Glass treasures from Winnipeg's brewing past exposed by historically low river level - Action News
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Manitoba

Glass treasures from Winnipeg's brewing past exposed by historically low river level

Historically low river levels in Winnipeg exposed a sunken cache from the city's past at the end of Mulvey Avenue relics from an era when breweries and bottling plants dotted the banks of the Red and Assiniboine rivers.

Sodas and beer were brewed on south Osborne site for generations, starting in 1883

This year's low water levels have exposed relics from an era when breweries and bottling plants dotted the banks of the Red and Assiniboine rivers and the long-gone Colony Creek. (Submitted by Jennifer Still)

For several weeks this spring, asthe sun swungaround a grove oftrees hugging abowed bank of the Red River in south Osborne, it setoff a turquoise and tawny glimmer.

Historically low river levels in Winnipeg had exposed a sunken cache from the city's past at the end of Mulvey Avenue.

A carpet of thickfragmentsof antique bottles andceramic jugs miredin river mud and zebra mussels covered a wide swath of normally submerged waterfront.

The relics are from an era that straddled the turn of the 20th century, when breweries and bottling plants dotted the banks of the Red and Assiniboine rivers and the long-gone Colony Creek.

The latter once wriggled from north of Portage Avenue along Memorial Boulevard, and then adjacent to Colony Street before joiningthe Assiniboine.

A map shows the location of Colony Creek in June 1873, with some later streets superimposed. The arrow indicates the location of the Winnipeg Brewery. (William Douglas, The House of Shea: The Story of a Pioneer Industry)

Its only remnant now is a dipin Broadway,between All Saints Anglican Church and CanadaLife, where the creek's 15-metre wide couleeused to cross.

Many of the bottles laid bare along the Red contained embossingraised lettering anddesigns as well as painted labelsfrom the former Blackwood'sbrewing plant at the centre of a modest warehouse district tucked behind the current-day Osborne rapid transit station.

The glass beach was a treasure trove for artists like HeatherKomus, who first discovered itpoking out of the snow during a walk along the frozen bank.

"It's very exciting and triggers my imagination," she said.

The original Blackwood's brewery as seen in 1904, one year after it was built at 409 Mulvey Avenue East. (Western Canada Pictorial Index/Manitoba Free Press)

"On a large flat rock there were several pieces of a Blackwood's ginger beer bottle, as though someone was trying to put the pieces back together," Komus said via an email interview.

"Like a puzzle, it just begged to be put together, so I took off my mittens and made my attempt but they weren't the right pieces and there were so many similar ones nearby that it quickly became impossible."

Her art process involves exploring landscapes and collecting objects. Finding an artifact from the pastinspires her to seek out its story or create some kind of narrative around it.

Heather Komus looks over one of her finds. (Submitted by Jennifer Still)

"I have noticed random bubbles in the glass pieces and wonder if the broken bottles were discarded because they didn't pass the quality inspection," Komus said.

"There is also something about words and water like receiving a message from the past."

She has donebeachcombing in the past but was able to explore the banks in ways notpossible in other years.

Recently, theglass beach was at a level below the gnarled roots of trees, blanched byyears typically spent underwater.

Record low levels

For many months Winnipeg's rivers were receding.

The fall was extremely dry, followed by a winter with well-below-normal snowfall, so the runoff that typically feeds themwas meagre.

In Winnipeg, river levels are measured by the heightin feetof the water above normal winter ice levels the zero mark at the James Avenue pumping station.

The Red Riveris typically6.5 feet James in summer, and slightly lowerat this time of year.According to the province,the lowest level on record at this timewas in 1981,with a level of4.76 feet.

That was obliterated last Friday when the level dipped to just 1.73 feet James.

The thick chunks of antique bottles were mired in river mud and zebra mussels across a wide swath of normally submerged waterfront. (Submitted by Jennifer Still)

"The rivers have always, obviously, been an important part of the development ofWinnipeg, soevery now and then you find that the river gives up some really interesting history,"said City of Winnipeg heritage officer Murray Peterson.

Afew years back, "the basic outline of one of the big riverboats" that plied the waters, with tall coal stacks, was discovered, he said.

"It's always fascinating."

While he's not surprised by the glass stash, Petersonwas taken aback by the amount.

"You're shocked, because they just basically threw it away and made a garbage dump of the river," he said.

"I guess maybe they thoughtit would be carried away and they would really never have to worry about it. And of course, it's such solid glass that it just basically stayed and got stuck in the gumbo."

Ginger beer bottles from early Winnipeg breweries. A Blackwood's bottle can be seen on the left. (Winnipeg Tribune Collection/University of Manitoba Archives)
A Blackwood's ginger beer bottle found along the exposed glass beach. (Submitted by Jennifer Still)

Now the rivers are climbing again with the operation of theSt. Andrews lock and dam, which keeps them at a navigable level for summer.

As a result, Blackwood's beach is again beingreclaimed by the water butnot before Komus was able to secure a few pieces.

"I'm most excited by the remnants that really convey another time, like a shard of glass from a rectangular cod liver oil bottle or the diversity in shapes and colours of glass," she said.

"I enjoy the old-fashioned language on the Blackwood's ginger beer bottle: 'Prepared from an old and valuable recipe.'

"The text on the Blackwood's Bottle's has a serious tone, that even though someone purchased the drink, they didn't buy the bottle, which is property of Blackwood's and must be returned."

The brewery complex as seen from across the river in 1970. (Architectural Survey/Archives of Manitoba)

Except there is nowhere to return it. The building,longabandoned, was eventually demolishedin the early 2000s.

The factorywas, according to a 2002 report by City of Winnipeg Peterson wrote, at that point the city's last remaining brewing building from the industry's early boom.

Links to Wolseley Expedition

The first brewery on the site was built in 1883 by Maj. Stewart Mulvey, a member of the Wolseley Expedition that came west from Ontario to confront Louis Riel's provisional government in 1870, according to Peterson's report.

He remained in Winnipeg and became one of the city's first school trustees, thena city councillor in Fort Rouge and later a provincial MLA.

He sold the brewery in 1888 and it went through several owners including E.L. Drewry, who would become one of the city's most famous brewers.William Blackwood took it over in 1903, while Drewrymaintained a brewery further down river, next to where theRedwood bridge would be built.

The Pellisier's brewery, showing the storefront with an old Club beer billboard on it, in 1970. (Architectural Survey/Archives of Manitoba)

In the early 1880s, Blackwood had operated a ginger ale plant on the Assiniboine River, south of what is Granite Way today.

The business bustled and expanded in the 1890s to another location at the corner of Colony Street and Graham Avenue two streets that once met before Hudson's Bay divided them.

When Blackwood shifted to the South Osborne location, the other breweries were abandoned and later demolished.

Hepoured everything into the site on what was then called Mulvey Avenue East. The original 1883 brewery was taken down and a towering new one constructed.

It then went through a number of additions and expansions over the next decade, eventually becoming acluster of seven connected buildings with a retail annex.

Two separate warehouse-sized buildings were added tothe property in 1912, with one serving as asoda and mineral water factory andthe other apickle factory.

The main building of the brewery, as seen in 2002, shortly before its demolition. (Murray Peterson)

Blackwood sold the complex just after the First World War and it became the Pelissier Brewery. Thatwas taken over in1976 byLabatt's, whichcontinued brewing at the location until 1980.

Pelissier'sintroduced two beer brands that would later become famous under the Labatt's label Club and Blue and are still produced today.

Labatt'ssold the building to an automotive companythat remained there only briefly, leaving itvacant bythe mid-1990sand the target of repeated vandalism.

The city took it over for unpaid taxes and tore it down about 10 years later.

The former Blackwood's brewery complex. The area bordered in yellow is where the brewery once stood. The blue area is the former soda and mineral water factory (now Mulvey Flea Market) and the one in orange is the former pickle factory (now Dominion Auctions and CJ Storage). (Google Satellite View)

Although the main brewery is gone, the other two factory buildings remain.

The soda and mineral water factory is now theSouth Osborne Exchange, which houses the MulveyFlea Market. The old pickle factoryis a blue warehouse forDominion Auctions and CJ Storage.

And then there are the turquoise pieces of the past, being swallowed once again by the river; except for those with a new future in Komus's hands.

"My art practice involves a lot of processes so it's hard to know right now where these discoveries will take me," she said.