Tuxedo, Winnipeg Explained

Tuxedo
Settlement Type:Suburb
Motto:"Winnipeg's Suburb Beautiful"[1]
Pushpin Map:Canada Winnipeg
Coordinates:49.8619°N -97.2219°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Established Title:Incorporated (town)
Extinct Title:Amalgamated (Winnipeg)
Founder:Frederick W. Heubach
Leader Title:MP
Leader Name:Ben Carr
Leader Title1:MLA
Leader Name1:Carla Compton
Leader Title2:Councillor
Leader Name2:Evan Duncan
Unit Pref:Metric
Area Total Km2:11.9
Area Metro Km2:5306.79
Elevation Footnotes:[2]
Elevation M:248
Population As Of:2016
Population Total:7145
Population Density Km2:auto
Postal Code Type:Forward Sortation Areas
Postal Code:R3P
Area Code:Area codes 204 and 431
Population Metro:778489

Tuxedo is a residential suburb of Winnipeg, Manitoba. It is located about 7 kilometres (4.5 miles) southwest of downtown Winnipeg and borders the Assiniboine River and Assiniboine Park on the north, Shaftesbury Boulevard on the west, Route 90 to the East and McGillvary Boulevard to the South. Prior to 1972, the community was incorporated as the Town of Tuxedo.

Tuxedo is part of the city ward of Charleswood-Tuxedo-Westwood,[3] as well as belonging to the provincial electoral district of Tuxedo, and the federal electoral district of Winnipeg South Centre.

Etymology

Tuxedo was named after Tuxedo Park, a village in Orange County, New York.[4] [5]

History

What is known today as Tuxedo began when the land was purchased by a group of businessmen between 1903 and 1910 in order to establish a planned "exclusive residential-only suburban enclave"

Between 1903 and 1905, the Tuxedo Park Company Limited, directed by Winnipeg-based real estate agent Frederick W. Heubach[6] on behalf of American investors Frederick E. Kenaston,[7] E. C. Warner, and Walter D. Douglas, began to purchase land in this area for a residential development. The company acquired farmland owned by Mary and Archibald Wright which, along with several smaller land purchases, brought the total area to about 1,200 hectares (3,000 acres). To transform the native scrub vegetation to what Heubach envisioned as a “Suburb Beautiful,” he hired architect and engineer Rickson A. Outhet of New York City to create an appropriate plan.[8] The Outhet plan was never implemented.[9]

In 1910, after acquiring additional land, Heubach and associates created the South Winnipeg Company, which absorbed the Tuxedo Park Company, and hired American landscape architects Olmsted Brothers to plan the subdivision. Their plan including a site intended for the University of Manitoba which, at the time, was located in downtown Winnipeg. Development of the area was delayed for a variety of reasons but investors continued to support the venture and a number of companies were created to manage land transactions and investment: Tuxedo (Winnipeg) Syndicate Limited, South Winnipeg Limited (later South Winnipeg 1923 Limited), Norwood (Winnipeg) Syndicate Limited, Warner Land Company, Tuxedo Estates Limited, Kenaston Realty Company, University Estates Limited, Assiniboine Estates Limited, Assiniboine Investments Limited, South Assiniboine Estates Limited, West Rydal Limited, and The Canadian Agency.

The Town of Tuxedo was formally incorporated on 24 January 1913, with Heubach as its first mayor and a four-member council. Other mayors included David R. Finkelstein (served 1915–1951),[10] Cecil A. R. Lamont (1952–1961),[11] and Clive K. Tallin (1961–1971).[12] The Town had its own police department, fire department, and recreation commission, and was part of a health unit including St. James, Assiniboia, St. Vital, Fort Garry, and Charleswood. There were three public schools in the Town, managed by the Assiniboine South School Division No. 3, including Tuxedo School No. 1709,[13] opened in 1927. Also in the late 1920s was the creation of Heubach Park, a purely residential subdivision within Tuxedo.

The Metropolitan Planning Commission indicated as far back as 1946[14] that Grant Avenue would be extended through the Town of Tuxedo.[15] In the mid-1950s, a project to extend Grant Avenue through Tuxedo and onto Charleswood terminating at Roblin Boulevard would lead to the bisection of Heubach Park. However, Tuxedo mayor Cecil Lamont was opposed to this plan[16] and preferred that the major thoroughfare be placed southward near Eldride. The Town changed its position by 1960, making way for the $50-million project, including an additional 1,600 homes and the westward extension of Grant Avenue over a 10-year period.[17] The initial portion of the new subdivision would be located west of Heubach Park between Corydon Avenue and Mountbatten Road.

Until the 1960s, retail locations were prohibited in Tuxedo. Rules were eased to allow an apartment complex and small shopping mall, Tuxedo Park Shopping Centre, which opened on 30 October 1963. Liquor sales followed suit in 1969.

A monument celebrating the incorporation of the Town was installed in Heubach Park in July 1970, dedicated by the Metropolitan Corporation of Greater Winnipeg.[18]

In 1972, Tuxedo amalgamated with Winnipeg and 12 other suburbs in the Unicity scheme.[19] Records for the Tuxedo Park Company, as well as municipal records for Tuxedo, are now held at the City of Winnipeg Archives.[20]

In the early 1990s, Larry Fleisher, who then represented Tuxedo at Winnipeg City Council, requested that $250,000 be spent on making Heubach Park nicer, and that the project commence by 1993.[21]

In the 2010s, commercial development of Tuxedo South led to the opening of several shopping areas, including an IKEA store, an Outlet Collection mall, and Seasons of Tuxedo big-box cluster.

Population

Neighbourhoods

2016 Population of Tuxedo!!2016 Pop.!Area km2.
Old Tuxedo9150.8
Tuxedo2,2452.4
South Tuxedo3,4402.1
Tuxedo Industrial5456.6
TOTAL7,14511.9

Crime

Tuxedo has a low crime rate. The table below shows the crime rates of various crimes in each of the Tuxedo neighbourhoods. The crime data spans 5 years from the year 2017 to the year 2021. The rates are crimes per 100,000 residents per year.

Crime Rates per 100,000 people in Tuxedo Neighbourhoods, 2017-2021[22] !Neighbourhood!Pop.[23] !Homicide!Rate !Robbery!Rate!Agr. Aslt. !Rate!Cmn. Aslt. !Rate!Utt. Threat !Rate!Property!Rate
Assiniboine Park00--3--2--8--2--98--
Edgeland1,25500.023366.524382.561972.125398.45729,115.5
Old Tuxedo91500.000.010218.6801,748.621459.02114,612.0
South Tuxedo3,44000.0423.3211.61269.8423.33401,976.7
Tuxedo2,24500.013115.8762.439347.414124.72772,467.7
Tuxedo Industrial54500.0291,064.214513.8321,174.326954.11,41351,853.2
Tuxedo8,40000.072171.459140.5232552.492219.02,9116,931.0

Education

Tuxedo is host to one elementary school, Ecole Tuxedo Park School and one public high school, Shaftesbury High School. It is also host to two private schools: Gray Academy of Jewish Education and St. Paul's High School.

Points of Interest

International real estate developer, financier and former Lord Mayor of London, England, Sir Denys Lowson (via South Winnipeg Development Co. Ltd.),[25] announced in March 1963[26] that Bird Construction was chosen as the company to build the Tuxedo Park Shopping Centre (2025 Corydon Avenue) designed by Smith Carter architects[27] and opened on 30 October 1963. The new Centre included a 10-pin bowling alley and billiards.[28] Other initial retailers were MacIver Nanton Toys, Height Hairstylists, and Tuxedo Book & Record Shop. A Bank of Montreal branch, Safeway supermarket, and Shell gas station continue to operate today. The Shopping Centre was phase 1 of 2 phases on 15 acres of land, with the second phase seeing the construction of 3 apartment towers.

Heubach Park (originally Olmsted Park) is a purely residential subdivision within Tuxedo that was created in the late 1920s. Heubach Park itself comprises 26 acres of landscaped land (trees, shrubs). At one time there was a flower bed at the southern edge of the Park at Grant Avenue, but it was later removed. As much as was possible, utility wires were buried, so as not to be visually cluttering.

Privately-owned and run and situated south of Assiniboine Park, the Tuxedo Golf Course was constructed between 1932 and 1933[29] and officially opened in May 1934.[30] It features both regular 18-hole and 18-hole miniature golf runs.[31]

References

  1. News: October 3, 1928. Winnipeg Free Press. 3. The Heubach Park Section .
  2. Web site: Elevation of Tuxedo. earthtools.org.
  3. Web site: Charleswood - Tuxedo - Westwood Ward Electoral Wards. 2021-06-28. winnipeg.ca. English.
  4. Web site: Tuxedo: Winnipeg's unique and classy suburb . 2021-06-28 . www.winnipegregionalrealestatenews.com . en-ca.
  5. Web site: Tuxedo . 2024-02-14.
  6. Web site: Memorable Manitobans: Frederick William Heubach (1859-1914). www.mhs.mb.ca. 2020-05-24.
  7. Web site: Memorable Manitobans: Frederick Eugene Kenaston (1853-1932). www.mhs.mb.ca. 2020-02-11.
  8. "An aesthetic sub-division," Manitoba Free Press, 17 April 1906, page 5.
  9. Web site: Tuxedo (Man.) - City of Winnipeg Archives. winnipeginfocus.winnipeg.ca. 2019-10-08.
  10. Web site: Memorable Manitobans: David R. Finkelstein (1880-1952). www.mhs.mb.ca. 2020-02-11.
  11. Web site: Memorable Manitobans: Cecil Alexander Ralph Lamont (1901-1982). www.mhs.mb.ca. 2020-02-11.
  12. Web site: Memorable Manitobans: Clive Kerslake Tallin (1907-1985). www.mhs.mb.ca. 2020-02-11.
  13. Web site: Historic Sites of Manitoba: Tuxedo School No. 1709 / Tuxedo Park School (2300 Corydon Avenue, Winnipeg). www.mhs.mb.ca. 2020-02-11.
  14. Book: Thrift, Eric. Metropolitan Plan for Greater Winnipeg. Metropolitan Planning Committee & Winnipeg Town Planning Commission. 1946–1950.
  15. News: June 20, 1956. A Metropolitan Problem: Fist Shaking Over Tuxedo. 23. Winni;eg Free Press.
  16. News: Tuxedo Puts Crimp Into Highway Plan. June 6, 1956. Winnipeg Free Press. 1, 5.
  17. News: Cohen. John. September 30, 1960. $50-Million Tuxedo Development Starts: 1,600 Homes Planned. 3. Winnipeg Free Press.
  18. Web site: Historic Sites of Manitoba: Frederick W. Heubach Memorial Park (Park Blvd North, Winnipeg). www.mhs.mb.ca. 2020-02-02.
  19. News: Unanimity Highlighted Tuxedo Elections. Bidewell. Frances. December 31, 1971. Winnipeg Free Press. 22.
  20. Web site: Archives and Records Control - TOC - City Clerk's Department - City of Winnipeg. winnipeg.ca. en-ca. 2020-02-11.
  21. News: February 17, 1991. Park priorities discussed. 5. Winnipeg Free Press - Free Press Weekly (SW).
  22. Web site: January CrimeMaps - 2022 by Winnipeg Police Service . May 7, 2022.
  23. Web site: 2016 Census: City of Winnipeg Neighbourhood Profiles . 2022-05-07 . Winnipeg.ca.
  24. Web site: Neighbourhoods Tourism Winnipeg. 2021-06-28. www.tourismwinnipeg.com.
  25. News: October 31, 1963. Sir Denys Lowson, president of South Winnipeg Development Co. Ltd.. 30. Winnipeg Free Press.
  26. News: October 29, 1963. Ex-Lord Mayor heads development company. 15. Winnipeg Tribune.
  27. News: Fairbairn. Clarence. March 2, 1963. 'Instant' reservations for air line travelers. 29. Winnipeg Tribune.
  28. News: Telpner. Gene. August 9, 1963. It Strikes Me. 16. Winni;peg Free Press.
  29. News: July 8, 1932. Contract for $11,500 New Wing to Tuxedo School is Awarded. 14. Winnipeg Free Press.
  30. News: May 17, 1934. Tuxedo Golf Course Was Opened This Afternoon With Number of Foursomes. 11. Winnipeg Tribune.
  31. Web site: Lakeland Group of Companies - Tuxedo Golf Course. 2020-05-26. www.lakelandgolfmanagement.com.

External links