Architects
Cyril William Upton Chivers
Born: –Died:
Education/accreditation: MAA
Biography
Cyril William Upton Chivers was born in Avebury, England (Wiltshire) on April 11, 1879. Early training brought the young Chivers to the London Polytechnic Institute, where he studied draftsmanship. In 1897 he moved with his family to Canada, settling in Manitoba.
Chivers gained employment as an assistant with the Winnipeg design offices of S. Frank Peters. In 1898 he moved to the offices of George C. Browne. After that, Chivers was hired in 1901 as a draftsman by Canadian Pacific Railway Engineering Construction Department. Amongst Chivers’s assignments while working with the CPR was the Laggan, B.C. railway station (1905).
In 1906 the young designer left the railway. It was during this period, in 1908, that Chivers was first affiliated with George W. Northwood, the Winnipeg-based partner of Winnipeg and Ottawa firm Northwood & Noffke. In 1909, however, he established a practice under his own name. The timing for this enterprise could not have been better, with Winnipeg experiencing a boom. Chivers received numerous commissions for residential and institutional projects.
Notable works of this era included: the Dorchester Apartments (Lilac Street at Dorchester Avenue, 1910); the Christie Residence (365 Wellington Crescent, 1910-1911); and the Lt. Col. Robert M. Thomson Residence (South Drive, 1913-19; now part of St. Johns Ravenscourt School).
Chivers halted this spell of lively work to serve in the First World War. He joined the First Canadian Mounted Rifles, travelling to the European front and gaining the rank of Brigade Major with the Ninth Canadian Infantry Brigade. Beyond this title, Chivers received the Distinguished Service Order.
Following his return from Europe, the architect came back to Winnipeg. Amongst his first post-war projects was, in 1919, to complete the design and construction of the Lt. Col. R.M. Thomson Residence, which he had begun before the onset of war. For some time after, Chivers resumed his own architectural office until, in the mid-1920s, Chivers once again joined Northwood, with whom he had been associated in the century’s first decade. This partnership was eminently successful and was connected to a great number of the city’s most iconic and prominent buildings. One of the many renowned structures which the new practice created was the iconic, Tudor, Assiniboine Park Pavilion – a three-storey block topped by a soaring tower.
Around this time the firm also was moving toward the embrace of a gradually modernising aesthetic approach, seen in such examples as the Canadian Wheat Board Building (423 Main Street, 1928). A similarly contemporary manner appears in the firm’s brick and stone Canadian General Electric Building (265 Notre Dame Avenue, 1930); the refined buff brick and stone Women’s Tribute Memorial Lodge (200 Woodlawn Street, 1931); the clean-lined limestone Winnipeg Civic Auditorium (200 Vaughan Street, 1932 with Semmens, Pratt and Ross); and the Dominion Public Building (269 Main Street, 1935-36).
Significantly, the latter two of this set came as government sponsored projects designed to spur economic growth during the Great Depression.
During this era an increasing proportion of the firm’s work came from outside the city, in such commissions as the T. Eaton Company Department Store, 101st Street at 102nd Avenue, Edmonton, 1938 – an Art Moderne, ground-hugging, two-storey stone structure.
Northwood and Chivers continued as a practice into the period following the Second World War. This period saw a number of figures who would later have a large impact on the city’s architectural history come through the firm’s offices, including Lawrence Green and R. E. Moore. Throughout this time the original partners bowed out, with Chiver’s son John Chivers taking control of the firm, alongside new partner John Casey; the firm ended in the late 1950s.
Beyond his design practice, Chivers was invested in the field of architecture intellectually and on an association level. He wrote often on issues in the field, for such publications as the Royal Architectural Institute of Canada Journal. Like his partner, Chivers was nominated president of the Manitoba Association of Architects, serving twice – in 1928 and in 1940. Chivers passed away in Winnipeg on August 9, 1969.
Projects
Dorchester Apartments, Lilac Street at Dorchester Avenue, 1910
Wellington Apartments, 264-276 Wellington Crescent, 1910
Christie Residence, 365 Wellington Crescent, 1910-1911
Harman Residence, Suffolk Street, 1911
Crowe Residence, East Gate, 1912
Dobell Residence, Wilmot Place South, 1912
Reid Residence, Kennedy Street, 1912
Hugo Apartments, Wellington Crescent at Hugo Street, 1912-13
Stores and apartments for William Moxam, Corydon Avenue at Wentworth Street, 1912
Ninette Sanitorium infirmary building and cottages, Ninette, Manitoba, 1912
Cumberland Block, Cumberland Avenue at Hargrave Street, 1912
Crescent Grove Apartments, Grosvenor Avenue near Lilac Street, 1912
Guenell Residence, Assiniboine Avenue, 1913
Lt. Col. Robert M. Thomson Residence, South Drive, 1913-19 (now part of St. Johns Ravenscourt School)
Gordon Bell Junior High School, Wolseley Avenue at Maryland Street, 1925
Morrison Residence, Park Boulevard, 1925
William A. Smith Residence, 111 Park Boulevard, 1925
Canadian Wheat Board Building, 423 Main Street, 1928
Provencher Collegiate Institute addition, Cathedrale Avenue at St. Jean Baptiste Street, 1929
Robert H. Smith Public School, 315 Oak Street, 1929 (demolished 1992)
Singer Sewing Machine Company building, Portage Avenue near Vaughan Street, 1929
Great West Saddlery Building alterations, Market Avenue, 1929
Imperial Bank, Invermere, British Columbia, 1929
Hall Building, Howe Street, Vancouver, British Columbia, 1929
Canadian General Electric Building, 265 Notre Dame Avenue, 1930
Women’s Tribute Memorial Lodge, 200 Woodlawn Street, 1931
Queenston School, 245 Queenston Street, 1931
Winnipeg Civic Auditorium, 200 Vaughan Street, 1932
High School, Kenora, Ontario, 1931
Public school, Ninette, Manitoba, 1932
Bank of Toronto, 420 Academy Road, 1933
Balmoral Hall (Riverbend School For Girls), 630 Westminster Avenue, 1934
Dominion Public Building, 269 Main Street, 1935-36
Manitoba Cold Storage Warehouse addition, Argyle Street at Higgins Avenue, 1937
T. Eaton Company Department Store, 101st Street at 102nd Avenue, Edmonton, 1938
Federal Department of Munitions & Supplies Engine Testing Shop, 1940
Manitoba Telephone System Radio Studio, Brandon, Manitoba, 1941
John Deeer Plow Company Office and Warehouse, Livingston Street, Yorkton, Saskatchewan, 1941
Medical Arts Building, Graham Avenue at Kennedy Street, 1945
Winnipeg General Hospital, Bannatyne Avenue at Emily Street, Maternity Pavilion, 1948-50
Royal Hotel addition, Flin Flon, Manitoba, 1950
Bank of Montreal, 676 Main Street, 1950
Imperial Bank of Canada, 739 Henderson Highway, 1950
Sources
“Harman Home.” Manitoba Free Press. 27 May 1911.
“Untitled.” Winnipeg Saturday Post. 8 June 1912.
“Hugo Apartments.” Manitoba Free Press. 29 March 1913.
“Stores and apartments for William Moxam.” Manitoba Free Press. 1 June 1912.
“Ninette Sanitorium.” Manitoba Free Press. 1 June 1912.
“Lt. Col. Robert M. Thomson Home.” Manitoba Free Press. 23 May 1914.
“Junior High School.” Construction xviii (June 1925): 206.
“Schools.” Royal Architectural Institute of Canada Journal iv (November 1927): 407-08, 411-12.
“Morrison Residence.” Construction xix (September 1926): 290-1.
“Obituary.” Winnipeg Free Press. 11 August 1969.
Chivers, Cyril. “The Domestic Architecture in Manitoba.” Royal Architectural Institute of Canada Journal v (September 1928): 323-39.
Peterson, M. Winnipeg Landmarks. Winnipeg: Watson and Dwyer, 1995
Pickwell, F.C. “Tuxedo Park, Winnipeg.” Construction 19 (September 1926): 290-294.
Rostecki, Randy R. Armstrong’s Point: a history. Winnipeg: Heritage Winnipeg Corporation, 2009.
Rostecki, Randy R. Crescentwood: a History. Winnipeg: The Crescentwood Home Owners Association, 1993.

