Winnipeg
With 667,000 inhabitants, WINNIPEG accounts for roughly
two-thirds of the population of Manitoba, and lies at the
geographic centre of the country, sandwiched between the American
frontier to the south and the infertile Canadian Shield to the
north and east. The city has been the gateway to the prairies since
1873, and became the transit point for much of the country's
transcontinental traffic when the railroad arrived twelve years
later. From the very beginning, Winnipeg was described as the city
where "the West began", and its polyglot population, drawn from
almost every country in Europe, was attracted by the promise of the
fertile soils to the west. But this was no classless pioneer town:
as early as the 1880s the city had developed a clear pattern of
residential segregation, with leafy prosperous suburbs to the
south, along the Assiniboine River, while to the north lay "Shanty
Town". The long-term effects of this division have proved hard to
erase, and today the dispossessed still gather round the cheap
dorms just to the north of the business district, a sad rather than
dangerous corner near the main intersection at Portage Avenue and
Main Street. Winnipeg's skid row is only a tiny part of the
downtown area, but its reputation has hampered recent attempts to
reinvigorate the city centre as a whole: successive administrations
in the last twenty years have refurbished warehouses and built
walkways along the Red and Assiniboine rivers, but the new downtown
apartment blocks remain hard to sell, and most people stick
resolutely to the suburbs.
That apart, Winnipeg makes for an enjoyable stopover, and all of
the main attractions are within easy walking distance of each
other. The Manitoba Museum of Man and Nature has excellent
displays on the history of the province and its various geographic
areas; the Exchange District , recently declared a National
Historic Site, features some good examples of Canada's early
twentieth-century architecture; the Winnipeg Art Gallery has
the world's largest collection of Inuit art; and, just across the
Red River, the suburb of St Boniface has a delightful museum
situated in the house and chapel of the Grey Nuns, who arrived here
by canoe from Montréal in 1844. Winnipeg is also noted for the
excellence and diversity of its restaurants , while its
flourishing performing-arts scene features everything from ballet
and classical music through to C&W and jazz.
Finally, the city makes a useful base for exploring the area's
attractions, the most popular of which - chiefly Lower Fort
Garry - are on the banks of the Red River as it twists its way
north to Lake Winnipeg, 60km away. On the lake itself, Grand
Beach Park has the province's finest stretches of sandy beach,
just two-hours' drive from the city centre.
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