1835 – Upper Fort Garry Gate, Winnipeg, Manitoba Upper Fort Garry was the last of five forts, known to have been built in this general vicinity. The other forts included: Fort Rouge (circa 1736),
1857 – St. Clement’s Anglican Church, Manitoba The official church for employees of the Hudson’s Bay Company who were stationed at the nearby Lower Fort Garry, St Clements was started in 1857 but the short bell tower was not completed until 1928.
1881 – Hudson’s Bay Company, Winnipeg, Manitoba Architect: Balston C. Kenway Built at Main & York, to replace an earlier store of 1874 further south on Main Street,
1913 – Hudson’s Bay Company, Calgary, Alberta Architect: Burke, Horwood & White Magnificent Edwardian department store of six storeys with the facade organized into three divisions.
1919 – Hudson’s Bay Company, Winnipeg, Manitoba Architect: Burke, Horwood & White Unbuilt proposal for a massive department store for the Hudson’s Bay Company. Intended to be their flagship store,
1927 – Hudson’s Bay Department Store, Winnipeg, Manitoba Architect: Barott & Blackader Founded in 1670, the Hudson’s Bay Company’s (HBC) chief interests for its first two centuries were the fur trade,
1927 – Hudsons Bay Company, Vancouver, British Columbia Architect: Burke, Horwood & White Designed by Burke, Horwood & White of Toronto, and who specialised in designing large commercial buildings using historic styles but contemporary materials.