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In 1914, a World War I captain
from Winnipeg, Harry Colebourn,
took a black bear cub to England
as his regiment's mascot. When
Colebourn shipped out for France
he donated the bear, named Winnie
after his hometown, to the London
Zoo. Author A. A. Milne and his son
Christopher Robin loved "Winnie the
Bear" and Milne crafted the much-
adored stories about his boy and the
bear that we still enjoy today, known
as Winnie the Pooh.
The first retail store at
the corner of Portage
and Main was built
by Henry McKenney
in 1862. At the time,
people laughed at him
for opening a store so
far from the river.
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The Winnipeg General Strike of 1919,
the largest-ever community strike in Canada,
forever placed Winnipeg at the centre of the
labour movement. It forced then Mayor
Charles F. Gray to enact the Riot Act.
Photo
Courtesy
Travel
Manitoba
Photo
Courtesy
Harv
Sawatsky
Strike!
Strike!