Windsor, Ontario

   

City of Windsor, Ontario, Canada
List of cities in Canada
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Windsor,_Ontario_Coat_of_Arms.jpg
Windsor, Ontario Coat of Arms


Provincial Symbols
Motto: The river and the land sustain us.
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Windsor,_Ontario_Location.png
Location of Windsor, Ontario
Area: City: 120.63 kmē
Metropolitan: 1,022.53 kmē
Population

City Population (2001)
Metropolitan Population
(2001)


208,402&sup1
307,877&sup1

Population Density:City: 1,727.7/kmē
Metropolitan: 301.1/kmē
Time zone: Eastern: UTC -5
Postal Code span:
Canada Post (http://www.canadapost.ca)
N9(A-J), N8(N-Y)

Latitude:
Longitude:

42š 18' N
83š 01' W

Altitude:? m
Mayor Eddie Francis
List of mayors of Windsor, Ontario
Governing Body: Windsor City Council

City of Windsor (http://www.citywindsor.ca)

&sup1 According to the 2001 Statistics Canada Census
Template Help Edit (http://en.wikipedia.org/w/wiki.phtml?title=Template:Canadian_City&action=edit)Flag of Canada

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Esxwin.png
Windsor, Ontario with Metropolitan Area in Orange.

Windsor (42š 18' N, 83š 01' W; EST), the southernmost city in Canada, is located in Essex County, Ontario and lies across the Detroit River and Lake St Clair from Detroit, Michigan, USA. As of the 2001 Census the population of Windsor is 208,402, with a metropolitan area population of 307,877. Windsor's motto is "The river and the land sustain us". Interestingly enough, it is the only point along Canada's southern border where crossing to the United States involves heading north.

Windsor was first settled in the mid-1720s after farms started getting too far from the protection of a fort in Detroit making it the oldest continually inhabited European city in Canada, west of the Quebec border. The area was first named Petite Cote (Little Coast), the site later became known as la Cote de Misere (The Coast of Misery) because of the sandy soils near LaSalle.

Windsor's nickname is the "City of Roses", and it has several large parks on the waterfront, extending uninterrupted from the Ambassador Bridge to Hiram Walker's Canadian Club plant. Of particular mention are the gardens at Jackson Park, where an actual Lancaster Bomber is mounted on a concrete pedestal. It is also home to the University of Windsor. The campus is just east of the Ambassador Bridge.

Windsor is recognized as the automotive capital of Canada, having achieved this status mainly by its proximity to Detroit. Its industries include DaimlerChrysler's minivan assembly plant, several Ford Motor Company engine and casting plants, General Motors' transmission plant and Hiram Walker's Canadian Club plant, along with a myriad of smaller manufacturers that supply the larger plants. Windsor tourist attractions include Casino Windsor, a lively downtown, the Odette Sculpture Park, Ojibway Park, and nearby Point Pelee National Park. Windsor was a major entry point into Canada for refugees from slavery via the Underground Railroad and a major source of liquor during American Prohibition.

Windsor is linked to the United States by the Ambassador Bridge, the Detroit-Windsor Tunnel, and a Canadian Pacific Railway tunnel. The Ambassador Bridge is North America's #1 international border crossing in terms of goods volume: 27% of all trade between Canada and the United States crosses the Ambassador Bridge.

Every summer Windsor participates in the 2-week long Windsor-Detroit International Freedom Festival that culminates in a gigantic fireworks display that celebrates Canada Day and the American Independence Day. The fireworks display is on the Wednesday before Canada Day, on the Detroit River between Detroit's Renaissance Center and Windsor's Festival Plaza, and each year attracts over a million spectators to Windsor's riverfront parks.

Labour union membership is very high in Windsor, and both of the city's current federal Members of Parliament are members of the New Democratic Party.

Because of Windsor's proximity to the Detroit media market, radio and television broadcasters in Windsor are accorded a special status by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission, exempting them from many of the Canadian content requirements most broadcasters in Canada are required to follow.

Famous people from Windsor

External link

North: Detroit, Michigan
West: Detroit, Michigan Windsor East: Tecumseh
South: Lasalle


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