Stratford Hall in 2022 (Google Street View)
Here is a look back at the building's history at my Winnipeg Places blog.
Local history and urban thoughts from a West End Winnipegger
Stratford Hall in 2022 (Google Street View)
© 2024, Christian Cassidy
Sad news that the 114-year-old Union Overall / Western Paper Box building at 579 McDermot Avenue has started to collapse, (also see), while being renovated into a residential block.
Here's a look back at the building's history before it's gone.
1914 Henderson's Directory of Winnipeg
The Union Overall Company was established in Winnipeg around 1904 and was the successor to the defunct Hoover Manufacturing Company. Its unionized workers produced overalls, work jackets and work shirts that were sold across the developing West.
Business was good and the company was constantly in need of larger space. Its initial factory was located at 301 Portage Avenue and it moved in 1905 to the MacRae Block on James Avenue where it soon took up the entire building. After a brief stint on Cumberland Avenue it moved into its new premises at 579 McDermot Avenue in January 1911.
The building, originally four stories in hiegh, was designed by J H G Russell for around $45,000.
September 25, 1915, Winnipeg Tribune
Thanks to new investment, likely by local dry goods wholesaler Stobart, Sons and Co., the garment manufacturer branched out in 1915 with a new division called Faultless Ladies' Wear Company. It was was established to "improve style conditions of ladies' wearing apparel" in Canada by keeping a close eye on fashion trends in New York and manufacturing them here soon after their release.
The new production line required that an additional storey be added to the building and advertisements seeking 25 sewing machine operators appeared in newspapers in August 1915.
Union Overall / Faultless did not survive the war and ceased operation in 1917. The following year, Ben Jacob and John Crowley of the Jacob Crowley Manufacturing Co. bought out the assets and rebranded the company as Jacob Crowley Cloakmakers, (eventually calling it Montreal Cloak), which lasted at this location for just a few years.
The next major tenant of the building lasted much longer than Union Overall.
Leopold "Leo" Meltzer came to Manitoba in 1903 and operated several businesses before opening Western Paper Box Company in 1921. It moved to 579 McDermot the following year.
Western produced folding boxes for everything from food products to garments and shipped them throughout the West. By 1925, Meltzer had added a second company called Zenith Printing under the same roof so that he could print the boxes in-house.
Western and Zenith did not take up the whole building. Space was leased out to other tenants, which in 1926 included Peters and Herron, automobile tops and seat covers, and Cowell's Harness Co..
Leo Meltzer died in 1959 and his son Earl became the president of the company until his retirement in September 1984. A trio of long-time employees, Alexander "Sonny" Fedoruk, Cal Kveder, and Steve Gregory, then bought it. Eventually, Sonny and his wife Janet became the owners.
The company was still in operation in 2019.
In May 2022, new owners of the building applied for a zoning variance to convert it into 50 residential units. The redevelopment was slow, the city even cited it under the Vacant Buildings Bylaw in October 2023, but by 2024 there were active building permits for renovation work.
In July 2024 the foundation failed and the building's walls have bowed. It is expected to be demolished.
© 2024, Christian Cassidy
Sad news that Young Food Mart at 96 Young Street had to be demolished after a fire on May 24, 2024.
For about a decade in the late 90s and early 00s, I lived right next door to the store and my roommate and I jokingly called it our pantry. A nice Korean couple, the Kins, ran it. It was not just a food store but a hub for the neighbourhood. Here's a look back at its early history.
© 2024, Christian Cassidy
Often I will
see an old photo or ad and spend some time digging into its back story.
Sometimes I find a great story, sometimes not. Either way, I learn a
few things about the city's history. Here's my latest attempt:
The above image was posted in the Manitoba Postcard Collectors Forum on Facebook. It is part of the vast Rob McInnes postcard collection, (you can see some of it here), and is used in this post with his permission.
The image is by Maurice Lyall of the Lyall Commercial Photo Co. of Winnipeg and contains no mention of a year or the location of the news stand. A resourceful member of the forum traced one of the magazine covers back to February 1912. A note on the back of the card states "This is Fred & Len's stall. That is Fred behind the counter."
After some digging through street directories, I found that this is the Foster Bros. News and Cigar Stand inside the McLaren Hotel operated by Frederick W. and R. Leonard Foster.
The
Fosters came to Canada from their native Sussex, England in 1893. The
family consisted of Alfred, a builder, and his wife Annie, along with their children Frederick, Herbert, Sidney, Charles, Augustine, R. Leonard, and Adelaide.
In 1903, tragedy struck when Alfred died of a heart attack while working in Minnedosa. At the time, the children ranged in age from 16 to 26 and all lived together at the family home on Furby Street.
The family remained close-knit. The year after Alfred's death, Annie and the children moved to a house at 527 Pembina Highway then to Beresford Avenue. The 1916 census shows them, minus Sidney and Charles, living together at 693 Rosedale Avenue.
Fred and Len Foster followed in their father's footsteps and became carpenters and in the early 1900s both worked for the CPR.
How they transitioned from being carpenters to running a news stand at the McLaren Hotel is unclear. The 1912 street directory lists the two men with no occupations and in the 1913 directory, the data for which would have been complied in mid-1912, there they are as Foster Bros. News and Cigar Stand.
The 150-room McLaren Hotel was opened in September 1911 by the McLaren Brothers. Aside from CPR's 300-room Royal Alexandra Hotel at Higgins Avenue, the McLaren was the largest hotel on the Main Street strip between Portage and Main and the CPR Depot.
Unlike the grander railway hotels, the other being the Grand Trunk's Hotel Fort Garry which would open in 1913, the McLaren was a middle-class hotel offering more affordable room rates and meal options.
Frederick married Amy Craddeck in December 1915 and by 1917 moved to 260 Mandeville Street in St. James.
Len took a different path and enlisted to fight in the war on September 2, 1914. He served as a private with the 10th Battalion Infantry and was killed in action on April 23, 1916 at the age of 29. He is buried at the Railway Dugouts Burial Ground in Belgium.
After Len's death, Charles took his place at the McLaren alongside Frederick.
The Fosters got out of the news stand business around 1926. Frederick, still living on Mandeville, went back to being a carpenter. Charles, who lived at 602 Jubilee did the same.
Frederick disappears from street drectories around 1945 and it is unclear what happened to him later in life. I could find no obituary for him and census records for that time are not yet accessible.
More Behind the Photo entries
© 2024, Christian Cassidy
Shocking news that the 170-suite Birchwood Terrace apartment block at 2440 Portage Avenue has been suddenly shut down by the city after an inspection "uncovered severe deterioration of its structure in various locations". Tenants had to scramble to evacuate overnight.
My latest Winnipeg Free Press Community Review article looks at the history of Logan Avenue, once known as Winnipeg’s ‘Swedish Main Street’. Check it out here.