Winnipeg Free Press

It provides coverage of local, provincial, national, and international news, as well as current events in sports, business, and entertainment and various consumer-oriented features, such as homes and automobiles appear on a weekly basis.The newspaper won the case, known as Fort Frances Pulp and Paper v Manitoba Free Press, as the court determined that whether the state of national emergency continued after the war was a political matter for Parliament.[5] 1991: The Free Press moved to its current location in the Inkster Industrial Park, a CA$150 million plant[2] at 1355 Mountain Avenue.[2] In 2008, at noon on Thanksgiving Day (Monday, October 13), about 1,000 members of the Communications, Energy and Paperworkers Union, representing editorial, advertising, circulation, and press staff, as well as newspaper carriers, launched a strike action.According to figures via Canadian Newspaper Association, the Free Press' average weekday circulation for 2013 was 108,583, while on Saturdays it was 144,278.
Historic Free Press building on Carlton
Former newspaper headquarters on Carlton Street
newspaperBroadsheetWilliam Fisher LuxtonWinnipegManitobaCirculationBrandon SunWestern CanadaNew York CityMain StreetClifford SiftonJohn Wesley Dafoeeditor-in-chiefPortageJudicial Committee of the Privy CouncilWar Measures ActWorld War IFort Frances Pulp and Paper v Manitoba Free Pressstate of national emergencyParliamentThomson NewspapersThanksgiving DayCommunications, Energy and Paperworkers Unionnewspaper carriersstrike actiontabloidCanadian Newspaper AssociationCharles EdwardsBartley KivesCBWT-DTVince LeahBob MoirHal SigurdsonMaurice SmithScott YoungList of newspapers in CanadaCBC NewsThe Brandon SunThe Canadian PressManitoba Historical SocietyCanadian Football Hall of FameUptown