Street and Elaine Place
Street name
Notes
Year created
Rachel Street
Rachel Street was established from Point Douglas Avenue [now the CPR tracks] going north; it was combined with Annabella in 1908 but the Annabella name was restored in 1913
1873
Radford Street
Formerly Ball Street, Bromhead Street, Madeline Street
MHS
Raleigh Street
Named for dentist John Patrick Raleigh, who owned river lots near the start of this street in the early 1900s
1906
Ralph Campbell Road
Named for D. Ralph Campbell, who served as President of the University of Manitoba from 1976 to 1981
MHS
Raquette Street
Formerly River Street
1963
Ravelston Avenue
Formerly Westgate Avenue
1963
Ray Marius Road
Named for municipal official Raymond Joseph Victor “Ray” Marius
MHS
Raymond Avenue
Renamed to Parnell Avenue in March 1959
Redfern Road
Named for Henry Fredrik Redfern, who lived in the area and was a school board member in the early 1900s
Redwood Avenue
Mary Hislop said it was named for Alfred Boyd who, “in the early days he had a store on the Red river bank which the Indians named Redwood on account of the color it was painted”; Harry Shave clarified that the log store building had a red roof which gave the name
Harry Shave, Manitoba Pageant, The Cradle of Winnipeg History, Volume 3, Number 1, September 1957
Formerly Nairn Avenue
1963
Named for Antony Reichert, an early settler in the North Kildonan area of Winnipeg
Named for Renfrew, the county town of Renfrewshire, near Glasgow, Scotland; see also Lanark Street
1907
Formerly Sunnyside Avenue
1963
According to J. B. Rudnyckyj, said to be named for "an early settler"
Named for Rice University; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
MHS
Named for newspaperman Robert Lorne Richardson; see also Dafoe Road, Macklin Avenue, McCurdy Street and Payne Street
Formerly Classic Avenue
MHS
Named for Louis Riel, whose efforts in 1870 culminated in the formation of the province of Manitoba
MHS
Name for Fort Garry municipal official John Herbert Riley
Named for Thomas E. Risbey, an early settler in this area of Winnipeg
Named for David Ritchie, Winnipeg alderman for Ward 5 (1902-1903)
1966
Named for cleric Joseph-Noel Ritchot
River Avenue
Formerly Water Avenue
1876
Formerly Gurney Avenue, Jasper Avenue, Georgina Avenue
MHS
Riverview Place
Renamed from Oakwood Place in March 1959
1959
Dr. Jose Rizal Way
Renamed for Filipino independence icon Dr. Jose P. Rizal (1861-1896); formerly Kenaston Street (north from Santa Fe Drive)
2007
Rizzuto Bay
Named for Transcona councillor Phil Rizzuto
MHS
Robert Avenue
Renamed to Galt Avenue in March 1959
Named for cleric James Robertson
1882
Named for merchant Thomas D. Robinson
before 1908
Roblin Avenue
Renamed to Lockston Avenue in March 1959
Roblin Boulevard
Named for Manitoba Premier Rodmond Palen Roblin
MHS
Robson Street
Named for Second World War Wishart Robson; formerly Queen Street
before 1908
According to historian Harry Shave, it commemorates E. Roch, who purchased four acres of property in its vicinity, in 1894; an alternative in Mosaic says it is named for William G. P. Roch, an East Kildonan landowner who lived in Saskatchewan
1904
Formerly Rockwood Street, Rockwood Place
1963
Named for a village 8 miles northeast of Guelph, Ontario, birthplace of railway tycoon James Jerome Hill, and once known for its famous Rockwood Academy
before 1908
Formerly Clair Street
1963
Named for American President Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1882-1945)
Named for Rorie Bannatyne, presumably a relative of early pioneer Andrew Graham Ballenden Bannatyne
1874
First named Ross Avenue (October 1881) then renamed Rosser in commemoration of CPR engineer Thomas L. Rosser (February 1903) then subsequently to Rose, to avoid confusion with streets of same name
Named for William Rosewarne, a contractor in the St. Vital area of Winnipeg in the early 1900s
Formerly Garnet Road
1873
MHS
Named for Hudson’s Bay Company employee and historian Alexander Ross (1783-1856) and his family. See also William Avenue
before 1908
Named for Thomas L. Rosser (1836-1910), Chief Engineer of the Canadian Pacific Railway; later renamed Warsaw Avenue
MHS
Named for Rossmere, the residence of early pioneers Malcolm and Roderick Ross
Rouge Road
Formerly Ferry Road
1963
Roux Avenue
Changed to Sherwood Place
1940
Rover Avenue
Formerly Minnie Street, Regent Avenue
1881
MHS
Rowand Avenue
Named for John Rowand, who built the estate of Donald Alexander Smith (Lord Strathcona) in west Winnipeg
Royal Street
Renamed to Pulford Street in March 1959
Ruby Street
Named for Ruby Henderson, daughter of real estate developer James Belfry Henderson
Rupert Avenue
Named for Prince Rupert, first governor of the Hudson’s Bay Company; see also Prince Rupert Avenue and Rupertsland Avenue; formerly R Street
1872 (renamed 1898)
Rupertsland Avenue
Named for the area given in 1670 to the Hudson’s Bay Company
Rutherford Street
Formerly Buchanan Street, it was renamed in 1959 for pioneering lumberman Thomas Rutherford
1959
40, MHS
Rutland Street
Ryan Street
Named for Winnipeg mayor Thomas Ryan (1849-?)
Street name
Notes
Year created
Named for an early girls’ school in the area; formerly Mac Street
St. James Place
Renamed to Picardy Place in March 1959
St. James Street
Formerly St. James Avenue
1893
Named for nearby St. John’s Cathedral, which was named in 1853 by Bishop David Anderson
1881
Named for St. Mary’s Church established in 1869 in a cottage owned by William Drever, later purchased by the Roman Catholic church under Archbishop Tache. In 1873, the Hudson’s Bay Company gave land to the church to construct a more permanent structure, completed in 1875
1881
St. Matthews Avenue
Commemorates St. Matthew’s Anglican Church at the corner of this street and Maryland Street; formerly Livinia Street, Livinia Avenue
1881 (renamed 1893, 1913)
J. B. Rudnyckyj suggested it was named for cleric Vital Justin Grandin; see also Grandin Street and Bishop Grandin Boulevard
Sackville Street
Named for Mrs. George B. Salter of Port Hope, Ontario, an aunt of lumberman Theodore Arthur Burrows
before 1908
Prominent, Winnipeg Free Press 27 January 1973
Named for John Sutherland Sanderson, first person to file for a farm in Manitoba, on 1 July 1872
1906
Named for politician H. E. Sanford, member of the Canadian Senate from 1887 to 1899, director of the Portage and Westbourne Railway, now part of the Canadian Pacific Railway; formerly Windsor Street
1913
Sanford Fleming Road
Named for Sandford Fleming (1827-1915). Note that, for reasons known, the name is misspelled on the street name
MHS
Named for municipal official Joseph Henry Sansome; formerly Tache Avenue
1963
Named for politician Saul Alecs Miller
MHS
Named for Hugh Hamilton Saunderson, who served as President of the University of Manitoba from 1954 to 1970
MHS
Named for Manitoba Lieutenant-Governor John Christian Schultz
1872
Named by Lord Selkirk settlers (1812) in memory of their Scottish homeland; formerly Scott Street
1893
Formerly Scott Avenue
MHS
Named for soldier Thomas Scott, protagonist of Louis Riel; formerly Joseph Street
1875 (renamed 1913)
Seel Avenue
Named for municipal official Donald Seel
?
MHS
Named for Gerhard W. Seier, owner of property and surroundings
1959
Named for Thomas Douglas, Fifth Earl of Selkirk; see also Douglas Avenue and Point Douglas Avenue
1883
Named for Selwyn College at Cambridge University; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Yale Avenue, and others
1903
Named for fur trader Robert Semple; see also Seven Oaks Avenue and Grant Avenue
1903
Semple Street
Renamed to Cochrane Street in 1959
Named for pioneer and fur trader Andrew Setter
Named for the 1816 Seven Oaks Battle between colonists from Lord Selkirk’s settlement, led by Robert Semple, and Metis under Cuthbert James Grant; see also Grant Avenue and Semple Avenue; formerly Kenilworth Avenue
Shaftesbury Boulevard
Named for Anthony Ashley Cooper (1801-1885), Seventh Earl of Shaftesbury, who in 1842 introduced laws that freed women and children from working in coal mines.
Named for Thomas George, First Baron of Shaughnessy (1853-1923), a member of the group which built the Canadian Pacific Railway into Winnipeg in 1881, and President of the company from 1899 to 1918. See also Hill Street, Stephen Street and Van Horne Street
1903
Shelley Crescent
Renamed to Poole Crescent in 1963
Named for soldier William Sheppard
1882
Sherbourne Street
Formerly Sherbourne Avenue
1893
Named originally for James Mulligan who operated a ferry across the Assiniboine River at about the place where the Misericordia Hospital is located today; renamed 14th Street South in 1891, back to Mulligan in 1893, and to Sherbrook in 1897; formerly Mulligan Street, Nena Street, Quelch Street
1874
Named for banker and poet Francis Joseph Sherman (1871-1926)
Sherwood Place
Formerly Roux Avenue, this street is believed to be named for Canadian soldier and diplomat Sherwood Lett (1895-1964)
Shore Street
Formerly Shore Avenue
1893
Sidebottom Drive
Named for real estate salesman Tom Sidebottom
MHS
Named for Winnipeg alderman Charles Edward Simonite, of the firm Argue & Simonite Company; formerly Beaumont Street
1965
Named for pioneer Robert Simpson, who established a market garden in East Kildonan
Named for early land surveyor Duncan Sinclair; formerly Ewart Street
1874
Named for Harry Slater, early settler on property where the street is now located in North Kildonan
Named for dry goods merchant and postmaster Thomas Sly (1878-1963), who was a West Kildonan alderman in the 1930s
Named for politician James Smart, a member of the Greenway government of 1881
1881
Named for Donald Alexander Smith, an official of the Hudson’s Bay Company
1882
Named for grain commissioner Matthew Snow; formerly Thurso Street
1959
Softley Road
Named for educator and municipal official Harry Lorne “King” Softley
MHS
Named for educator John Beaufort Somerset
Named for school board secretary-treasurer Barbara Southall and members of her family
Formerly Roseberry Avenue
MHS
Named for James Spence; formerly Carey Street
1893
Named for Alice Wilhelmina Hawkins Sprague
1919
Mosaic, MHS
Formerly Smith Street
1963
Spruce Street
Formerly Hallet Street
1882 (renamed 1893)
MHS, 50
Named for athlete Frank Stack
MHS
Stafford Street
Named for Sir Ralph de Stafford, 1st Earl of Stafford (1301-1372); see also Wentworth Street
before 1908
Named for William Stalker, a foreman of public works in North Kildonan in the early 1900s
Named for Charles E. Stanier (1870-1949), employee of the National Trust Company from 1905 to 1935
1906
Named for Frederick Arthur, First Baron of Stanley of Preston (1841-1908), who served as Governor General of Canada from 1888 to 1893; in 1893, he donated the Stanley Cup for hockey; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Tweedsmuir Road, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard; formerly Machray Street
1893
Formerly Paisley Street
1963
Formerly Hartford Avenue
1963
Stephen Street
Probably named for George Stephen (1829-1921), a member of the syndicate which built the Canadian Pacific Railway into Winnipeg in 1881. See also Hill Street, Shaughnessy Street and Van Horne Street
1881
MHS
Sterling Lyon Parkway
Named for Manitoba politician Sterling Rufus Lyon
MHS
Stevenson Road
Named for early commercial pilot Frederick Joseph Stevenson, for whom the Winnipeg International Airport was formerly named Stevenson Aerodrome
Stewart Street
Named for James Stewart, an employee of the Hudson’s Bay Company; renamed Warnock Street in March 1959
Stewart Street
This street in the Assiniboia area was named for Alexander Mitchell Stewart, who owned four sections of land where the street is now located
MHS
Stiles Street
Named for clothier Henry Brougham Stiles
1905
Stillwell Street
Named for Henry Stillwell (1878-1960), who arrived in Winnipeg in 1910, forming the Stillwell Upholstering Company
Storie Road
Named for Thomas Storie, an early settler in Old Kildonan who owned land in the early 1900s; formerly Churchill Road
1963
Stornoway Street
Formerly Glen Avenue
1963
Stovel Street
Named for pioneering printers in the Stovel family, among whom was Gordon Stovel
1959
Stradbrook Avenue
Named for Stradbrook Hall in Ireland, the family home of Annie Pim, wife of a Mr. Jones, the land owner who gave the street its name; formerly Maria Avenue, Spadina Avenue (part)
1913
Strathcona Street
Named for businessman Donald Alexander Smith, also known as Lord Strathcona
1904
Strathmillan Road
Named because it was midway between the estate of Lord Strathcona and property at Sturgeon Creek owned by a McMillan
Stuart Avenue
Named for fur trader John Stuart (1779-1847)
Sturgeon Road
Formerly Victoria Street
1963
Sutherland Avenue
Named for politician Alexander MacBeth Sutherland; formerly Hill Avenue
1872
Swailes Avenue
Named for politician Donovan Swailes; formerly Marion Avenue
1963
Symington Road
Named for lawyer Herbert James Symington; formerly Selkirk Road
1963
Syndicate Street
Probably named for the syndicate of businessmen who built the Canadian Pacific Railway, which arrived in Winnipeg in 1881
1881
MHS
Street name
Notes
Year created
Named for cleric Alexandre-Antonin Taché
before 1908
Named for James T. Taggart, a councillor in Transcona from the 1920s to 1940s; formerly Second Street
1959
Named for William Auld Tait
Talbot Avenue
Named for Alice Talbot, first principal of Talbot School, 1891; she became the wife of Archbishop Matheson; formerly Carter Street, Central Street, Elmwood Street, Regent Avenue, Renton Street, Taylor Street
1906
Named for the pioneering Tallman family of the Rosser area; formerly Laurence Street
1906 (renamed 1966)
Named for the pioneering Tanner family of West Kildonan, of which Charles Tanner was Reeve from 1920 to 1923
Taylor Avenue
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Thomas William Taylor; formerly Frederic Avenue
1898 (renamed March 1959)
Named for aboriginal warrior Tecumseh (1768-1813) who fought on behalf of British forces during the War of 1812; formerly Silvia Street, Monkman Street
1877 (renamed before 1908)
Named for Reverend D. H. Telfer, pastor of St. James Methodist Church in the 1920s
Named for pioneer William Templeton, owner of land that is now the Kildonan Golf Course
Named for priest Jean Baptiste Thibault
before 1908
Named for recorder Adam Thom; formerly Thompson Avenue
1963
Named for fur trader and surgeon Thomas Thomas (1766-1828), who served the Hudson’s Bay Company at York Factory
1957
See Minto Street
1883
MHS
Thompson Drive
Named for veterinarian Samuel Jacob Thompson
Thompson Street
Renamed to McKelvey Street in March 1959
Timlick Street
Formerly Telfer Street
1963
Tod Drive
Named for the family of Peter Tod, Scottish immigrants who settled in the St. Vital area, 1878, becoming prominent market gardeners
Toshak Street
Formerly McLean Street
1963
Traill Avenue
Named for fur trader Walter John Strickland Traill
MHS
Troy Avenue
Formerly St. Johns Avenue
MHS
Truro Street
Turenne Street
Named for municipal official Joseph Turenne; formerly Leslie Street
1963
Turnbull Drive
Named for local farmer Thomas Turnbull
MHS
Turner Avenue
Believed to be named for Philip Turnor, the first full-time surveyor for the Hudson’s Bay Company
Tuxedo Avenue
Formerly Fourth Avenue, Van Horne Avenue, Pipe Boulevard
MHS
Tweedsmuir Road
Named for John Buchan, First Baron Tweedsmuir (1875-1940), who served as Governor General of Canada from 1935 to 1940. Other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Vanier Drive, and Vincent Massey Boulevard
MHS
Tylehurst Street
Formerly Centre Street
MHS
Tyndall Avenue
Named for British scientist John Tyndall (1820-1893), who is also commemorated by a type of stone quarried in Manitoba (Tyndall stone) that is used widely in local buildings
1962
Street name
Notes
Year created
Union Avenue
Crosses Brazier, Roch, and Watt Streets named for Albert Brazier, E. Roch, and James Watt, respectively, each of whom purchased 4 acres of land in the vicinity, in 1894
before 1908
Street name
Notes
Year created
Valde Avenue
Named for Second World War Pilot Officer Victor Lewis Valde
Valour Road
Renamed to honor three residents of the street who won the Victoria Cross for bravery during the First World War: Robert Shankland, Leo Clarke, and Fred Hall; formerly Pine Street, Ross Street
1925 (renamed 1945)
Vandal Street
Formerly River Street
1963
Van Horne Street
Named for railwayman William Cornelius Van Horne; see also Hill Street, Shaughnessy Street, Stephen Street and Van Horne Street; formerly Van Horne Avenue
1903
Vanier Drive
Named for Georges-Philéas Vanier (1888-1967), who served as Governor General of Canada from 1959 to 1967; other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, and Vincent Massey Boulevard
MHS
Vaughan Street
Named for land surveyor Josephus Wyatt Vaughan
1881
Vavasour Avenue
Believed to be named for explorer Mervin Vavasour who accompanied Henry James Warre on his travels through the interior of North America in 1845
MHS
Vernon Road
Victor Street
Formerly Maple Street
MHS
Victoria Grove
Formerly Centre Avenue (1912-c1961)
Victoria Street
Renamed to Westbrook Street in March 1959
Vincent Street
Named for Anglican priest Thomas Vincent (1835-?). See also Vine Street
1906
Vincent Massey Boulevard
Named for Charles Vincent Massey (1887-1967), who served as Governor General of Canada from 1952 to 1959. Other Winnipeg street commemorating Governors General include Aberdeen Avenue, Athlone Drive, Byng Place, Devonshire Drive, Dufferin Avenue, Grey Street, Lansdowne Avenue, Leger Crescent, Lisgar Avenue, Lorne Avenue, Minto Street, Monck Avenue, Stanley Street, Tweedsmuir Road, and Vanier Drive
MHS
Vine Street
This street running north from Logan Avenue was renamed from Vincent Street sometime before 1914
MHS
Vopni Avenue
Named for Icelandic immigrant Jon Jonnson Vopni until 1982 when it was renamed Park Lane Avenue
Vulcan Avenue
Named for the Vulcan Iron Works that purchased 27 acres of land in the vicinity in 1961
MHS
Street name
Notes
Year created
Named for surveyor William Wagner
1964
Formerly Rosedale Crescent
1963
Possibly named for theatre owner Corliss Powers Walker; formerly Merrion Avenue
1883
Wallace Street
Renamed to London Street in March 1959
Walnut Street
Formerly Walnut Avenue
1893
Named for soldier Leo Warde (1888-1971), who had a long record of service in Winnipeg
Named for judge Thomas Wardlaw Taylor; formerly Kennedy Avenue, Wardlow Avenue
1893 (renamed 1906)
Warnock Street
Named for animal activist Sally Warnock, renamed from Stewart Street in 1959
1959
Vince Leah (Winnipeg Tribune 20 Feb 1959), 40
Formerly named Ross Avenue for businessman Arthur Wellington Ross, changed to Rosser Avenue to avoid confusion with Ross Avenue; probably commemorating CPR engineer Thomas Lafayette Rosser, subsequently renamed to Warsaw
1913
MHS
Water Street
Early street to Red River where boats docked; see also Pioneer Avenue; renamed William Stephenson Way in 2009; formerly Schultz Street
1876
Waterloo Street
Formerly Waterloo Avenue
1893
Named for James Watt, who purchased four acres of land in its vicinity, in 1894. An alternate version given by Mosaic is that it commemorates local landowner Walter L. Watt
1904
Mosaic stated it was named for Winnipeg mayor Richard Deans Waugh but it actually commemorates his brother, East St. Paul municipal official William Waugh.
Named for British military commander Archibald Percival, First Earl of Wavell (1883-1950). See also Montgomery Avenue and McNaughton Avenue
1948
Waverley Street
Named for Waverley novels by Scottish author Sir Walter Scott (1771-1832); formerly Waverley Avenue
1882 (renamed 1893)
Weatherdon Avenue
Formerly Gladstone Avenue
MHS
Webb Place
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Ralph Humphreys Webb; renamed from Isbister Place in March 1959
1959
Wellesley Avenue
Formerly Wellington Avenue
1893
Wellington Avenue
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Alexander McMicken; formerly McMicken Street, Wellington Street
1881 (renamed 1893)
Wellington Crescent
Named for businessman Arthur Wellington Ross; formerly Crescent Road, Laurel Street, Wellington Street, Assiniboine Drive (March 1959)
before 1908 (renamed March 1959)
MHS, 40
Wentworth Street
Named for Thomas Wentworth (1593-1641) who was given the title Earl of Stafford by Henry VIII; see also Stafford Street
1882
Named for Herman Wenzel (1868-1944), who worked as part of a supply depot during the 1885 Northwest Rebellion, later farmed at Springfield
1965
Westbrook Street
Named for Winnipeg mayor Henry Shaver Wesbrook, renamed from Victoria Street in March 1959
1959
The street name commemorates the gates that were erected at its entrance; see also East Gate and Middle Gate; formerly Assiniboine Avenue
1910
MHS
Formerly Buell Avenue
1910
MHS
Named for educator Charles W. Wharton.
Whellams Lane
Named for municipal official Herbert Creasey Whellams; formerly Ferry Lane
1963
Whicker Street
Named for local municipal and school officials James William Whicker (1878-1949) and his son George Whicker (1911-2007)
Whitehall Avenue
Eliminated and replaced by Mostyn Place
1955
Whiteway Road
Named for teacher and MP Dean Waldon Whiteway
c1978
Whyte Avenue
Named for railwayman William Whyte
Whytewold Road
Widlake Street
Named for Second World War Trooper Tom Huntington Widlake
Wiginton Street
Named for alderman Jack Lester Wiginton
1967
Wilfred Knowles Bay
See Knowles Avenue
MHS
Wilkes Avenue
Named for Charles R. Wilkes
after 1910
Mosaic, MHS
William Avenue
Named for postmaster William Ross, son of Alexander Ross; see also Ross Avenue and McWilliam Avenue
1893
William Dixon Bay
Named for Knowles Centre Superintendent Rev. William Dixon
MHS
William Gibson Bay
Named for community activist William Hector Gibson
MHS
William Johnstone Court
Named for municipal official William Johnstone
2016
MHS
William Newton Avenue
Named for businessman and city councillor William Newton.
William R. Clement Parkway
Named for Winnipeg councillor William Ralph “Bill” Clement; formerly Charleswood Parkway
2002 (renamed 2010)
Named for war hero William Stephenson; formerly Water Avenue
Renamed November 2009
Formerly College Place
1908 (renamed 1913)
Named for New Brunswick Lieutenant-Governor (1868-1873) Lemuel Allan Wilmot, whose family later moved to Winnipeg; formerly Betourney
1901
Named for Winnipeg Mayor Horace Wilson
Named for an English town dating to 8th century
Winchester Street
Winslow Drive
Named for municipal official Arthur Alvin Winslow
Winston Road
Formerly Sutherland Street
MHS
Wolfe Street
Renamed to Gateway Road in March 1959
Wolseley Avenue
Name for soldier Garnet Joseph Wolseley; formerly Bath Street, Ethel Street, Ida Street, Keller Street
1905
MHS
Wood Street
Named for judge Edmund Burke Wood
1874 (named in June 1884)
Woodlands Crescent
Formerly Woodlands Boulevard, Victoria Boulevard
1963
Named for Charles Woodward (1852-1937), founder of the Woodward department stores of western Canada, and cattle dealer in Manitoba, 1882
1882
Named for founding Winnipeg School Board member Archibald Francis Wright
Street name
Notes
Year created
Yale Avenue
Named for Yale University; other Winnipeg streets commemorating academic institutions include Bishops Lane, Cambridge Street, Harvard Avenue, Laval Drive, Macalester Bay, McGill Avenue, Mount Allison Bay, Oxford Street, Purdue Bay, Rutgers Bay, Ryerson Avenue, Selwyn Place, Yale Avenue, and others
MHS
York Avenue
Named for the Hudson’s Bay Company trading post York Factory on Hudson Bay; a portion of the avenue was formerly called University Place because it was near the University of Manitoba’s Science Building that once stood where Memorial Park is now situated. See also Carlton, Edmonton, Ellice, Fort, Garry, Qu’Appelle
1881
Young Street
Named for cleric George Young
1893
Youville Street
Named for Sister L’Esperance Youville of Charity Grey Nuns, first teacher in a school established by Archbishop Tache
before 1908
Yukon Avenue
Renamed from Alberta Avenue in March 1959
On 31 March 1891, the Winnipeg city council hurriedly passed a bylaw, despite objections from such prominent Winnipeggers as George Bryce, to change the names of most streets west of Main Street, giving them sequential numbers. Streets east of Main Street remained unchanged.
A majority of residents did not like the numbered streets. Businesses ignored the new names and continued to use the older ones. Newspapers frequently gave addresses using both systems. In June 1893, three mailmen addressed the city council to argue in favour of restoring the original names. One letter carrier said that, of 216 letters and cards that he delivered, only five were addressed to streets designated by number; the rest contained the old names.
A bylaw passed on 16 October 1893 mostly reinstated the original names with a few exceptions. Some streets whose names had not been popular were renamed. There was an attempt to eliminate duplicate names and the new system of always calling north-south streets as Avenues and east-west ones as Streets was maintained.
The following table provides the pre-1891 names, street numbers, and post-1893 names. [50]
Post-1893 Name
Street Number (1891-1893)
Pre-1891 Name
Adelaide Street
4th Street North
Adelaide Street
Agnes Street
17th Street South
?
Aikins Street
8th Street North
Aikins Street
Albert Street
1st Street North
Albert Street
Alexander Avenue
7th Avenue North
Alexander Street
Alfred Avenue
22nd Avenue North
Alfred Street
Anderson Avenue
29th Avenue North
Anderson Street
Andrews Street
14th Street North
Andrews Street
Arlington Street
23rd Street South
?
Assiniboine Avenue
10th Avenue South
Assiniboine Street
Athol Avenue
36th Avenue North
Athol Street
Atlantic Avenue
34th Avenue North
Crawford Avenue
Balmoral Street
9th Street South
Balmoral Street
Bannatyne Avenue
2nd Avenue North
Bannatyne Street
Bannerman Avenue
33rd Avenue North
Bannerman Street
Beaconsfield Street
20th Street North
?
Beverly Street
20th Street South
?
Boyd Avenue
25th Avenue North
Boyd Street
Brant Street
22nd Street North
?
Broadway
9th Avenue South
Broadway
Brown Street
22nd Street North
?
Burrows Avenue
22nd Avenue North
Burrows Street
Bushnell Street
11th Street North
?
Carlton Street
6th Street South
Carlton Street
Charles Street
6th Street North
Charles Street
Charlotte Street
5th Street North
Charlotte Street
Church Avenue
30th Avenue North
Church Street
College Avenue
26th Avenue North
?
Corydon Avenue
17th Avenue South
Corydon Street
Cumberland Avenue
1st Avenue South
Cumberland Street
Derby Street
4th Street North
?
Donald Street
4th Street South
Donald Street
Dudley Avenue
23rd Avenue South
?
Dufferin Avenue
14th Avenue North
Dufferin Street
Edmonton Street
7th Street South
Edmonton Street
Elgin Avenue
4th Avenue North
Jemima Street
Ellen Street
6th Street North
Ellen Street
Ellice Avenue
4th Avenue South
Ellice Street
Emily Street
17th Street North
?
Fleet Avenue
21st Avenue South
Fleet Street
Flora Avenue
16th Avenue North
Laura Street
Fonseca Avenue
10th Avenue North
Fonseca Street
Fort Street
1st Street South
Fort Street
Fountain Street
6th Street North
Fountain Street
Furby Street
13th Street South
Furby Street
Garry Street
2nd Street South
Garry Street
Garwood Avenue
22nd Avenue South
?
Gertie Street
7th Street North
Gertie Street
Gertrude Avenue
15th Avenue South
Gertrude Street
Graham Avenue
6th Avenue South
Graham Street
Gunnell Street
12th Street North
?
Gwendoline Street
13th Street North
Gwendoline Street
Hargrave Street
5th Street South
Hargrave Street
Harriet Street
8th Street North
Harriet Street
Henry Avenue
9th Avenue North
Common Street
Higgins Avenue
10th Avenue North
Higgins Street
Home Street
22nd Street South
?
Isabel Street
9th Street North
Isabel Street
Jarvis Avenue
13th Avenue North
Jarvis Street
Jessie Avenue
18th Avenue South
?
Juno Street
10th Street North
?
Kate Street
11th Street North
?
Kennedy Street
8th Street South
Kennedy Street
King Street
2nd Street North
King Street
Langside Street
12th Street South
Langside Street
Laura Street
7th Street North
Laura Street
Lizzie Street
5th Street North
Lizzie Street
Logan Avenue
8th Avenue North
Logan Street
Lorette Avenue
24th Avenue South
?
Lulu Street
16th Street North
?
Lydia Street
12th Street North
?
Machray Avenue
31st Avenue North
Machray Street
Magnus Avenue
21st Avenue North
Magnus Street
Main Street
Main Street
Main Street
Manitoba Avenue
19th Avenue North
Manitoba Street
Margaretta Street
13th Street North
Margaretta Street
Maria Avenue
13th Avenue South
Maria Street
Maryland Street
15th Street South
Boundary Street
Maud Street
26th Street North
?
Mayfair Avenue
11th Avenue South
?
McDermot Avenue
1st Avenue North
McDermott Street
McGee Street
16th Street South
?
McGregor Street
16th Street North
?
McKenzie Street
18th Street North
?
McMillan Avenue
16th Avenue South
?
Monkman Street
20th Street North
?
Morris Street
21st Street North
?
Mountain Avenue
27th Avenue North
Mountain Street
Mulligan Street
14th Street South
?
Mulvey Avenue
20th Avenue South
?
Nellie Avenue
4th Avenue South
Nellie Street
Nena Street
14th Street North
Nena Street
Ness Street
12th Street South
Ness Street
Nora Street
18th Street North
?
Notre Dame Avenue
Central Avenue
Notre Dame Street
Olivia Street
15th Street North
Olivia Street
Pacific Avenue
6th Avenue North
McWilliam Street
Park Street
10th Street North
?
Parr Street
20th Street North
?
Patrick Street
8th Street North
Patrick Street
Paulin Street
4th Street North
?
Pearl Street
16th Street North
?
Penelope Street
16th Street North
?
Point Douglas Avenue
11th Avenue North
Point Douglas Street
Polson Avenue
35th Avenue North
Polson Street
Portage Avenue
Portage Avenue
Portage Avenue
Powers Street
12th Street North
?
Prince Street
30th Street North
?
Princess Street
3rd Street North
Princess Street
Pritchard Avenue
18th Avenue North
Pritchard Street
Qu'Appelle Avenue
3rd Avenue South
Qu'Appelle Street
Queen Street
26th Street North
?
Redwood Avenue
24th Avenue North
Redwood Street
Rietta Street
17th Street North
?
River Avenue
12th Avenue South
River Avenue
Robinson Street
7th Street North
Robinson Street
Ross Avenue
5th Avenue North
Ross Street
Rosser Avenue
19th Avenue South
?
Salter Street
10th Street North
?
Sargent Avenue
2nd Avenue South
?
Schultz Street
5th Street North
?
Scotland Avenue
25th Avenue South
?
Selkirk Avenue
17th Avenue North
Selkirk Street
Simcoe Street
21st Street South
?
Sinclair Street
24th Street North
?
Smith Street
3rd Street South
Smith Street
Spence Street
10th Street South
Carey Street, Spence Street
Spencer Street
18th Street North
?
St. John ?
32nd Avenue North
St. John Street
St. John's Avenue
28th Avenue North
St. John's Street
St. Mary Avenue
7th Avenue South
St. Mary's Street
Stanley Street
4th Street North
?
Stella Avenue
15th Avenue North
Stella Street
Sutherland Avenue
12th Avenue North
Sutherland Street
Tecumseh Street
20th Street North
?
Toronto Street
19th Street South
?
Victor Street
18th Street South
Victoria Avenue, Maple Street
Wardlow Avenue
14th Avenue South
Wardlow Street
William Avenue
3rd Avenue North
William Street
Xante Street
24th Street North
?
York Avenue
8th Avenue South
York Street
Young Street
11th Street South
Coolican Street, Young Street
See also:
The Cradle of Winnipeg History by Harry Shave
Manitoba Pageant, Volume 3, Number 1, September 1957History Lives in Point Douglas Street Names by Lillian Gibbons
Manitoba Pageant, Volume 4, Number 3, April 1959First Avenue North, Winnipeg by Charles Edward Parker
Manitoba Pageant, Volume 10, Number 3, Spring 1965
Mosaic of Winnipeg Street Names Compiled by J. B. Rudnyckyj, published in 1974 by the Canadian Institute of Onomastic Sciences (now the Canadian Society for the Study of Names) |
|
Pioneers and Prominent People of Manitoba This collection of biographies of Manitobans was compiled by the Canadian Publicity Company, and published at Winnipeg in 1925. Most of those featured in the book were living at that time, so no information on death dates was provided. Where possible, these have been added to this online version. Online version 2007, Manitoba Historical Society. |
|
The Streets of Winnipeg |
“Streets named after prominent newspapermen” by Vince Leah, Winnipeg Free Press, 30 July 1989.
1. Minutes of the Manitoba Good Roads Association meeting on 23 February 1928 recorded that “a delegation from the Session of the Congregation of the John Black Memorial Church, composed of Rev. Hugh R. Robertson and W. J. Harrison, was heard suggesting that the East Kildonan Road from the beginning of Kelvin Street through the various Municipalities through which it passes be renamed “Henderson Highway” in honor of the late Mr. S. R. Henderson, President of the Manitoba Good Roads Association since its inception, in commemoration of the valuable services rendered towards improving the highways of the Province and his contribution to the welfare of the community in which he labored so long, faithfull and well.”
2. “Winnipeg street is named for Anglican church” by Harry Shave, Winnipeg Free Press, 29 April 1967.
3. “Point Douglas milled oats, lumber for city’s shakers” by Vince Leah, Winnipeg Free Press, 24 March 1991.
4. “Little streets named for big men” by Harry Shave, Winnipeg Free Press, 20 March 1965.
5. “It’s now William ... William Stephenson Way”, Winnipeg Free Press, 14 November 2009, page B5.
6. “J. B. Henderson is dead after long career in west”, Winnipeg Free Press, 10 October 1934, page 11.
7. Obituary (H. R. Lyon), Winnipeg Free Press, 24 January 1969, page 31.
8. The name of Carriere Avenue, formerly Third Avenue, was changed under By-law No. 3664/84 adopted by Winnipeg City Council on 14 December 1983. We thank Bart Carr for clarifying the birth and death years for Carriere.
9. “Street to be renamed after CJOB founder”, Winnipeg Free Press, 4 December 2010, page A7.
10. We Watch the Waves by Susan Riley, Great Plains Publications, 2007, page 161.
11. Information provided by Kevin A. Miller, 20 December 2012.
12. We thank Cynthia McMullin for a correction to this information, which formerly identified Donald Munroe as a daughter of George F. Munroe when, in fact, she was a daughter of Donald Munroe.
13. West of the River: The Story of West Kildonan by Vince Leah, 1972.
14. “The Metropolitan Corporation of Greater Winnipeg, Street Name Changes,” Winnipeg Free Press, 6 April 1963, page 52.
15. “Kildonan story told,” by Vince Leah, Winnipeg Free Press Weekly, South Edition, 24 June 1990, page 14. Nathan Kramer
16. Nathan Kramer, personal communication, 3 June 2014.
17. Nathan Kramer, personal communication, 15 June 2014.
18. Nathan Kramer, personal communication, 20 June 2014. “Streets named after Partridge, Farlinger families” by Vince Leah, Winnipeg Free Press Weekly, 3 September 1989, page 14.
19. Allan Whicker, personal communication, 6 August 2014. Obituary W. J. Whicker, Winnipeg Free Press, 28 July 1949. Death registration James William Whicker, British Columbia Vital Statistics. Obituary George Whicker, Winnipeg Free Press, 17 March 2007.
20. Nathan Kramer, personal communication, 6 September 2014.
21. Ten Years in Winnipeg by Alexander Begg & Walter Nursey, Winnipeg, 1879, pages 142-143.
22. “Some Tuxedo street trivia” by Vince Leah, Winnipeg Free Press, 20 August 1989, page 100.
23. “Museum creates virtual exhibit,” Winnipeg Free Press, 19 November 2003, page N9. Second World War Service Files, Library and Archives of Canada.
24. “The Smith of Smith Street Navy Way,” Winnipeg Free Press, 2 August 1986, page 6.
25. “No referendum on electric franchise in St. Vital [Hack Avenue, Poplarwood Avenue],” Manitoba Free Press, 1 March 1924, page 3.
26. Nathan Kramer, personal communication, 2 May 2015.
27. Nathan Kramer, personal communication, 12 July 2015. “Park heals old wounds,” Winnipeg Free Press, 23 September 2002, page A3. “Take notice that [William R. Clement Parkway],” Winnipeg Free Press, 24 August 2010, page B5.
28. Nathan Kramer, personal communication, 15 July 2015. “Proposed changes in street names,” Manitoba Free Press, 29 January 1913, page 7. “Again! Rachel's nose out of joint,” Winnipeg Free Press, 12 March 1952, page 3. “City fathers sound knell for Rachel,” Winnipeg Free Press, 9 April 1952, page 15. “Committee gets unemployed bid,” Winnipeg Free Press, 29 April 1952, page 3.
29. “Military Memorials recognize sacrifice of Transcona heroes [Bates Avenue]” by Lori Nichols, Transcona Views, November 2002 [Vol. 16, No. 11], pages 1 & 4.
30. By-Law No. 165/2007, [Dr. Jose Rizal Way], City of Winnipeg Clerks Decision Making Information System.
31. A Prairie Girl’s Life: The Story of the Reverend Edna Lenora Perry by Edna Lenora Perry, 2014. [Winnipeg Public Library]
32. Email communication, Steven Barker, 26 November 2009.
33. Email communication, Carrie Chochinov, 2 July 2010.
34. Email communication, Shawn Kennedy, 21 August 2010.
35. Email communication, Herb R. Cox, 2 April 2011.
36. Email communication, Frances Waugh Howard, 13 May 2011.
37. Email communication, Nathan Kramer, 15 October 2017. “Name change okayed,” Winnipeg Free Press, 22 August 1974, page 3. and “The City of Winnipeg re By-Law No. 888/75 notice of street name changes,” Winnipeg Free Press, 29 May 1975, page 87.
38. North East Winnipeg Area History: Elmwood, East Kildonan, North Kildonan, Volume 2, 2018, page 155.
39. North East Winnipeg Area History: Elmwood, East Kildonan, North Kildonan, Volume 2, 2018, page 177.
40. “City of Winnipeg, notice street name changes,” Winnipeg Free Press, 28 March 1959, page 4. “Q - Who is Leo Novak,” Winnipeg Free Press, 19 September 1966. “Notice street name changes,” Winnipeg Tribune, 28 March 1959, page 35.
41. Email communication, John Perrin, 1 April 2019.
42. Email communication, Josh Peters, 20 April 2020.
43. Obituary [Thomas Naven], Winnipeg Tribune, 13 March 1947, page 25. “The resurrection of Navin, Manitoba” by Christian Cassidy, Winnipeg Real Estate News, 15 November 2019.
44. Email communication, Laverne Dalgleish, 28 July 2020.
45. “Goodbye Jackson Ave.,” Winnipeg Tribune, 4 March 1950, page 30.
46. “Rush hour parking ban on Grosvenor proposed,” Winnipeg Free Press, 1 March 1950, page 3. “Jackson Ave. renamed Corydon,” Winnipeg Tribune, 2 March 1950, page 19.
47. Email communication, Linda Pearn, 9 August 2021.
48. “Know your Metro street names” by Vince Leah, Winnipeg Tribune, 14 February 1970.
49. “Schools named for local men as ties with Britain loosen” by Vince Leah, Winnipeg Tribune, 14 February 1970.
50. “What is your street now?,” Winnipeg Tribune, 18 October 1893, page 5.
51. Obituary [Allenby Kitchener Ballendine], Winnipeg Free Press, 1 August 2009.
52. “Thos. Leighton called by death,” Winnipeg Tribune, 6 October 1924.
53. “Notice street name changes,” Winnipeg Free Press, 18 January 1964, page 55.
54. “City plans closing half of Whitehall,” Winnipeg Free Press, 6 September 1955, page 3.
55. We thank Oliver Bernuetz (Legislative Library of Manitoba) for providing this information.
We thank Alistair Brown, Jim Burns, Bart Carr, Christian Cassidy, Cheryl Girard, Gordon Kapelus, Karen Morrow, Allan Whicker, and Cliff Hodgins for providing additional information used here.
This page was prepared by Gordon Goldsborough and Nathan Kramer.
Page revised: 29 September 2024