More Info on ManitobaSimilar Undetermined MusicSearch Artistopia
Biography
about|the Canadian province||Infobox province or territory of Canada| Name = Manitoba| AlternateName =| Fullname = Province of Manitoba| EntityAdjective = Provincial| Flag = Flag of Manitoba.svg| FlagAlt = A red flag with a large Union Jack in the upper left corner and a shield, consisting of St. George's Cross over a left-facing bison standing on a rock, on the right side| CoatOfArms = G manitoba.gif| CoatOfArmsAlt = A central shield depicting a bison standing on a rock, under a St George's Cross. On top of the shield sits a helmet decorated with a red and white billowing veil. On top of the helmet sits a beaver with a crown on its back, holding a prairie crocus. To the right of the shield is a rearing white unicorn wearing a collar of white and green maple leaves, from which hangs a green cart-wheel pendant. To the left of the shield is a rearing white horse wearing a collar of Indian beadwork, from which hangs a green cycle of life medallion. The animals and shield stand on a mound, with a wheat field beneath the unicorn, prairie crocuses beneath the shield, and spruces beneath the horse. Beneath the mound are white and blue waves, under which is a orange scroll bearing the words "GLORIOSUS ET LIBER"| Map = Manitoba, Canada.svg| MapAlt = Map showing the location of Manitoba, in the centre of Southern Canada| Label_map = no| Motto = lang-la|Gloriosus et Liber ("Glorious and free")| OfficialLang = English language|English ( de facto )| OfficialLang = English language|English & French language|French ( de jure )| Demonym = Manitoban| Capital = Winnipeg | LargestCity = Winnipeg| LargestMetro = Winnipeg| Viceroy = Philip S. Lee | ViceroyType = Lieutenant Governor| Premier = Greg Selinger | PremierParty = New Democratic Party of Manitoba|NDP | Legislature = Legislative Assembly of Manitoba| PostalAbbreviation = MB| PostalCodePrefix = List of R postal codes of Canada|R | AreaRank = 8th| TotalArea_km2 = 649950| LandArea_km2 = 548360| WaterArea_km2 = 101593| PercentWater = 15.6| PopulationRank = 5th| Population = 1208268| PopulationRef = cite web|url= http://www12.statcan.ca/census-recensement/2011/dp-pd/hlt-fst/pd-pl/Table-Tableau.cfm? LANG=Eng& T=101& S=50& O=A|title=Population and dwelling counts, for Canada, provinces and territories, 2011 and 2006 censuses |publisher=Statistics Canada |date=8 February 2012 |accessdate=8 February 2012| PopulationYear = 2011| DensityRank = 8th| Density_km2 = 2.14| GDP_year = 2009| GDP_total = C$ 50.973& nbsp; billionvcite web |url= http://www40.statcan.ca/l01/cst01/econ15.htm |publisher=Statistics Canada |title=Gross domestic product, expenditure-based, by province and territory |accessdate=3 March 2010| GDP_rank = 6th| GDP_per_capita = C$38,001| GDP_per_capita_rank = 8th| AdmittanceOrder = 5th| AdmittanceDate = 15 July 1870| TimeZone = Coordinated Universal Time|UTC –6, ( daylight saving time|DST -5)| HouseSeats = 14| SenateSeats = 6| ISOCode = CA-MB| Demonym = Manitoban| Website = www.gov.mb.ca Manitoba IPAc-en|audio=En-ca-Manitoba.ogg|?|m|æ|n|?|'|t|o?|b|? is a Canada|Canadian Canadian Prairies|prairie Provinces and territories of Canada|province . The province, with an area of convert|649950|km2|-2, has a largely continental climate because of its flat topography. Agriculture, mostly concentrated in the fertile southern and western parts of the province, is vital to the province's economy; other major industries are transportation, manufacturing, mining, forestry, energy, and tourism.
Manitoba's capital and largest city, Winnipeg , is Canada's eighth-largest Census geographic units of Canada|Census Metropolitan Area , and home to 60 percent of the population of the province. Winnipeg is the seat of government, home to the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba and the highest court in the jurisdiction, the Manitoba Court of Appeal . Four of the province's five universities, all four of its professional sports teams, and most of its cultural activities are located in Winnipeg.
Fur trade rs first arrived during the late 17th century. Manitoba became a province of Canada in 1870 after the Red River Rebellion . A Winnipeg General Strike|general strike took place in Winnipeg in 1919, and the province was hit hard by the Great Depression . This led to the creation of what would become the New Democratic Party of Manitoba , one of the province's major political parties and currently in power, led by premier Greg Selinger .
Etymology
The name Manitoba (meaning "strait of the spirit" or "lake of the prairies") is believed to be derived from the Cree language|Cree , Anishinaabe language|Ojibwe or Assiniboine language|Assiniboine language.
Geography
Main|Geography of ManitobaSee also|List of protected areas of ManitobaManitoba is bordered by the provinces of Ontario to the east and Saskatchewan to the west, the territories of Nunavut and Northwest Territories to the north, and the US states of North Dakota and Minnesota to the south. It adjoins Hudson Bay to the northeast, and is the only prairie province with a coastline.
Hydrography and terrain
The province has a saltwater coastline bordering Hudson Bay and contains over 110,000 lakes,vcite web |url= http://www40.statcan.gc.ca/l01/cst01/phys01-eng.htm |title=Land and Freshwater area, by province and territory |accessdate=7 August 2007 |publisher=Statistics Canada covering approximately 15.6 percent or convert|101593|km2|sqmi of its surface area.vcite web|url= http://www.travelmanitoba.com/default.asp? page=130& node=585|title=Geography of Manitoba|publisher=Travel Manitoba|accessdate=10 February 2010 Manitoba's major lakes are Lake Manitoba , Lake Winnipegosis , and Lake Winnipeg , the List of lakes by area|tenth-largest freshwater lake in the world and the largest located entirely within southern Canada.vcite web |url= http://www.lakewinnipeg.org/web/content.shtml? pfl=public/downloads.param& page=000103& op9.rf1=000103 |title=Lake Winnipeg Facts |publisher=Lake Winnipeg Stewardship Board |accessdate=7 August 2007 Some traditional Native lands and Taiga|boreal forest on the east side of Lake Winnipeg are a proposed UNESCO World Heritage Site .vcite journal|author=Schwartz, Bryan; Cheung, Perry|date=2007|title=East vs. West: Evaluating Manitoba Hydro's Options for a Hydro-Transmission Line from an International Law Perspective|journal=Asper Review of International Business and Trade Law|publisher=University of Manitoba|volume=7|issue=4|page=4
Major watercourses include the Red River of the North|Red , Assiniboine River|Assiniboine , Nelson River|Nelson , Winnipeg River|Winnipeg , Hayes River|Hayes , Whiteshell River|Whiteshell and Churchill River (Hudson Bay)|Churchill Rivers . Most of Manitoba's inhabited south lies in the prehistoric bed of Lake Agassiz|Glacial Lake Agassiz . This region, particularly the Red River Valley , is flat and fertile; there are hilly and rocky areas throughout the province left behind by receding glaciers.vcite book|author=Savage, Candace|title=Prairie: A Natural History|publisher=Greystone Books|date=2011|pages=52–53|isbn=978-1-55365-588-6|edition=2
Baldy Mountain (Manitoba)|Baldy Mountain is the highest point in the province at convert|832|m above sea level ,vcite book|author=Manitoba Parks Branch|title=Outdoor recreation master plan: Duck Mountain Provincial Park|publisher=Manitoba Department of Tourism, Recreation and Cultural Affairs|location=Winnipeg|date=1973 and the Hudson Bay coast is the lowest at sea level. Riding Mountain National Park|Riding Mountain , the Pembina Escarpment|Pembina Hills , Sandilands Provincial Forest , and the Canadian Shield are also upland regions. Much of the province's sparsely inhabited north and east lie on the irregular granite Canadian Shield, including Whiteshell Provincial Park|Whiteshell , Atikaki Provincial Wilderness Park|Atikaki , and Nopiming Provincial Park s.vcite journal|author=Butler, George E|date=1950|title=The Lakes and Lake Fisheries of Manitoba|journal=Transactions of the American Fisheries Society|publisher=American Fisheries Society|volume=79|page=24
Extensive agriculture is found only in the southern half of the province, although there is grain farming in the Kelsey, Manitoba|Carrot Valley Region (near The Pas ). The most common agricultural activity is cattle farming (34.6%), followed by assorted grains (19.0%) and oilseed (7.9%).vcite web |url= http://www40.statcan.gc.ca/l01/cst01/agrc35h-eng.htm |title=Summary Table of Wheats and Grains by Province |publisher=Statistics Canada |accessdate=7 August 2007 Around 12 percent of Canadian farmland is located in Manitoba.vcite web|url= http://www40.statcan.gc.ca/l01/cst01/agrc25h-eng.htm |title=Total farm area, land tenure and land in crops, by province (Census of Agriculture, 1986 to 2006) (Manitoba)|publisher=Statistics Canada|accessdate=28 October 2009
Climate
Main|Climate of Manitoba
Manitoba has an extreme continental climate ; temperatures and precipitation generally decrease from south to north, and precipitation decreases from east to west.vcite book|author=Ritchie, JC|title=Post-Glacial Vegetation of Canada|publisher=Cambridge University Press|date=2004|page=25|isbn=978-0-521-54409-2 Manitoba is far removed from the moderating influences of both mountain ranges and large bodies of water, and because of the generally flat landscape, it is exposed to cold Polar high|Arctic high-pressure air masses from the northwest during January and February. In the summer, air masses sometimes come out of the Southern United States , as warm humid air is drawn northward from the Gulf of Mexico .vcite book|author=Vickers, Glenn; Buzza, Sandra; Schmidt, Dave; Mullock, John|title=The Weather of the Canadian Prairies|publisher=Navigation Canada|date=2001|url= http://www.navcanada.ca/ContentDefinitionFiles/publications/lak/CanadianPrairies/1-P32E.PDF|accessdate=11 February 2010|pages=48, 51, 53–64
Southern parts of the province, located just north of Tornado Alley , experience tornado es each year, with 15 confirmed touchdowns in 2006. In 2007, on 22 and 23 June, numerous tornadoes touched down, the largest of which was an Elie, Manitoba tornado|F5 Tornado that devastated parts of Elie, Manitoba|Elie (the strongest officially recorded tornado in Canada).vcite web|url= http://www.ec.gc.ca/default.asp? lang=En& n=714D9AAE-1& news=4B3DE57E-4967-4B09-98D6-EF974B32D6B5|title=Elie Tornado Upgraded to Highest Level on Damage Scale Canada's First Official F5 Tornado |date=18 September 2007|publisher=Environment Canada|accessdate=28 October 2009 Temperatures exceed convert|30|C numerous times each summer, and the combination of heat and humidity can bring the humidex value to the mid-40s.vcite web |url= http://climate.weatheroffice.gc.ca/climateData/generate_chart_e.html? timeframe=3& Prov=XX& StationID=28051& Year=2006& Month=1& Day=1& Type=line& MeasTypeID=meanmaxtemp|title=Mean Max Temp History at The Forks, Manitoba |work=Climate Data Online |publisher=Environment Canada |accessdate=7 August 2007 Carman, Manitoba holds the record for the highest humidex in Canada, with 53.0.vcite web|title=Canada's Top Ten Weather Stories for 2007|url= http://www.ec.gc.ca/EnviroZine/default.asp? lang=En& n=70BF6FA1-1|publisher=Environment Canada|accessdate=8 November 2010
According to Environment Canada , Manitoba ranked first for clearest skies year round, and ranked second for clearest skies in the summer and for sunniest province in the winter and spring.vcite web|url= http://www.on.ec.gc.ca/weather/winners/manitoba-e.html|title=Manitoba Weather Honours|publisher=Environment Canada|accessdate=28 October 2009 Portage la Prairie has the most sunny days in summer in Canada; Winnipeg has the second-clearest skies year-round and is the second-sunniest city in Canada in the spring and winter.vcite web|url= http://www.on.ec.gc.ca/weather/winners/city.cfm? lang=e|title=Winnipeg MB|publisher=Environment Canada|accessdate=28 October 2009 Southern Manitoba has a long frost-free season of between 125 and 135 days in the Red River Valley,vcite web|url= http://www.gov.mb.ca/agriculture/climate/wab00s00.html|title=Climatic Information for Potatoes in Manitoba|publisher=Government of Manitoba|accessdate=28 October 2009 decreasing to the northeast.
The northern sections of the province (including the city of Thompson, Manitoba|Thompson ) fall in the subarctic climate zone ( Köppen climate classification Dfc ). This region features long and extremely cold winters and brief, warm summers with little precipitation. Overnight temperatures as low as convert|-40|C occur on several days each winter.vcite web |url= http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/geog101/textbook/climate_systems/subarctic.html |title=Subarctic Climate |work=The Physical Environment |author=Ritter, Michael E |accessdate=7 August 2007 |year=2006
Southern Manitoba (including the city of Winnipeg), falls into the humid continental climate zone (Köppen Dfb). This area is cold and windy in the winter and frequently experiences blizzards because of the openness of the landscape. Summers are warm with a moderate length, and this region is the most humid area in the prairie provinces with moderate precipitation.
Southwestern Manitoba, though under the same climate classification as the rest of Southern Manitoba, is closer to the semi-arid interior of Palliser's Triangle . The area is drier and more prone to drought s than other parts of southern Manitoba. This area is cold and windy in the winter and frequently experiences blizzard s because of the openness of the landscape. Summers are generally warm to hot, with low to moderate humidity.vcite web|url= http://www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/geog101/textbook/climate_systems/midlatitude_steppe.html|title=Midlatitude Steppe Climate |work=The Physical Environment |author=Ritter, Michael E |accessdate=7 August 2007 |year=2006
cite web|url= http://climate.weatheroffice.gc.ca/Welcome_e.html|title=National Climate Data and Information Archive|publisher=Environment Canada|accessdate=2 September 2010>
City
July (°C)
July (°F)
January (°C)
January (°F)
Pierson
Winnipeg
Portage la Prairie
Dauphin
Brandon
The Pas
Thompson
Churchill
Flora and fauna
The eastern, southeastern, and northern reaches of the province range through boreal Pinophyta|coniferous forests, muskeg , Canadian Shield and a small section of tundra bordering Hudson Bay. Forests make up about convert|263000|km2|sqmi, or 48 percent, of the province's land area.vcite web |url= http://replay.waybackmachine.org/20090226181706/ http://www.gov.mb.ca/conservation/forestry/forest-education/general.html |title=Manitoba Forest Facts |publisher=Manitoba Conservation |accessdate=11 April 2011 The forests consist of pine s (mostly Jack Pine , some Red Pine ), spruce s ( Picea glauca|white , Picea mariana|black ), Tamarack Larch|larch , Populus|poplars ( Populus tremuloides|Trembling Aspen , balsam poplar ), birch ( Betula papyrifera|white , Betula pumila|swamp ) and small pockets of Thuja occidentalis|Eastern White Cedar . The tallgrass prairie dominates the southern and particularly the southeastern parts of the province around the Red River Valley, and is notable for its endangered Platanthera praeclara|Western Prairie Fringed Orchid ,vcite web|url= http://www.cosewic.gc.ca/eng/sct1/searchdetail_e.cfm? id=200& StartRow=1& boxStatus=All& boxTaxonomic=All& location=All& change=All& board=All& commonName=orchid& scienceName=& returnFlag=0& Page=1|title=Fringed-orchid, Western Prairie|publisher=Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada|accessdate=7 November 2009IUCN2008 |assessors= Goedeke, T; Sharma, J; Delphey, P; Marshall Mattson, K |year= 2008 |id= 132834 |title= Platanthera praeclara |downloaded= 9 February 2010 whereas the rest of the south and southwest is predominantly mixed grass prairie .
Manitoba is home to a diverse species of animals. The province is especially noted for its polar bear population; Churchill, Manitoba|Churchill is commonly referred to as the "Polar Bear Capital".vcite book|author=Stirling, Ian; Guravich, Dan |title=Polar Bears|publisher=University of Michigan Press|date=1998|page=208|isbn=978-0-472-08108-0 Other large animals, such as moose, deer, and wolves, are common throughout the province, especially in the provincial and national List of protected areas of Manitoba|parks . There is a large population of garter snake s near Narcisse, Manitoba|Narcisse ; the dens there are home to the largest concentration of snakes in the world.vcite book|author=LeMaster, MP; Mason, RT|title=Chemical signals in vertebrates|editors=Marchlewska-Koj, Anna; Lepri, John J; Müller-Schwarze, Dietland |publisher=Springer|date=2001|page=370|volume=9|chapter=Annual and seasonal variation in the female sexual attractiveness pheromone of the red-sided garter snake, Thamnophis sirtalis parietalis |isbn=978-0-306-46682-3 Manitoba has over 145 species of birds, including the Great Grey Owl , the province's official bird, and the endangered peregrine falcon .vcite book|author=Bezener, Andy; De Smet, Ken D|title=Manitoba birds|publisher=Lone Pine|date=2000|pages=1–10|isbn=978-1-55105-255-7 Manitoba's lakes host 18 species of game fish, particularly species of trout , Pike (fish)|pike , and goldeye , as well as many smaller fish.vcite web|url= http://www.manitoba.ca/waterstewardship/fisheries/recreation/09guide.pdf|title=Angler's Guide 2009|date=2009|publisher=Manitoba Fisheries|page=5|accessdate=22 February 2010
History
Main|History of Manitoba
First Nations and European settlement
The geographical area of modern-day Manitoba was inhabited by the First Nations people shortly after the Last glacial period|last ice age glacier s retreated in the southwest approximately 10,000 years ago; the first exposed land was the Turtle Mountain (plateau)|Turtle Mountain area.vcite journal|author=Ritchie, James AM; Brown, Frank; Brien, David|date=2008|title=The Cultural Transmission of the Spirit of Turtle Mountain: A Centre for Peace and Trade for 10,000 Years|journal=General Assembly and International Scientific Symposium|publisher=International Council on Monuments and Sites|volume=16|pages=4–6 The Ojibwe , Cree , Dene , Sioux , Mandan , and Assiniboine people|Assiniboine peoples founded settlements, and other tribes entered the area to trade. In Northern Manitoba, quartz was mined to make arrowhead s. The first farming in Manitoba was along the Red River, where Maize|corn and other seed crops were planted before contact with Europeans.vcite journal|author=Flynn, Catherine; Syms, E Leigh|date=Spring 1996|title=Manitoba's First Farmers|journal=Manitoba History|publisher=Manitoba Historical Society|issue=31 The name "Manitoba" is likely derived from the languages of the Cree language|Cree or Ojibwe language|Ojibwe , and means "strait of the Manitou (spirit)". It may also be from the Assiniboine language|Assiniboine for "Lake of the Prairie".vcite web|url= http://geonames.nrcan.gc.ca/education/prov_e.php#mb|title=Manitoba|publisher=Natural Resources Canada|accessdate=28 October 2009|archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20080604204017/ http://geonames.nrcan.gc.ca/education/prov_e.php#mb|archivedate=4 June 2008
In 1611, Henry Hudson was one of the first Europeans to sail into what is now known as Hudson Bay, where he was abandoned by his crew.vcite book|author=Neatby, LH|title=Dictionary of Canadian Biography|publisher=University of Toronto/Université Laval|date=2000|editor=Cook, Ramsay|volume=1|pages=374–379|chapter=Henry Hudson|edition=online|url= http://biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php? & id_nbr=343 The first European to reach present-day central and southern Manitoba was Sir Thomas Button , who travelled upstream along the Nelson River to Lake Winnipeg in 1612 in an unsuccessful attempt to find and rescue Hudson.vcite book|author=Eames, Aled|title=Dictionary of Canadian Biography|publisher=University of Toronto/Université Laval|date=2000|editor=Cook, Ramsay|volume=1|pages=144–145|chapter=Sir Thomas Button|edition=online|url= http://biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php? & id_nbr=98 The Nonsuch (ship)|Nonsuch , a British ship, sailed into Hudson Bay in 1668–1669, becoming the first trading vessel to reach the area; that voyage led to the formation of the Hudson's Bay Company , which was given absolute control of the entire Hudson Bay watershed by the British government. This watershed was named Rupert's Land , after Prince Rupert of the Rhine|Prince Rupert , who helped to subsidize the Hudson's Bay Company.vcite book|author=Simmons, Deidre|title=Keepers of the Record: The History of the Hudson's Bay Company Archives|publisher=McGill-Queen's University Press|date=2009|pages=19–23, 83–85, 115|isbn=978-0-7735-3620-3 York Factory, Manitoba|York Factory was founded in 1684 after the original fort of the Hudson's Bay Company, Fort Nelson (built in 1682), was destroyed by rival French traders.vcite journal|author=Stewart, Lillian|date=Spring 1988|title=York Factory National Historic Site|journal=Manitoba History|publisher=Manitoba Historical Society|issue=15
Pierre Gaultier de Varennes, sieur de La Vérendrye , visited the Red River Valley in the 1730s to help open the area for French exploration and trade.vcite book|author=Zoltvany, Yves F|title=Dictionary of Canadian Biography|publisher=University of Toronto/Université Lava|date=2000|editor=Cook, Ramsay|volume=3|pages=246–254|chapter=Pierre Gaultier De Varennes et De La Vérendrye|edition=online|url= http://biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php? & id_nbr=1366 As French explorers entered the area, a Montreal -based company, the North West Company , began trading with the Métis people (Canada)|Métis . Both the North West Company and the Hudson's Bay Company built fur-trading forts; the two companies competed in southern Manitoba, occasionally resulting in violence, until they merged in 1821 (the Hudson's Bay Company Archives in Winnipeg preserve the history of this era).
Kingdom of Great Britain|Great Britain secured the territory in 1763 as a result of their victory over France in the Seven Years' War (also known as the French and Indian War ; 1754–1763). The founding of the first agricultural community and settlements in 1812 by Thomas Douglas, 5th Earl of Selkirk|Lord Selkirk , north of the area which is now downtown Winnipeg, resulted in conflict between British colonists and the Métis.vcite book|author=Gray, John Morgan|title=Dictionary of Canadian Biography|publisher=University of Toronto/Université Laval|date=2000|editor=Cook, Ramsay|volume=5|pages=264–269|chapter=Thomas Douglas|edition=online|url= http://biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php? & id_nbr=2377 Twenty colonists, including the governor, and one Métis were killed in the Battle of Seven Oaks (1816)|Battle of Seven Oaks in 1816.vcite journal|author=Martin, Joseph E|date=1965|title=The 150th Anniversary of Seven Oaks|journal=MHS Transactions|publisher=Manitoba Historical Society|volume=3|issue=22
Confederation
Rupert's Land was ceded to Canada by the Hudson's Bay Company in 1869 and incorporated into the Northwest Territories; a lack of attention to Métis concerns caused Métis leader Louis Riel to establish a local provisional government as part of the Red River Rebellion . In response, Prime Minister John A. Macdonald introduced the Manitoba Act in the House of Commons of Canada|Canadian House of Commons , the bill was given Royal Assent and Manitoba was brought into Canada as a province in 1870.vcite book|author=Sprague, DN|title=Canada and the Métis, 1869–1885|publisher=Wilfrid Laurier University Press|location=Waterloo, ON|date=1988|pages=33–67, 89–129|isbn=978-0-88920-964-0 Louis Riel was pursued by British army officer Garnet Wolseley, 1st Viscount Wolseley|Garnet Wolseley because of the rebellion, and Riel fled into exile.vcite book|author=Cooke, OA|title=Dictionary of Canadian Biography|editor=Cook, Ramsay|publisher=University of Toronto/Université Laval|date=2000|edition=online|volume=14|chapter=Garnet Joseph Wolseley|url= http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php? & id_nbr=7780& & PHPSESSID=rr7c8co68cf4v1cfjr1ufabvb2 The Métis were blocked by the Canadian government in their attempts to obtain land promised to them as part of Manitoba's entry into confederation. Facing racism from the new flood of white settlers from Ontario, large numbers of Métis moved to what would become Saskatchewan and Alberta .
Numbered Treaties were signed in the late 19th century with the chiefs of various First Nations that lived in the area. These treaties made specific promises of land for every family. As a result, a Indian reserve|reserve system was established under the jurisdiction of the Federal Government.vcite book|author=Tough, Frank|title=As Their Natural Resources Fail: Native People and the Economic History of Northern Manitoba, 1870–1930|publisher=UBC Press|date=1997|pages=75–79|isbn=978-0-7748-0571-1 The prescribed amount of land promised to the native peoples was not always given; this led to efforts by aboriginal groups to assert rights to the land through aboriginal land claim s, many of which are still ongoing.vcite web|url= http://www.gov.mb.ca/stem/mrd/mines/sustain/first.html|title=First Nations Land Claims|publisher=Government of Manitoba|accessdate=28 October 2009|archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20091030030837/ http://www.gov.mb.ca/stem/mrd/mines/sustain/first.html |archivedate=30 October 2009
The original province of Manitoba was a square one-eighteenth of its current size, and was known colloquially as the "postage stamp province".vcite journal|author=Kemp, Douglas|date=April 1956|title=From Postage Stamp to Keystone|journal=Manitoba Pageant|publisher=Manitoba Historical Society Its borders were expanded in 1881, but Ontario claimed a large portion of the land; the disputed portion was awarded to Ontario in 1889. Manitoba grew progressively, absorbing land from the Northwest Territories until it attained its current size by reaching 60°N in 1912.
The Manitoba Schools Question showed the deep divergence of cultural values in the territory. The Catholic Franco-Manitobans had been guaranteed a state-supported separate school system in the original constitution of Manitoba, but a grassroots political movement among English Protestantism|Protestants from 1888 to 1890 demanded the end of French schools. In 1890, the Manitoba legislature passed a law removing funding for French Catholic schools.vcite journal|author=Fletcher, Robert|date=1949|title=The Language Problem in Manitoba's Schools|journal=MHS Transactions|publisher=Manitoba Historical Society|volume=3|issue=6 The French Catholic minority asked the federal government for support; however, the Orange Order in Canada|Orange Order and other anti-Catholic forces mobilized nationwide to oppose them.vcite journal|author=McLauchlin, Kenneth|date=1986|title='Riding The Protestant Horse': The Manitoba Schools Question and Canadian Politics, 1890–1896|journal=Historical Studies|publisher=CCHA|volume=53|pages=39–52
The federal Conservative Party of Canada (historical)|Conservatives proposed remedial legislation to override Manitoba, but they were blocked by the Liberal Party of Canada|Liberals , led by Wilfrid Laurier , who opposed the remedial legislation because of his belief in provincial rights. Once elected Prime Minister in 1896, Laurier implemented a compromise stating that Catholics in Manitoba could have their own religious instruction for 30 minutes at the end of the day if there were enough students to warrant it, implemented on a school-by-school basis.
Modern era
By 1911, Winnipeg was the third largest city in Canada, and remained so until overtaken by Vancouver in the 1920s.vcite book|author=Hayes, Derek|title=Historical Atlas of Canada|publisher=D& M Adult|date=2006|page=227|isbn=978-1-55365-077-5 A boomtown, it grew quickly around the turn of the century, with outside investors and immigrants contributing to its success.vcite web|url= http://www.cbc.ca/history/EPISCONTENTSE1EP10CH3PA5LE.html|title=Winnipeg Boomtown|publisher=CBC|accessdate=28 October 2009 The drop in growth in the second half of the decade was a result of the opening of the Panama Canal in 1914, which reduced reliance on Transcontinental railroad|transcontinental railways for trade, as well as a decrease in immigration due to the outbreak of the World War I|First World War .vcite news|title=The heart of the continent? |author=Silicz, Michael|date=10 September 2008|work=The Manitoba|publisher=University of Manitoba Over 18,000 Manitoba residents enlisted in the first year of the war; by the end of the war, 14 Manitobans had received the Victoria Cross .vcite book|author=Morton, William L|title=Manitoba, a History|publisher=University of Toronto Press|date=1957|pages=345–359
After the First World War ended, severe discontent among farmers (over wheat prices) and union members (over wage rates) resulted in an upsurge of Political radicalism|radicalism , coupled with a polarization over the rise of Bolshevik|Bolshevism in Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic|Russia .vcite book|author=Conway, John Frederick|title=The West: The History of a Region in Confederation |publisher=Lorimer|date=2005|edition=3|pages=63–64, 85–100|isbn=978-1-55028-905-3 The most dramatic result was the Winnipeg General Strike of 1919. It began on 15 May and collapsed on 25 June 1919; as the workers gradually returned to their jobs, the Central Strike Committee decided to end the movement.vcite book|author=Bercuson, David J|title=Confrontation at Winnipeg: Labour, Industrial Relations, and the General Strike|publisher=McGill-Queen's University Press|date=1990|pages=173–176|isbn=978-0-7735-0794-4
Government efforts to violently crush the strike, including a Royal Northwest Mounted Police charge into a crowd of protesters that resulted in multiple casualties and one death, had led to the arrest of the movement's leaders. In the aftermath, eight leaders went on trial, and most were convicted on charges of sedition|seditious conspiracy , illegal combinations, and seditious libel ; four were aliens who were deported under the Canadian immigration and refugee law|Canadian Immigration Act .vcite journal|author=Lederman, Peter R|date=1976|title=Sedition in Winnipeg: An Examination of the Trials for Seditious Conspiracy Arising from the General Strike of 1919|journal=Queen's Law Journal|publisher=Queen's University|volume=3|issue=2|pages=5, 14–17
The Great Depression (1929–c.1939) hit especially hard in Western Canada , including Manitoba. The collapse of the world market combined with a steep drop in agricultural production due to drought led to economic diversification, moving away from a reliance on wheat production.vcite book|author=Easterbrook, William Thomas; Aitken, Hugh GJ|title=Canadian economic history|publisher=University of Toronto Press|location=Toronto|date=1988|pages=493–494|isbn=978-0-8020-6696-1 The Manitoba Co-operative Commonwealth Federation , forerunner to the New Democratic Party of Manitoba (NDP), was founded in 1932.vcite book|author=Wiseman, Nelson|title=Social democracy in Manitoba|publisher=University of Manitoba|date=1983|page=13|isbn=978-0-88755-118-5
Canada entered the World War II|Second World War in 1939. Winnipeg was one of the major commands for the British Commonwealth Air Training Plan to train fighter pilots, and there were air training schools throughout Manitoba. Several Manitoba-based regiments were deployed overseas, including Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry . In an effort to raise money for the war effort, the Canada Savings Bond|Victory Loan campaign organized " If Day " in 1942. The event featured a simulated Nazism|Nazi invasion and occupation of Manitoba, and eventually raised over Canadian dollar|C$ 65 million.vcite journal|author=Newman, Michael|date=Spring 1987|title=February 19, 1942: If Day|journal=Manitoba History|publisher=Manitoba Historical Society|issue=13
Winnipeg was inundated during the 1950 Red River Flood and had to be partially evacuated. In that year, the Red River reached its highest level since 1861 and flooded most of the Red River Valley. The damage caused by the flood led then-Premier Dufferin Roblin|Duff Roblin to advocate for the construction of the Red River Floodway ; it was completed in 1968 after six years of excavation. Permanent dikes were erected in eight towns south of Winnipeg, and clay dikes and diversion dams were built in the Winnipeg area. In 1997, the " 1997 Red River Flood|Flood of the Century " caused over Nowrap|C$400 million in damages in Manitoba, but the floodway prevented Winnipeg from flooding.vcite journal|author=Haque, C Emdad|date=May 2000|title=Risk Assessment, Emergency Preparedness and Response to Hazards: The Case of the 1997 Red River Valley Flood, Canada|journal=Natural Hazards|publisher=Kluwer Academic Publishers|volume=21|issue=2|pages=226–237|issn=0921-030X
In 1990, Prime Minister Brian Mulroney attempted to pass the Meech Lake Accord , a series of constitutional amendments to persuade Quebec to endorse the Canada Act 1982 . Unanimous support in the legislature was needed to bypass public consultation. Member of the Legislative Assembly|Manitoba politician Elijah Harper , a Cree, opposed because he did not believe First Nations had been adequately involved in the Accord's process, and thus the Accord failed.vcite book|author=Hawkes, David C; Devine, Marina|title=How Ottawa Spends, 1991–1992: The Politics of Fragmentation|editor=Abele, Frances|publisher=McGill-Queen's University Press|date=1991|pages=33–45|chapter=Meech Lake and Elijah Harper: Native-State Relations in the 1990s|isbn=978-0-88629-146-4
Demography
Main|Demographics of Manitoba See also|List of communities in Manitoba by population At the 2011 census, Manitoba had a population of 1,208,268, more than half of which is in the Winnipeg Capital Region; Winnipeg is Canada's eighth-largest Census Metropolitan Area, with a population of 730,018 (2011 Censuscite web|url= http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census06/data/popdwell/Table.cfm? T=303& SR=1& S=3& O=D& RPP=25& CMA=602 |title=Winnipeg Census Metropolitan Area (CMA) with census subdivision (municipal) population breakdowns |work= Statistics Canada , 2006 Census of Population |date=13 March 2007 |accessdate=13 March 2007). Although initial colonization of the province revolved mostly around homesteading, the last century has seen a shift towards urbanization; Manitoba is the only Canadian province with over fifty-five percent of its population located in a single city.vcite web|url= http://www12.statcan.gc.ca/census-recensement/2006/dp-pd/prof/92-591/details/page.cfm? Lang=E& Geo1=CSD& Code1=4611040& Geo2=PR& Code2=46& Data=Count& SearchText=Winnipeg& SearchType=Begins& SearchPR=01& B1=All& GeoLevel=PR& GeoCode=4611040|title=2006 Community Profiles Manitoba & Winnipeg|publisher=Statistics Canada|accessdate=11 April 2011
: Source: Statistics Canada vcite web|url= http://www40.statcan.gc.ca/l01/cst01/demo62h-eng.htm |title=Manitoba Population trend|publisher=Statistics Canada|accessdate=28 October 2009vcite web|url= http://www.statcan.gc.ca/daily-quotidien/060927/dq060927a-eng.htm|title=Canada's population|publisher=Statistics Canada|accessdate=28 October 2009
According to the Canada 2006 Census|2006 Canadian census , the largest ethnic group in Manitoba is English Canadian|English (22.9%), followed by Canadians of German ethnicity|German (19.1%), Scottish Canadian|Scottish (18.5%), Ukrainian Canadian|Ukrainian (14.7%), Irish Canadian|Irish (13.4%), Indigenous peoples of the Americas|North American Indian (10.6%), Polish Canadians|Polish (7.3%), Métis (6.4%), French Canadian|French (5.6%), Canadians of Dutch descent|Dutch (4.9%), and Russians in Canada|Russian (4.0%). Almost one-fifth of respondents also identified their ethnicity as "Canadian".vcite web|url= http://www12.statcan.ca/census-recensement/2006/dp-pd/tbt/Rp-eng.cfm? LANG=E& APATH=3& DETAIL=0& DIM=0& FL=A& FREE=0& GC=0& GID=838031& GK=0& GRP=1& PID=92333& PRID=0& PTYPE=88971,97154& S=0& SHOWALL=0& SUB=0& Temporal=2006& THEME=80& VID=0& VNAMEE=& VNAMEF=|title=Ethnic Origin (247), Single and Multiple Ethnic Origin Responses (3) and Sex (3) for the Population of Canada, Provinces, Territories, Census Metropolitan Areas and Census Agglomerations, 2006 Census& nbsp;– 20% Sample Data|publisher=Statistics Canada|accessdate=29 January 2010 There is a significant indigenous community: aboriginals (including Métis) are Manitoba's fastest-growing ethnic group, representing 13.6 percent of Manitoba's population as of 2001 (some reserves refused to allow census-takers to enumerate their populations).vcite news|title=Native population fastest growing in country|author=Janzen, L|date=13 March 2002|publisher=Winnipeg Free Press|page=B4 There is a significant Franco-Manitoban minority (148,370) and a growing Aboriginal peoples in Canada|aboriginal population (192,865, including the Métis). Gimli, Manitoba is home to the largest Icelanders|Icelandic community outside of Iceland .vcite web|url= http://www.gov.mb.ca/chc/hrb/plaques/plaq0570.html|publisher=Government of Manitoba|accessdate=8 March 2012|title=Icelandic Settlement, Gimli
Most Manitobans belong to a Christian denomination: on the 2001 census, 758,760 Manitobans (68.7%) reported being Christian, followed by 13,040 (1.2%) Jewish, 5,745 (0.5%) Buddhist, 5,485 (0.5%) Sikh , 5,095 (0.5%) Muslim, 3,840 (0.3%) Hindu, 3,415 (0.3%) Native American religion|Aboriginal spirituality and 995 (0.1%) paganism|pagan . 201,825 Manitobans (18.3%) reported no religious affiliation. The largest Christian denominations by number of adherents were the Roman Catholic Church with 292,970 (27%); the United Church of Canada with 176,820 (16%); and the Anglican Church of Canada with 85,890 (8%).vcite web|url= http://www12.statcan.ca/english/census01/products/highlight/Religion/Page.cfm? Lang=E& Geo=PR& View=1a& Code=46& Table=1& StartRec=1& Sort=2& B1=46& B2=All|title=Religions in Canada|publisher=Statistics Canada|accessdate=28 October 2009
Economy
See also|List of companies based in Manitoba Manitoba has a moderately strong economy based largely on natural resources. Its Gross Domestic Product was C$50.834& nbsp;billion in 2008. The province's economy grew 2.4 percent in 2008, the third consecutive year of growth; in 2009, it neither increased nor decreased.vcite web|url= http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/13-016-x/2009001/hl-fs-eng.htm#manitoba|title=Highlights by province and territory |date=27 April 2009|publisher=Statistics Canada|accessdate=7 November 2009vcite web|url= http://www.statcan.gc.ca/pub/13-016-x/13-016-x2010001-eng.htm|title=Provincial and Territorial Economic Accounts Review |date=11 April 2010|publisher=Statistics Canada|accessdate=11 April 2011 The average individual income in Manitoba in 2006 was C$25,100 (compared to a national average of C$26,500), ranking fifth-highest among the provinces.vcite web|url= http://www40.statcan.gc.ca/l01/cst01/famil105k-eng.htm|title=Individuals by total income level, by province and territory |date=11 February 2009|publisher=Statistics Canada|accessdate=7 November 2009 As of October 2009, Manitoba's unemployment rate was 5.8 percent.vcite web|url= http://www.statcan.gc.ca/subjects-sujets/labour-travail/lfs-epa/lfs-epa-eng.htm|title=Latest release from the Labour Force Survey|date=6 November 2009|publisher=Statistics Canada|accessdate=7 November 2009
Manitoba's economy relies heavily on agriculture, tourism, energy, oil, mining, and forestry. Agriculture is vital and is found mostly in the southern half of the province, although grain farming occurs as far north as The Pas. Around 12 percent of Canadian farmland is in Manitoba. The most common type of farm found in rural areas is cattle farming (34.6%), followed by assorted grains (19.0%) and oilseed (7.9%).
Manitoba is the nation's largest producer of sunflower seed and dry beans,vcite web|url= http://www.umanitoba.ca/afs/agric_economics/Century/ACenturyofAgriculture.PDF|title=A Century of Agriculture|publisher=University of Manitoba|accessdate=28 October 2009 and one of the leading sources of potatoes. Portage la Prairie is a major potato processing center, and is home to the McCain Foods Limited|McCain Foods and Simplot plants, which provide French fries for McDonald's , Wendy's , and other commercial chains.vcite journal|date=1 July 2002|title=New Simplot french fry plant in Canada expected to come on line later this year|journal=Quick Frozen Foods International|publisher=E.W. Williams Publications, Inc|volume=2|issue=3|page=3 Viterra|Can-Oat Milling , one of the largest oat mills in the world, also has a plant in the Rural municipality|municipality .vcite journal|date=November 2005|title=A Case Study of the Canadian Oat Market|journal= Alberta Agriculture, Food and Rural Development |page=74|url= http://www1.agric.gov.ab.ca/$department/deptdocs.nsf/all/agc6751/$FILE/OatsStudyNov2005.pdf |accessdate=29 January 2010
Manitoba's largest employers are government and government-funded institutions, including crown corporations and services like List of hospitals in Manitoba|hospitals and List of universities in Manitoba|universities . Major private-sector employers are The Great-West Life Assurance Company , Cargill Ltd. , and Richardson International|James Richardson and Sons Ltd. vcite journal|date=July 2000|title=Top 100 Companies Survey 2000|journal=Manitoba Business Magazine|publisher=Manitoba Business|volume=26 Manitoba also has large manufacturing and tourism sectors. Churchill's Arctic wildlife is a major tourist attraction; the town is a world capital for polar bear and beluga whale watchers.vcite book|author=Shackley, Myra L|title=Wildlife tourism|publisher=International Thomson Business Press|date=1996|page=xviii|isbn=978-0-415-11539-1 Manitoba is the only province with an Arctic deep-water seaport, which links to the shortest shipping route between North America, Europe and Asia.
Economic history
Manitoba's early economy depended on mobility and living off the land. Aboriginal Nations (Cree, Ojibwa, Dene, Sioux and Assiniboine) followed herds of bison and congregated to trade among themselves at key meeting places throughout the province. After the arrival of the first European traders in the 17th century, the economy centred on the trade of beaver pelts and other furs.vcite book|author=Friesen, Gerald|title=The Canadian prairies: a history|publisher=University of Toronto Press|date=1987|pages=22–47, 66, 183–184|isbn=978-0-8020-6648-0 Diversification of the economy came when Lord Selkirk brought the first agricultural settlers in 1811,vcite journal|author=Morton, William L|date=April 1962|title=Lord Selkirk Settlers|journal=Manitoba Pageant|publisher=Manitoba Historical Society|volume=7|issue=3 though the triumph of the Hudson's Bay Company (HBC) over its competitors ensured the primacy of the fur trade over widespread agricultural colonization.
HBC control of Rupert's Land ended in 1868; when Manitoba became a province in 1870, all land became the property of the federal government, with homesteads granted to settlers for farming. Transcontinental railways were constructed to simplify trade. Manitoba's economy depended mainly on farming, which persisted until drought and the Great Depression led to further diversification.
Armed forces
CFB Winnipeg is a Canadian Forces base|Canadian Forces Base at the Winnipeg International Airport. The base is home to flight operations support divisions and several training schools, as well as the 1 Canadian Air Division and Canadian North American Aerospace Defense Command|NORAD Region Headquarters.vcite web |url= http://www.airforce.forces.gc.ca/v2/page-eng.asp? id=24 |title=Organization Overview |publisher=Department of National Defence|accessdate=16 January 2010 17 Wing of the Canadian Forces is based at CFB Winnipeg; the Wing has three squadrons and six schools.vcite web |url= http://www.airforce.forces.gc.ca/17w-17e/page-eng.asp? id=182 |title=17 Wing—General Information |publisher=Department of National Defence|accessdate=22 February 2010 It supports 113 units from Thunder Bay to the Saskatchewan/Alberta border, and from the 49th parallel north to the Northern Canada|high Arctic . 17 Wing acts as a deployed operating base for CF-18 Hornet fighter–bombers assigned to the Canadian NORAD Region.
The two 17 Wing squadrons based in the city are: the 402 ("City of Winnipeg" Squadron), which flies the Canadian designed and produced de Havilland Canada Bombardier Dash 8|CT-142 Dash 8 navigation trainer in support of the 1 Canadian Forces Flight Training School's Air Combat Systems Officer and Airborne Electronic Sensor Operator training programs (which trains all Canadian Air Combat Systems Officer);vcite book|author=Pigott, Peter|title=Taming the skies|publisher=Dundurn Press Ltd|date=2003|page=203|isbn=978-1-55002-469-2 and the 435 ("Chinthe" Transport and Rescue Squadron), which flies the Lockheed Corporation|Lockheed C-130 Hercules tanker/transport in airlift search and rescue roles, and is the only Air Force squadron equipped and trained to conduct Aerial refueling|air-to-air refueling of fighter aircraft.
CFB Shilo|Canadian Forces Base Shilo (CFB Shilo) is an Operations and Training base of the Canadian Forces located convert|35|km east of Brandon. During the 1990s, Canadian Forces Base Shilo was designated as an Area Support Unit, acting as a local base of operations for Southwest Manitoba in times of military and civil emergency.vcite web |url= http://www.army.gc.ca/iaol/143000440000579/index-Eng.html|title=CFB ASU Shilo |publisher=Department of National Defence|accessdate=2 April 2012 CFB Shilo is the home of the Royal Canadian Horse Artillery|1st Regiment, Royal Canadian Horse Artillery , both battalions of the 1 Canadian Mechanized Brigade Group , and the Royal Regiment of Canadian Artillery|Royal Canadian Artillery . The Second Battalion of Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry (2 PPCLI), which was originally stationed in Winnipeg (first at Fort Osborne, then in Kapyong Barracks), has operated out of CFB Shilo since 2004. CFB Shilo hosts training units such as the Western Area Training Centre Detachment Shilo and the Communications Reserve School. It serves as a base for support units of Land Force Western Area , including 731 Signals Squadron. The base currently houses 1,700 soldiers.
Government and politics
See also|Politics of Manitoba|Monarchy in ManitobaAfter the control of Rupert's Land was passed from Great Britain to the Government of Canada in 1869, Manitoba attained full-fledged rights and responsibilities of self-government as the first Canadian province carved out of the Northwest Territories.vcite book|author=Dupont, Jerry|title=The Common Law Abroad: Constitutional and Legal Legacy of the British Empire|publisher=Fred B Rothman & Co|date=2000|pages=139–142|isbn=978-0-8377-3125-4 The Legislative Assembly of Manitoba was established on 14 July 1870. Political parties first emerged between 1878 and 1883, with a two-party system ( Manitoba Liberal Party|Liberals and Progressive Conservative Party of Manitoba|Conservatives ).vcite journal|author=Adams, Chris|date=17 September 2006|title= Manitoba's Political Party Systems: An Historical Overview|journal=Annual Meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association|publisher=York University|pages=2–23 The Progressive Party of Manitoba|United Farmers of Manitoba appeared in 1922, and later merged with the Liberals in 1932. Other parties, including the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF), appeared during the Great Depression; in the 1950s, Manitoban politics became a three-party system, and the Liberals gradually declined in power. The CCF became the New Democratic Party of Manitoba (NDP), which came to power in 1969. Since then, the Conservatives and the NDP have been the dominant parties.
Like all Canadian provinces, Manitoba is governed by a unicameralism|unicameral legislative assembly .vcite book|author=Summers, Harrison Boyd|title=Unicameral Legislatures|publisher=Wilson|date=1936|volume=11|page=9|oclc=1036784 The executive (government)|executive branch is formed by the governing party; the party leader is the premier of Manitoba , the head of the executive branch. The head of state, Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Queen Elizabeth& nbsp;II , is represented by the Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba , who is appointed by the Governor General of Canada on advice of the Prime Minister of Canada|Prime Minister .vcite web|url= http://www.lg.gov.mb.ca/role/resp.html|title=Roles and Responsibilities|publisher=Lieutenant-Governor of Manitoba|accessdate=29 October 2009 The head of state is primarily a ceremonial role, although the List of lieutenant governors of Manitoba|Lieutenant Governor has the official responsibility of ensuring that Manitoba has a duly constituted government.
The Legislative Assembly consists of the 57 Members elected to represent the people of Manitoba.vcite book|author=Hogg, Peter W|title=The Role of Courts in Society|editor=Shetreet, Shimon|publisher=Aspen Publishing|date=1988|page=9|chapter=Necessity in Manitoba: The Role of Courts in Formative or Crisis Periods|isbn=978-90-247-3670-6 The List of premiers of Manitoba|premier of Manitoba is Greg Selinger of the NDP, who replaced Gary Doer to lead the NDP majority government of 37 seats.vcite web|url= http://www.electionsmanitoba.ca/en/Results/general_election_39_static.html|title=39th General Election|publisher=Elections Manitoba|accessdate=29 October 2009vcite web|url= http://electionsmanitoba.ca/election/results/flashresults.asp|title=40th Provincial Election|accessdate=8 March 2012|publisher=Elections Manitoba The Conservative Party holds 19 seats, and the Liberal Party has one seat but does not have official party status in the Manitoba Legislature. The last provincial List of Manitoba general elections|general election was held on 4 October 2011. The province is represented in federal politics by 14 Canadian House of Commons|Members of Parliament and six Senate of Canada|Senators .vcite web|url= http://webinfo.parl.gc.ca/MembersOfParliament/MainMPsCompleteList.aspx? TimePeriod=Current& Language=E|title=Members of Parliament|publisher=Government of Canada|accessdate=12 November 2009vcite web|url= http://www.parl.gc.ca/common/senmemb/senate/isenator.asp? Language=E|title=Senators|publisher=Government of Canada|accessdate=12 November 2009
Manitoba's judiciary consists of the Manitoba Court of Appeal|Court of Appeal , the Court of Queen's Bench of Manitoba|Court of Queen's Bench , and the Provincial Court of Manitoba|Provincial Court . The Provincial Court is primarily for criminal law; 95 percent of criminal cases in Manitoba are heard here.vcite web|url= http://www.manitobacourts.mb.ca/pr/pr_work.html |title=Provincial Court& nbsp;– Description of the Court's Work|date=21 September 2006|publisher=Manitoba Courts|accessdate=9 November 2009 The Court of Queen's Bench is the highest trial court in the province. It has four jurisdictions: family law ( child and family services cases), civil law (common law)|civil law , criminal law (for indictable offence s), and appeal s. The Court of Appeal hears appeals from both benches; its decisions can only be appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada .vcite book|author=Brawn, Dale|title=The Court of Queen's Bench of Manitoba, 1870–1950: A Biographical History|publisher=University of Toronto Press |date=2006|pages=16–20|isbn=978-0-8020-9225-0
Official languages
English and French are the official languages of the legislature and courts of Manitoba, according to § 23 of the Manitoba Act, 1870 (part of the Constitution of Canada ). In April 1890, the Manitoba legislature attempted to abolish the official status of French, and ceased to publish bilingual legislation. However, in 1985 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in the Reference re Manitoba Language Rights that §23 still applied, and that legislation published only in English was invalid (unilingual legislation was declared valid for a temporary period to allow time for translation).vcite book|author=Hebert, Raymond M|title=Manitoba's French-Language Crisis: A Cautionary Tale|publisher=McGill-Queen's University Press|date=2005|pages=xiv–xvi, 11–12, 30, 67–69|isbn=978-0-7735-2790-4
Although French is an official language for the purposes of the legislature, legislation, and the courts, the Manitoba Act does not require it to be an official language for the purpose of the executive branch (except when performing legislative or judicial functions).In 1992 1 S.C.R. 221–222 http://www.lexum.umontreal.ca/csc-scc/en/pub/1992/vol1/html/1992scr1_0212.html Umontreal.ca, the Supreme Court rejected the contentions of the Société franco-manitobaine that §23 extends to executive functions of the executive branch. Hence, Manitoba's government is not completely bilingual. The Manitoba French Language Services Policy of 1999 is intended to provide a comparable level of provincial government services in both official languages.vcite web|url= http://www.gov.mb.ca/fls-slf/pdf/fls_policy.pdf|title=Manitoba Francophone Affairs Secretariat|publisher=Government of Manitoba|accessdate=29 October 2009 According to the 2006 Census, 89.8 percent of Manitoba's population spoke only English, 0.2 percent spoke only French, 9.1 percent spoke both, and 0.9 percent spoke neither.vcite web|url= http://www40.statcan.gc.ca/l01/cst01/demo15-eng.htm|title=Population by knowledge of official language, by province and territory (2006 Census) |date=11 December 2007|publisher=Statistics Canada|accessdate=8 March 2010
Transportation
See also|List of bridges in Canada|List of Manitoba provincial highways
Transportation and warehousing contribute approximately Nowrap|C$2.2 billion to Manitoba's GDP. Total employment in the industry is estimated at 34,500, or around 5 percent of Manitoba's population.vcite web|url= http://www.gov.mb.ca/ctt/profiles/trans1/index.html |title=Employment|publisher=Government of Manitoba|accessdate=28 October 2009Trucks haul 95 percent of land freight in Manitoba, and trucking companies account for 80 percent of Manitoba's merchandise trade to the United States.vcite web|url= http://www.gov.mb.ca/ctt/profiles/trans1/index.html|title=Transportation & Logistics|publisher=Government of Manitoba|accessdate=28 October 2009 Five of Canada's twenty-five largest employers in for-hire trucking are headquartered in Manitoba.Nowrap|C$1.18 billion of Manitoba's GDP comes directly or indirectly from trucking.
Greyhound Canada , Grey Goose Bus Lines and Jefferson Lines offer domestic and international bus service from the Winnipeg Bus Terminal . The terminal was relocated from downtown Winnipeg to the airport in 2009, and is a Greyhound hub.vcite web|url= http://www.cbc.ca/canada/manitoba/story/2009/08/14/manitoba-bus-depot.html|title=Winnipeg bus depot to move after 45 years downtown|date=14 August 2009|publisher=CBC News|accessdate=31 January 2010 Municipalities also operate localized transit bus systems.
Manitoba has two Class I railroad|Class& nbsp;I railways : Canadian National Railway (CN) and Canadian Pacific Railway (CPR). Winnipeg is centrally located on the main lines of both carriers, and both maintain large inter-modal terminals in the city. CN and CPR operate a combined convert|2439|km of track in Manitoba. Via Rail offers transcontinental and Northern Manitoba passenger service from Union Station (Winnipeg)|Winnipeg's Union Station . Numerous small regional and short-line railways also run trains within Manitoba: the Hudson Bay Railway , the Southern Manitoba Railway , Burlington Northern Santa Fe Manitoba , Greater Winnipeg Water District Railway , and Central Manitoba Railway . Together, these smaller lines operate approximately convert|1775|km of track in the province.
Winnipeg James Armstrong Richardson International Airport , Manitoba's largest List of airports in Manitoba|airport , is one of only a few 24-hour unrestricted airports in Canada and is part of the National Airports System .vcite web|url= http://www.gov.mb.ca/ctt/invest/busfacts/transport/wiairport.html|title=Transportation: Winnipeg James Armstrong Richardson International Airport|publisher=Government of Manitoba|accessdate=28 October 2009 A new, larger terminal opened in October 2011.vcite web|url= http://www.waa.ca/media/news/read,article/619/winnipeg-airports-authority-officially-opens-community-s-new-front-door|publisher=Winnipeg Airports Authority|accessdate=2012-03-09|title=Winnipeg Airports Authority Officially Opens Community's New Front Door|date=2011-10-31 The airport handles approximately convert|195000|t|lb of cargo annually, making it the third largest cargo airport in the country.
Eleven regional passenger airlines and nine smaller and charter carriers operate out of the airport, as well as eleven air cargo carriers and seven freight forwarders. Winnipeg is a major sorting facility for both FedEx and Purolator Courier|Purolator , and receives daily trans-border service from United Parcel Service|UPS . Air Canada Cargo and Cargojet Airways use the airport as a major hub for national traffic.
The Port of Churchill , owned by OmniTRAX , is nautically closer to ports in Northern Europe and Russia than any other port in Canada.vcite web|url= http://www.portofchurchill.ca/|title=Port of Churchill|publisher=Hudson Bay Port Company|accessdate=28 October 2009 The port is the only Arctic deep-water port in Canada and a part of the closest shipping route between North America and Asia. It has four deep-sea berths for the loading and unloading of grain, general cargo and tanker vessels. The port is served by the Hudson Bay Railway (also owned by OmniTRAX). Grain represented 90 percent of the port's traffic in the 2004 shipping season. In that year, over convert|600000|t|lb of agricultural products were shipped through the port. -
Education
See also|Higher education in Manitoba|Manitoba Public Schools ActThe first school in Manitoba was founded in 1818 by Roman Catholic missionary|missionaries in present-day Winnipeg; the first Protestant school was established in 1820.vcite book|author=Badertscher, John M|coauthors=Harland, Gordon; Miller, Roland E|title=Religious Studies in Manitoba and Saskatchewan|publisher=Wilfrid Laurier University Press|date=1993|page=8|isbn=978-0-88920-223-8 A provincial board of education was established in 1871; it was responsible for public schools and curriculum, and represented both Catholics and Protestants. The Manitoba Schools Question led to funding for French Catholic schools largely being withdrawn in favour of the English Protestant majority.vcite journal|author=Bale, Gordon|date=1985|title=Law, Politics, and the Manitoba School Question: Supreme Court and Privy Council|journal=Canadian Bar Review|publisher=Canadian Bar Association|volume=63|issue=461|pages=467–473 Legislation making education compulsory for children between seven and fourteen was first enacted in 1916, and the leaving age was raised to sixteen in 1962.vcite journal|author=Oreopoulos, Philip|date=May 2003|title=Oreopoulos|journal=Conference on Education, Schooling and The Labour Market|publisher=Canadian Employment Research Forum|page=9
Public schools in Manitoba fall under the regulation of one of thirty-seven List of school districts in Manitoba|school divisions within Minister of Education, Citizenship and Youth (Manitoba)|the provincial education system (except for the Manitoba Band Operated Schools , which are administered by the federal government).vcite book|author=Hajnal, Vivian J|title=Saving America's School Infrastructure|editors=Crampton, Faith E; Thompson, David C|publisher=Information Age Publishing|date=2003|pages=57–58|chapter=Canadian Approaches to the Financing of School Infrastructure|isbn=978-1-931576-17-8 Public schools follow a provincially mandated curriculum in either French or English. There are sixty-five funded independent schools in Manitoba, including three boarding schools.vcite web|url= http://www.edu.gov.mb.ca/k12/schools/ind/funded_ind.html|title=Funded Independent Schools|publisher=Government of Manitoba|accessdate=12 November 2009 These schools must follow the Manitoban curriculum and meet other provincial requirements. There are forty-four non-funded independent schools, which are not required to meet those standards.vcite web|url= http://www.edu.gov.mb.ca/k12/schools/ind/non_fund_ind.html|title=Non-Funded Independent Schools|publisher=Government of Manitoba|accessdate=12 November 2009
There are five universities in Manitoba, regulated by the Minister of Advanced Education and Literacy (Manitoba)|Ministry of Advanced Education and Literacy .vcite web|accessdate=8 October 2008|url= http://www.aucc.ca/can_uni/our_universities/index_e.html|title=Canadian Universities |publisher=Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada Four of these universities are in Winnipeg: the University of Manitoba , the largest and most comprehensive; the University of Winnipeg , a liberal arts college|liberal arts school primarily focused on undergrad studies located downtown; Collège universitaire de Saint-Boniface , the province's only French-language university; and the Canadian Mennonite University , a religious-based institution. The Collège universitaire de Saint-Boniface, established in 1818 and now affiliated with the University of Manitoba, is the oldest university in Western Canada. Brandon University , formed in 1899 and located in Brandon, is the province's newest university and the only one not in Winnipeg.vcite web|url= http://www.aucc.ca/_pdf/english/aboutaucc/joinaucc_e.pdf|title=Founding Year and Joining Year of AUCC Member Institutions|date=2 November 2009|publisher=AUCC|accessdate=2 February 2010
Manitoba has thirty-eight public libraries; of these, twelve have French-language collections and eight have significant collections in other languages.vcite web|url= http://www.umanitoba.ca/libraries/engineering/mla/libdir.html|title=Directory of libraries in Manitoba|publisher=Manitoba Library Association|accessdate=29 October 2009 Twenty-one of these are part of the Winnipeg Public Library system. The first lending library in Manitoba was founded in 1848.vcite book|title=Winnipeg Public Library: A Capsule History|publisher=Winnipeg Public Library|date=1988
Culture
Main|Culture of Manitoba
Arts
Manitoba's culture has been influenced by both traditional (Aboriginal and Métis) and modern Canadian artistic values, as well as by the cultures of its immigrant populations and American neighbours. The Minister of Culture, Heritage, Tourism and Sport (Manitoba)|Minister of Culture, Heritage, Tourism and Sport is responsible for promoting and, to some extent, financing Manitoban culture.vcite web|url= http://www.gov.mb.ca/chc/ourdept/index.html|title=Culture, Heritage and Tourism|publisher=Government of Manitoba|accessdate=11 April 2011 Manitoba is the birthplace of the Red River Jig , a combination of aboriginal pow-wow s and European Reel (dance)|reels that was popular among early settlers.vcite journal|author=Bolton, David|date=September 1961|title=The Red River Jig|journal=Manitoba Pageant|publisher=Manitoba Historical Society|volume=7|issue=1 Manitoba's traditional music has strong roots in Métis and Aboriginal culture, in particular the old-time music|old-time fiddle|fiddling of the Métis.vcite journal|author=Lederman, Anne|date=1988|title=Old Indian and Metis Fiddling in Manitoba: Origins, Structure, and Questions of Syncretism|journal=The Canadian Journal of Native Studies|volume=7|issue=2|pages=205–230 Manitoba's cultural scene also incorporates classical European traditions. The Royal Winnipeg Ballet (RWB), based in Winnipeg, is Canada's oldest ballet and the longest continuously operating ballet company in North America; it was granted its royal title in 1953 under Queen Elizabeth& nbsp;II.vcite book|author=Dafoe, Christopher|title=Dancing through time: the first fifty years of Canada's Royal Winnipeg Ballet|publisher=Portage & Main Press|date=1990|pages=4, 10, 154|isbn=978-0-9694264-0-0 The Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra (WSO) performs classical music and new compositions at the Centennial Concert Hall .vcite web|url= http://www.wso.mb.ca/history.asp|archiveurl= http://web.archive.org/web/20080504203455/ http://www.wso.mb.ca/history.asp|archivedate=4 May 2008|title=More About the WSO|date=2008|publisher=Winnipeg Symphony Orchestra|accessdate=23 February 2010 Manitoba Opera , founded in 1969, also performs out of the Centennial Concert Hall.
Le Cercle Molière (founded 1925) is the oldest French-language theatre in Canada,vcite journal|author=Moss, Jane|date=Spring 2004|title=The Drama of Identity in Canada's Francophone West|journal=American Review of Canadian Studies|publisher=Routledge|volume=34|issue=1|pages=82–83|issn=0272-2011 and Manitoba Theatre Centre (founded 1958) is Canada's oldest English-language regional theatre.vcite journal|author=Hendry, Thomas B|date=Autumn 1965|title=Trends in Canadian Theatre|journal=The Tulane Drama Review|publisher=MIT Press|volume=10|issue=1|page=65 Manitoba Theatre for Young People was the first English-language theatre to win the Canadian Institute of the Arts for Young Audiences Award, and offers plays for children and teenagers as well as a theatre school.vcite web|url= http://www.mtyp.ca/about-mtyp.cfm|title=About Us|publisher=Manitoba Theatre for Young People|accessdate=11 April 2011 The Winnipeg Art Gallery (WAG), Manitoba's largest art gallery and the sixth largest in the country, hosts an art school for children; the WAG's permanent collection comprises over twenty thousand works, with a particular emphasis on Manitoban and Canadian art.vcite web|url= http://www.umanitoba.ca/schools/art/gallery/hpgs/wag/|title=Winnipeg Art Gallery|publisher=University of Manitoba|accessdate=8 November 2009vcite web|url= http://wag.ca/about/history|title=History|date=2009|publisher=Winnipeg Art Gallery|accessdate=8 November 2009
The 1960s pop supergroup (music)|supergroup The Guess Who was the first Canadian band to have a No. 1 hit in the United States;vcite journal|author=Elliott, Robin|date=December 1998|title=Before the Gold Rush: Flashbacks to the Dawn of the Canadian Sound|journal=CAML Review|publisher=Canadian Association of Music Libraries, Archives, and Documentation Centres|volume=26|issue=3|pages=26–27Guess Who guitarist Randy Bachman later created Bachman–Turner Overdrive (BTO).vcite book|author=Melhuish, Martin|title=Bachman-Turner Overdrive: Rock Is My Life, This Is My Song|publisher=Methuen Publications|date=1976|page=74|isbn=978-0-8467-0104-0 Fellow rocker Neil Young played with Stephen Stills in Buffalo Springfield , and again in Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young .vcite web|url= http://www.rockhall.com/inductee/neil-young|title=Neil Young|date=2007|publisher=The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, Inc|accessdate=23 February 2010 Soft-rock band Crash Test Dummies formed in the late 1980s in Winnipeg and were the 1992 Juno Award s Group of the Year.vcite book|author=Bianco, David P|title=Parents aren't supposed to like it|publisher=U*X*L|date=2001|edition=2|volume=1|page=42|isbn=978-0-7876-1732-5
Several prominent Canadian films were produced in Manitoba, such as The Stone Angel (film)|The Stone Angel , based on the Margaret Laurence book of the The Stone Angel|same title , The Saddest Music in the World , Foodland (film)|Foodland , For Angela , and My Winnipeg . Major films shot in Manitoba include The Assassination of Jesse James by the Coward Robert Ford and Capote (film)|Capote ,vcite web|url= http://www.mbfilmmusic.ca/Film/WhosFilmedHere/tabid/73/language/en-US/Default.aspx|title=Who's filmed here? |publisher=Manitoba Film & Music|accessdate=11 November 2009 both of which received Academy Award nominations.vcite web|url= http://old.oscars.org/press/presskit/nomannc/pdf/03_80th_fact_sheet.pdf|title=80th Annual Academy Awards Oscar Nominations Fact Sheet|publisher=Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences|accessdate=11 November 2009 Falcon Beach , an internationally broadcast television drama, was filmed at Winnipeg Beach, Manitoba .vcite news|url= http://falconbeach.ca/index.aspx? go=/pr_060621.aspx|title=Falcon Beach filming again in Manitoba|author=St. Germain, Pat|date=21 June 2006|publisher=Winnipeg Sun|accessdate=11 November 2009
Manitoba has a strong literary tradition. Manitoban writer Bertram Brooker won the first-ever Governor General's Awards|Governor General's Award for Fiction in 1936.vcite web|url= http://www.canadacouncil.ca/NR/rdonlyres/CCA1B1A6-59E5-4748-BFEE-B64313E92624/0/CumulativeWinners2008.pdf|title=Cumulative List of Winners of the Governor General's Literary Awards|date=2008|publisher=Canada Council for the Arts|accessdate=11 November 2009 Cartoonist Lynn Johnston , author of the comic strip For Better or For Worse , was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize and inducted into the Canadian Cartoonist Hall of Fame .vcite web |url= http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/search/article_display.jsp? vnu_content_id=1003835602 |title=Lynn Johnston to Enter Canadian Cartoonists' Hall of Fame on Friday |author=Astor, Dave |publisher= Editor & Publisher |date=6 August 2008 |accessdate=5 September 2008|archiveurl= http://able2know.org/topic/120511-1|archivedate=6 August 2008 Margaret Laurence's The Stone Angel and A Jest of God were set in Manawaka , a fictional town representing Neepawa, Manitoba|Neepawa ; the latter title won the Governor General's Award in 1966.vcite book|author=Rosenthal, Caroline|title=The Canadian Short Story: Interpretations|editor= Reingard M. Nischik |publisher=Camden House|date=2007|page=219|chapter=Collective Memory and Personal Identity in the Prairie town of Manawaka|isbn=978-1-57113-127-0 Carol Shields won both the Governor General's Award and the Pulitzer Prize for The Stone Diaries .vcite book|author=Werlock, Abby|title=Carol Shields's the Stone Diaries|publisher=Continuum|date=2001|page=69|isbn=978-0-8264-5249-8 Gabrielle Roy , a Franco-Manitoban writer, won the Governor General's Award three times. A quote from her writings is featured on the Canadian $20 bill.vcite web|url= http://www.bankofcanada.ca/banknotes/bank-note-series/canadian-journey/gabrielle-roy-canadian-author-of-the-quotation-on-the-back-of-the-new-20-note/|title=Gabrielle Roy, Canadian author of the quotation on the back of the new $20 note|publisher=Bank of Canada|accessdate=2 April 2012
Festivals and museums
Festivals take place throughout the province, with the largest centred in Winnipeg. The Festival du Voyageur is an annual ten-day event held in Winnipeg's French Quarter, and is Western Canada's largest winter festival. It celebrates Canada's fur-trading past and French-Canadian heritage and culture. Folklorama , a multicultural festival run by the Folk Arts Council, receives around 400,000 pavilion visits each year, of which about thirty percent are from non-Winnipeg residents.vcite book|author=Selwood, John|title=Food Tourism Around The World: Development, Management and Markets|editor=Hall, C Michael; Sharples, Liz; Mitchell, Richard; Macionis, Niki; Cambourne, Brock|publisher=Butterworth-Heinemann|date=2003|pages=180–182|chapter=The lure of food: food as an attraction in destination marketing in Manitoba, Canada|isbn=978-0-7506-5503-3vcite web|url= http://www.folklorama.ca/index.php? option=com_content& view=article& id=55& Itemid=53|title=FAQs|publisher=Folklorama|accessdate=11 November 2009 The Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival is an annual Fringe theatre|alternative theatre festival , the second-largest festival of its kind in North America (after the Edmonton International Fringe Festival ).vcite journal|author=Woosnam, Kyle M; McElroy, Kerry E; Van Winkle, Christine M|date=July 2009|title=The Role of Personal Values in Determining Tourist Motivations: An Application to the Winnipeg Fringe Theatre Festival, a Cultural Special Event |journal=Journal of Hospitality Marketing & Management|publisher=Routledge|volume=18|issue=5|pages=500–502
Manitoban museums document different aspects of the province's heritage. The Manitoba Museum is the largest museum in Manitoba and focuses on Manitoban history from prehistory to the 1920s.vcite book|author=Dutton, Lee S|title=Anthropological Resources: A Guide to Archival, Library, and Museum Collections|publisher=Routledge|date=1999|pages=6–9|isbn=978-0-8153-1188-1 The full-size replica of the Nonsuch is the museum's showcase piece.vcite journal|author=Barbour, Alex; Collins, Cathy; Grattan, David|date=1986|title=Monitoring the Nonsuch|journal=LIC-CG Annual Conference|publisher=International Institute for Conservation& nbsp;– Canada Group|location=Ottawa|volume=12|pages=19–21 The Manitoba Children's Museum at The Forks, Winnipeg|The Forks presents exhibits for children.vcite web|url= http://childrensmuseum.com/capital_campaign/about-us/|title=About MCM|publisher=Manitoba Children's Museum|accessdate=11 November 2009 There are two museums dedicated to the native flora and fauna of Manitoba: the Living Prairie Museum , a tall grass prairie preserve featuring 160 species of grasses and wildflowers, and FortWhyte Alive , a park encompassing prairie, lake, forest and wetland habitats, home to a large herd of bison .vcite journal|author=Stewart, Jane|date=April 1986|title=Winnipeg: a big city with the heart of a small town|journal=Canadian Medical Association Journal|publisher=Canadian Medical Association|volume=134|issue=7|page=810 The Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre houses the largest collection of marine reptile fossil s in Canada.vcite book|author=Janzic, A; Hatcher, J|title=Late Cretaceous Marine Reptile Fossils of the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre|publisher=Mount Royal College|date=2008|series=Alberta Palaeontological Society, Twelfth Annual Symposium|volume=Abstracts Volume|page=28 Other museums feature the history of Western Canada Aviation Museum|aviation , Marine Museum of Manitoba|marine transport , and Winnipeg Railway Museum|railways in the area. The Canadian Museum for Human Rights will on completion be the first Canadian national museum outside of the National Capital Region (Canada)|National Capital Region .vcite journal|author=Carter, Jennifer|date=2007|title=Canada at the "Crossroads": Global Citizenship, Narrative History, and The Canadian Museum for Human Rights|journal=Linköping Electronic Conference Proceedings|publisher=Linköpings universitet|issue=31|page=81|issn=1650-3740|url= http://www.ep.liu.se/ecp/031/007/ecp0703107.pdf
Media
Winnipeg has three daily newspapers: the Winnipeg Free Press , a broadsheet with the highest circulation numbers in Manitoba, as well as the Winnipeg Sun and Metro_International#North_America|Metro , both smaller Tabloid (newspaper format)|tabloid -style papers. There are several ethnic weekly newspapers,vcite web|url= http://www.collectionscanada.gc.ca/8/16/r16-205-e.html|title=Canadian Ethnic Newspapers Currently Received|publisher=Collections Canada|accessdate=17 July 2009 including the weekly French-language La Liberté (Canada)|La Liberté , and regional and national magazines based in the city. Brandon has two newspapers: the daily Brandon Sun and the weekly Wheat City Journal .vcite web|url= http://www.econdev.brandon.mb.ca/main.nsf/Pages+By+ID/666|title=Local Media|publisher=Economic Development Brandon|accessdate=11 November 2009 Many small towns have local newspapers.vcite web|url= http://www.gov.mb.ca/chc/leg-lib/newspapers.html|title=Current Newspapers at the Library|publisher=Legislative Library|accessdate=23 February 2010
There are five English-language television stations and one French-language station based in Winnipeg. The Global Television Network (owned by Canwest ) is headquartered in the city.vcite book|author=Carlin, Vincent A|title=How Canadians communicate|editor=Frits Pannekoek, David Taras, Maria Bakardjieva|publisher=University of Calgary Press|date=2003|volume=1|pages=59–60|chapter=No Clear Channel: The Rise and Possible Fall of Media Convergence|isbn=978-1-55238-104-5 Winnipeg is home to twenty-one AM and FM radio stations, two of which are French-language stations. Brandon's five local radio stations are provided by Astral Media and Westman Communications Group .vcite web|url= http://www.winnipegradio.ca/|title=Winnipeg Radio|date=2008|publisher=Fresh Traffic Group|accessdate=11 November 2009 In addition to the Brandon and Winnipeg stations, radio service is provided in rural areas and smaller towns by Golden West Broadcasting , Corus Entertainment , and local broadcasters. CBC Radio broadcasts local and national programming throughout the province.vcite journal|author=Smith, John H|date=1969|title=The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation|journal=International Communication Gazette|publisher=Sage Publications|volume=15|pages=139–143 Native Communications is devoted to Aboriginal programming and broadcasts to many of the isolated native communities as well as to larger cities.vcite journal|author=Buddle, Kathleen|date=2005|title=Aboriginal Cultural Capital Creation and Radio Production in Urban Ontario|journal=Canadian Journal of Communication|publisher=Canadian Journal of Communication Corporation|volume=30|issue=1|pages=29–30
Sports
Manitoba has four professional sports teams: the Winnipeg Blue Bombers ( Canadian Football League ), the Winnipeg Jets ( National Hockey League ), the Winnipeg Goldeyes ( American Association of Independent Professional Baseball|American Association ), and the Winnipeg Alliance FC|Winnipeg Alliance ( Canadian Major Indoor Soccer League ). The province was previously home to another team called the Winnipeg Jets (1972–96)|Winnipeg Jets , which played in the World Hockey Association and National Hockey League from 1972 until 1996, when financial troubles prompted a sale and move of the team, renamed the Phoenix Coyotes .vcite news|title=Latest Example of an NHL Trend Is the Flight of the Winnipeg Jets |publisher=The Wall Street Journal |url= http://online.wsj.com/article/SB830488243239275000.html? mod=googlewsj|author=Helyar, John |date=26 April 1996 |accessdate=22 May 2009 The team returned as the Winnipeg Jets, after True North Sports & Entertainment bought the Atlanta Thrashers and was moved to Winnipeg in time for the 2011 hockey season.vcite news|url= http://sports.nationalpost.com/2011/06/24/its-official-the-winnipeg-jets-are-back/|title=It's official: the Winnipeg Jets are back|author=Traikos, Michael|publisher=National Post|date=24 June 2011|accessdate=8 March 2012 Manitoba has one Canadian Hockey League|major junior-level hockey team, the Western Hockey League 's Brandon Wheat Kings .
Manitoba is represented in university athletics by the University of Manitoba Manitoba Bisons|Bisons , the University of Winnipeg Winnipeg Wesmen|Wesmen , and the Brandon University Brandon Bobcats|Bobcats . All three teams compete in the Canada West Universities Athletic Association (the regional division of Canadian Interuniversity Sport ).vcite web|url= http://www.canadawest.org/sports/2010/8/9/About-CW.aspx? |title=About Canada West|date=2006|publisher=Canada West Universities Athletic Association|accessdate=11 April 2011
References
Reflist|colwidth=30em
Further reading
portal|ManitobaWikipedia books|Canadarefbegin
vcite book|author=Donnelly, MS|title=The Government of Manitoba|publisher=University of Toronto Press|year=1963
vcite book|author=Hanlon, Christine; Edie, Barbara; Pendgracs, Doreen|title=Manitoba Book of Everything|publisher=MacIntyre Purcell Publishing Inc|year=2008|isbn=978-0-9784784-5-2
vcite book|author=Whitcomb, Ed|title=A Short History of Manitoba|publisher=Canada's Wings|year=1982|isbn=978-0-920002-15-5
refendclear
External links
Sisterlinks|Manitoba
http://www.gov.mb.ca/splash.html Government of Manitoba
http://www.travelmanitoba.com/ Travel Manitoba
dmoz|Regional/North_America/Canada/Manitoba
Geographic Location (8-way)| Northwest = flag|Northwest Territories| North = flag|Nunavut| Northeast = Hudson Bay | West = flag|Saskatchewan| Centre = Manitoba | East = flag|Ontario| Southwest = flag|North Dakota| South = flag|North Dakota flag|United States| Southeast = flag|Minnesota Navboxes|list =ManitobaProvinces and territories of CanadaCanada topicsCoord|55|4|N|97|31|W|region:CA_scale:10000000|display=title|name=Manitoba featured article Category:Manitoba| Category:1870 establishments Category:Provinces and territories of Canada Category:Article Feedback Blacklist