Academy Road is a street in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. It runs from the Maryland Bridge to Wellington Crescent, just west of Route 90 (Kenaston Boulevard), and actually intersects with Wellington at both its east and west ends. Academy Road is located in the residential neighbourhood of River Heights and has many retail stores along it.
Academy Road was named after St. Mary's Academy, a private school for girls that lies on the portion of the road just south of the Maryland Bridge.[1][2] The portion west of Cambridge Street was originally named Godfrey Avenue but was renamed Academy Road in the 1930s. It was originally served by "Broadway" street cars, but the route became known later on as "Academy Road" when this section became the more important portion of the route.[1]
Points of interest
Some points of interest along Academy Road include:
The Uptown Theatre building opened in 1931 as an atmospheric-style movie palace during the golden age of cinema. Holding just over 1,600 seats (1,200 on the first floor and 427 on the second), the theatre screened The Brat (1931) on its opening night.[2][3]
In 1960, the cinema was turned into a bowling alley called Uptown Bowling Lanes (or Academy Uptown Lanes). Opened in September that year, the new Academy Lanes completely converted the interior of the former theatre and included 30 bowling alleys.[3][4]
With the bowling alley relocating in April 2018, construction began in 2019 to transform the building into a mixed-use commercial and 23-suite apartment complex, adding additional floors. Now called Uptown Lofts, the project was completed in February 2021.[4][5]
The former Julia Clark School building (615 Academy), currently functions as the office of the Canadian Centre for Child Protection including Child Find Manitoba.[2][6]
Acquired in 1915, the site (615-621 Academy) originally served an orphanage of the Children's Home of Winnipeg, opening on 18 March 1916 by Mayor Richard Deans Waugh. School classes also were held in the structure until a separate building was established on the grounds two years later.[6]
In the fall of 1918, the Government of Manitoba funded the construction of a school at the site, which would be named the Julia Clark School in 1920 after one of the Home's early directors, Julia Jane Murray Clark. The 2-storey schoolhouse held 4 classrooms, and—though not really a public school—its operating costs were covered by the Winnipeg School Division, who also provided its teaching staff.[6]
Veterans Affairs left the site in 1958, when it was turned into the Assiniboia Indian Residential School, which operated until June 1973.[2][7][8] From 1972 to 1993, Parks Canada used the facility for artifact storage. In the early 1980s, the dormitories of the former Home were demolished and replaced by a forensic science laboratory for the RCMP.[6]
Today, what remains on the grounds is the original school building (opened in 1918) and the gymnasium/chapel (opened in 1966).[9]
Fontaine, Theodore. 2010. Broken Circle: The Dark Legacy of Indian Residential Schools. Victoria, BC: Heritage House. ISBN 9781926613666.
Survivors of the Assiniboia Indian Residential School. 2021. Did You See Us? Reunion, Remembrance, and Reclamation at an Urban Indian Residential School, edited by A. Woolford. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press. ISBN 9780887559075.