© 2026 Christian Cassidy.
There was a spike in youth crime in Winnipeg during the Second World War. It was blamed mainly on the fact that thousands of fathers were absent and many mothers had to juggle raising children and working outside of the home for the first time. Children had a lot of unsupervised time on their hands, and not all of them used it well.
This pointed out deficiencies in the city's parks system. At the time, there was no city recreation department. The parks board did what it could to include playground equipment and sports fields in some of its parks, (there were 17 playgrounds with sumer programming operated by the city in 1944), but it was often left to churches and private athletic clubs to pick up the slack by organising what activities they could.
Towards the end of the war, the city put out the call to its various civic service clubs to help it speed up the number of full-service playgrounds it operated.
Winnipeg had many such clubs, some of which had been around for decades. With thousands of members and formidable fundraising abilities, they paid for projects that governments could not or would not do in the days before the social safety net. The beneficiaries were hospitals, parks, orphanages, war charities, sports leagues, soup kitchens, and children's summer camps.
The Kiwanis Club of Winnipeg, founded in 1917, stepped up to take on the challenge of turning vacant city land into bustling playgrounds. Fred White, the city's superintendent of public parks, said: "It is a splendid gesture on their part, especially when such places as these are needed so badly for the children of Winnipeg."
The city provided the land, Kiwanis raised the funds that paid for the construction, then it donated the playground to the city. The city provided the staff to offer summer programming at the sites.
The major playgrounds were known as "Kiwanis Playgrounds". That name faded in the late 1950s as parks got renamed and community clubs took over operation of some of the sites. It returned in the late 1960s and early 1970s when the city began publishing its playground summer activity guide in the daily newspapers.
The main sites continue operating today, though their association with Kiwanis is long forgotten.
Kiwanis Playground No. 1 was created on a 150 x 190-foot lot on Burnell Street at St. Matthews Avenue.
Fundraising efforts got underway in late spring 1944, and work began later in the year on constructing a wading pool, merry-go-round, shelter, sandboxes, and swings at a cost of around $5,600.
The opening ceremony was held on May 31, 1945, with around 700 area school children in attendance. Ben Dean, the international president of Kiwanis, was at the ceremony and told the crowd, "Such a place as this solves many of our community problems and helps make more healthy and capable citizens of our children."
This land was eventually absorbed into Orioles Community Club, which opened in February 1951.
Kinsmen Playground No. 2 opened on August 18, 1946, on Lizzie Street off Logan Avenue.
This was an existing park and playground that had opened on June 28, 1940. It was established by the Council of Women of Winnipeg thanks to the hard work of long-time school trustee Jessie MacLennan.
The playground was handed over to Kiwanis, which used its experience and deeper pockets to expand and redevelop the playground by adding a wading pool, pool building, and merry-go-round. The cost was around $5,000.
The park eventually became known as Lizzie Playground and was renamed Giizhigooweyaabikwe Park in 2018. It no longer has a wading pool.
Kiwanis Playground No. 3 was located on vacant land on Sargent Avenue between Home and Simcoe streets and opened on September 14, 1947.
Like the other Kinsmen playgrounds, it got playground equipment, a wading pool, pool building, at a cost of around $5,000. George Jackson, president of the Kiwanis Club of Winnipeg, and Mayor Garnet Coulter were on hand at the opening ceremony.
This park is now known as Home Playground and is currently undergoing major renovations.
There was to have been a fourth Kiwanis Playground that would have been the largest.
In June 1948, Kinsmen put up $7,500 for a new playground at Tecumseh Street and Alexander Avenue that it hoped would be cost-matched by the parks board. The reason for the higher cost than the previous playgrounds was the addition of an enclosed recreation building so that activities could take place year-round.
The city considered the matter but turned it down as the land was being reserved for a possible expansion to the nearby city works yard and civic concrete plant at Tecumseh and Ross.
Though No. 3 was the last of the large post-war playgrounds with wading pools for Winnipeg, Kiwanis donated funds for playground equipment for many sites in the city through the late 1940s and 1950s.
There were some larger playgrounds with wading pools funded in cities surrounding Winnipeg during this time.
In 1947, the Kiwanis Club of St. James and the City of St. James partnered to create the Kinsmen Playground at 245 Marjorie Street based on the same plan as the Winnipeg playgrounds. A second St. James Kiwanis Playground opened in June 1950 at King Edward Street and Ness Avenue.
In spring 1946, the City of St. Boniface, Norwood Amateur Athletic Association, and Kinsmen teamed up to develop a playground and sports fields off of Fernwood and Walmer streets. This eventually became part of Norwood Community Centre.


































































