Fort Rouge, Winnipeg

[3] Notable people from Fort Rouge include Kimberly Prost, judge of the International Criminal Court.

Most houses in this area were quite modest in size and cost, although during the 1890s and 1900s mansions could be found on Roslyn Road, Wellington Crescent, and River Avenue.

Due to its proximity to central Winnipeg and the presence of the Park Line streetcar, Fort Rouge was attractive to a variety of families of the middle and commercial classes as well as the more prosperous from the skilled trades.

[7] Another Titanic victim, John Hugo Ross,[8] gave his name to Hugo Street in Fort Rouge some years before his death, while a fifth victim, Eaton's employee George Graham, is buried in St. Marys Cemetery (in St. Marys, Ontario).

These include Lord Roberts, Riverview, Ebby-Wentworth, Earl Grey, McMillan, and River-Osborne.

St. Mary's Cemetery, a Catholic burial ground dating to the 19th century, is located on Osborne Street.

The team plays out of the Century Arena in Fort Garry and are members of the Manitoba Major Junior Hockey League.