About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 59. Chapters: Manitoba Legislative Assemblies, Manitoba provincial electoral divisions, Members of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, Manitoba Legislative Building, Donald Smith, 1st Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal, 39th Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, Kildonan, Lewis St. George Stubbs, Swan River, Stephen Juba, St. Boniface, Gordon Churchill, Lac du Bonnet, Rossmere, La Verendrye, Springfield, Minnedosa, Russell, Radisson, Emerson, George Armstrong, Assiniboia, St. James, St. Johns, Morris, Elmwood, William Luxton, Turtle Mountain, Kewatinook, Gimli, Point Douglas, Wolseley, Fort Garry, Portage La Prairie, St. Norbert, The Pas, St. Vital, Lakeside, Inkster, Pembina, Concordia, Henry Mabb, Steinbach, Ste. Rose, Wellington, Patrice Breland, Fort Rouge, The Maples, River Heights, Brandon West, Arthur-Virden, Ronald Turner, John Moore Robinson, Interlake, Tuxedo, Burrows, George Klyne, Fort Whyte, Selkirk, Carman, Seine River, Riel, Southdale, Kirkfield Park, Flin Flon, Thompson, Minto, Stewart Mulvey, Lord Roberts, Charleswood, Transcona, River East, Dauphin-Roblin, Brandon East, Charles Nolin, William James Westwood, Maxime Lepine, Manitoba Electoral Redistribution, 2008, John K. Downes, Donald Gunn, Stephen Krawchyk, Samuel Clarke Biggs, Robert Ironside, John H. Edmison, City of Winnipeg Act, Daniel Dennis McLean, Riding. Excerpt: The Manitoba Legislative Building is the meeting place of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, in central Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. It was originally named the Manitoba Parliament Building, not Legislative. The neoclassical building was completed in 1920 and stands seventy-seven meters tall (253 ft). It was designed and built by Frank Worthington Simon (1862-1933) and Henry Boddington III, along with other masons and many skilled craftsmen. The building is famous for the Golden Boy, a gold cove...