© 2026, Christian Cassidy
I came across the name Henri Soucisse during my King’s Hotel research. He was the contractor who was issued the building permit for the hotel in 1903.
According to the city's historic building report for the hotel, written in 2007, not a lot is known about Soucisse. Aside from the King's Hotel in 1903, "his name only appears on three permits between 1899 and 1913 (this hotel and two houses which he owned, designed and built, one on Osborne Street [1900] and one on Good Street [1903])."
This gives the impression that he may have been a small-time builder and perhaps the King's was his crowning achievement. Yet, his obituary notes that, "As a contractor and builder he was well-known all throughout the West...”
How can this be when his name appears on so few building permits?
It turns out that Soucisse often worked in partnerships, and some of his largest works were in other cities and towns.
Joseph-Henri Soucisse was born in St Anne Des Plaines, Quebec, on October 18, 1844, and came to Manitoba from Montreal in 1878, four years before the arrival of the CPR.
The first newspaper mention of Soucisse is in December 1882, when he launched a $96 lawsuit against the city for injuries to his horse after it fell into an excavation hole in the roadway at Bannatyne Avenue and Rorie Street that he claimed wasn't properly marked.
The city was slow to respond, and in January 1883, bailiffs seized the furniture in the city clerk's office. The city appealed the ruling and the outcome of the case is unknown.
At the time, Soucisse was working construction and living in a suite in Caldwell's Block, a three-storey mixed-use building at Main and McDermot (now demolished).
Soucisse began working for the firm J. E. Gelley and Company by 1883.
He also became a Justice of the Peace for Winnipeg from 1884 to at least 1888.
Joseph E. Gelley was born in Levis, Quebec and can first be found in the street directory of 1882, the data for which would have been compiled in 1881, as a partner in the construction firm Grant and Gelley.
Gelley must have had great political connections and a good reputation in the construction industry from his home province, as just a couple of years after arriving, he and Soucisse were working on the city's highest-profile public buildings.
The above item in Le Manitoba newspaper of December 29, 1883, notes that a federal government architect came to visit Gelley and Soucisse to tour several government projects they were working on that would open over the next couple of years. These included the new Dominion Post Office, a new Manitoba legislature, and the completion of Government House after the original contractor failed.
They remained busy on the home front as well, with the aforementioned public buildings in Winnipeg, a new sanctuary for St. Mary's Church, and a 45 ft x 85 ft church at St. Pierre-Jolys.
This was likely due to Gelley taking contracts to help build railway branch lines and spending more time prospecting in the Lake of the Woods region. He relocated to Notre Dame des Lourdes, where he died in 1897.
It's unclear how busy Soucisse &Co. was, as the only newspaper mention of him is a contract to build a 40 x 54 foot extension to the Selkirk Asylum in 1888.
Working for himself was a personal and financial disaster for Soucisse.
The Montana Farmer and Stock Journal of September 8, 1888, reported that “H. Soucisse, the well known contractor of Winnipeg, has skipped to the States leaving numerous creditors…. There was a large number of unpaid workmen.” The skip was short-lived as later that month, a notice to Soucisse's creditors appeared in the Winnipeg Free Press seeking claims that had to be settled.
Due to the bad publicity, Soucisse relocated to Montreal. Back in May 1895, he had created a construction business with Pacifique Brouillette. He must have spent some time there as census records show that his two youngest children were born in the province around 1895.
By January 1898, Soucisse & Brouillette was declared insolvent and its creditors lined up.
Soucisse then appears to have spent the remainder of 1898 in St. Paul, Minnesota as a house builder and carpenter.
(According to Soucisse's obituary, he was married twice, and Victor, born in 1887, was his son from his first marriage. If this is the case, his second wife's first name was also Geraldine.)
Soucisse kept a low profile and his days of building large government projects were over. According to the city and newspaper items, he built a couple of houses, did the woodwork in another one, and replaced the facade on the Windsor / Manwin Hotel.
The only large contract he received seems to have been the Richelieu / King's, Hotel at 114 Higgins Avenue. There was a French community connection there, as the hotel's owner was Joseph Napoleon "Nap" Levesque.
The first Winnipeg street directory mention of the Soucisse family comes in the 1905 edition, the data for which would have been compiled in 1904. They live at 178 Good Street (now demolished), a house that Soucisse built.
The following year shows that Soucisse was in partnership with Henry Maranada of 558 Ross Street, and they had a work yard at 220 McDermot Avenue.
The firm Maranda Bros., the predecessor to Soucisse and Maranada, got the contract to construct Église du Sacré-Cœur /Sacred Heart Church on the south west corner of Bannatyne Avenue at Lydia Street in April 1905. It was a Roman Catholic church to serve Winnipeg's French-speaking population. Though this is before Soucisse joined him, the time needed to construct such a substantial building, which was officially dedicated in late December 1905, likely meant he worked on it.
The only project noted in newspapers specifically built by Maranda and Soucisse was École Sacré-Coeur, which was a two-storey plus basement building that measured 120 feet x 54 feet, constructed next to the church in 1906. (It's unclear in the image above if it is at the back of the church or the building to the right of it.)
The church and school were torn down starting in June 1992.
This was certainly the last substantial project for Soucisse, who was now in his early sixties.
The 1906 Census of the Prairie Provinces shows the family at home on Good Street.
The Soucisse name then disappears from the Winnipeg street directory for a couple of years. He and Geraldine relocated to Lorne Street in Regina in the summer of 1907 where their son, Vincent, lived and worked as a sign painter.
They returned to the city in 1909, and Henri died at 260 Beacon Street on March 10, 1909, age 65. His obituary noted that he had been in ill health for some time.
Gelley & Co. / Gelley and Soucisse
1883 - Manitoba Parliament / Legislature (Mar 13, 1884, Wpg Free Press)
1883 - Completion of Government House / Lt.-Gov residence (Jan 24, 1884, Wpg Daily Sun)
1884 - New church for St. Pierre Jolys (St. Pierre-Joly history book, p.8)
1885 - Sanctuary, St. Mary's Church, Winnipeg (Nov 5, 1885, Wpg Free Press Weekly)
1885 - Dominion Post Office, Regina (Korvemaker Inventory and Dom p112)
1885 - Dominion Post Office, Winnipeg (Dec 18, 1886, Wpg Free Press and Dom p. 109)
1886 - North-West Territorial Jail and Lunatic Asylum, Regina (Korvemaker NWT Jail and Dom p112)
1886 - NWMP Riding School and Drill Hall # 1 (Korvemaker Inventory)
Soucisse & Co.
1887 - Extension to Selkirk Asylum (Aug 4, 1887, Wpg Free Press Weekly)
Henri Soucisse
1887 - 1900 - Various houses and renovations in Quebec and Minnesota
1900 - Two-storey brick veneer house on Osborne Street (Dec 22, 1900, Morning Telegram)
1903 - House at 178 Good Street (Winnipeg historic buildings report)
1903 - Richelieu / King's Hotel at 114 Higgins Avenue (Winnipeg historic buildings report)
1904 - New façade to Windsor / Manwin Hotel at 655 Main Street (Jun 1, 1904, Wpg Free Press)
1904 - Carpentry work for J. C. Scott home at 200 Colony Street (Jun 1, 1904, Wpg Free Press)
1904 - House for Isaic Lavoie, Provencher Avenue (Aug 31, 1904, Le Manitoba)
Soucisse & Maranda
1905 - Sacred Heart Church (Apr 04, 1905, Winnipeg Tribune)
1906 - Sacred Heart School, Bannatyne Avenue (Dec 06, 1906, Winnipeg Free Press)
Abbreviations:
Korvemaker Inventory = Frank Korvemaker - Inventory of North-West Territorial Governmental Buildings in Saskatchewan
Korvemaker NWT Jail = Frank Korvemaker - Summary Report for the North-West Territorial Jail and Lunatic Asylum, Regina
Dom = Sessional Paper, Dominion of Canada Vol. 10



























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