- The Carillon Passages
- All Titles
Search:
Notices are posted by 10 am Monday through Saturday
OWEN WILLIAM (BILL) STEELE
Born: Apr 28, 1938
Date of Passing: Mar 08, 2026
Offer Condolences or MemoryOWEN WILLIAM (BILL) STEELE
On March 8, Bill Steele left us peacefully at the age of 87, on a beautiful Sunday morning in Guelph, after a life so well lived.
Bill is survived by his devoted wife Margaret, his children Margaret (Dirk), Donald (Claire), Heather (Peter), Jennifer, Darrell (Alan) and Roslyn (Darcy), his grandchildren Alison (Harry), Lindsay (Brock) and Jennifer (Gabe), Christopher and Martha, Mackenzie (Michael), Carson (Katherine) and Landon, Brendan and Aiden, his great-grandchildren Dawson, Colton, Isabell, Daniel, Colin, Logan, Owen and Eleanor, his brothers John (Dorothy), Ronald (Mary), Harold (Marilyn) and Martin (Sybil), his sister-in-law Jane, brothers-in-law Bruce (Pat) and Donald (Susan) and by many nieces, nephews and cousins. Bill was predeceased by his parents Victor and Sybil, his brother Geoffrey, and by his brother-in-law David and sister-in-law Joy.
Bill was born in St. John’s on April 28, 1938, a proud son of Newfoundland from the beginning. During his school years, the Steele family lived on Maxse Street in St. John’s, while Bill and his brothers attended Bishop Feild College. Summer months were spent at the family’s country home in Manuels on Conception Bay, a place that inspired Bill’s adventurous spirit, and offered many opportunities to test his mettle, including on one occasion, a swim to Kellys Island in the wee hours, accompanied by brother rowing beside him for moral support. His poor mother would have been mortified if she ever found out. She never did.
A gifted athlete, the Feildian Grounds, St. Bon’s Forum and Memorial Stadium in St. John’s were home to Bill’s exploits in track and field, football (“real” football, as he would say) and hockey. A particular point of pride was that, to this day, he is the Provincial record holder in the juvenile 1-mile race walk. Later, during his Winnipeg years, still passionate for competition, Bill found a love of squash as a member of the Carlton Club and the Winnipeg Squash Racquet Club, where we were told, by him, that he was known as “Whippey-Blue Steele”.
Growing up in Newfoundland, perhaps more than anything else, Bill was proud to be one of the six “Steele Brothers” and he carried his deep love and admiration for each one of them throughout his life. It must also be said, though, that he showed that love in his own unique way, and took to his role as “family provocateur” with great vigour, tormenting his long-suffering, but ever-understanding brothers mercilessly. Oh, the banter!
In 1956, having turned 18, Bill headed west to the mainland to join the RCMP. After graduating from training in Regina, he was posted to several rural Manitoba detachments in Beausejour, Ashern and Portage la Prairie. After a few years, however, Bill longed for a different career path and headed to Winnipeg, secured a job with Manufacturers Life, and began taking real estate appraisal courses.
Living in downtown Winnipeg, Bill began attending a young adults’ group at All Saints’ Anglican Church where, in 1960, Margaret Thompson, a lovely, spirited young nurse-in-training at the Winnipeg General Hospital caught his eye. He never looked away and she became the love of his life. Bill and Margaret married in early 1963 and shortly thereafter Bill was promoted to a position in London, Ontario. The newlyweds relocated.
Soon, twins Margaret and Donald arrived, and within eighteen months, daughter Heather. Two years later, and after a move back to Winnipeg, Bill and Margaret welcomed another set of twins, Jennifer and Darrell. After moving from Fort Garry to a larger home on Athlone Drive in St. James Assiniboia in 1967, Bill and Margaret worked tirelessly (as one must with 5 kids under the age of 3½) to build a supportive, if chaotic, home for their growing brood. With Margaret organizing life on the homefront and Bill working hard to provide for the family, they proved to be a remarkably effective partnership.
Yes, life was busy in the Steele household as the kids, nurtured by Margaret’s love and Bill’s adventurous spirit, thrived at school and in their increasingly diverse interests. Still, there was something missing and in 1973, that void was filled with the arrival of daughter Roslyn, “Snoz” to Bill, his baby girl. The sixth Steele sibling, she completed the family and prompted a move four doors away, to a house on Flamingo Avenue.
But it wasn’t all work for Bill. Every winter, he led his family in the construction of a skating rink that covered the entire back yard, meticulously levelling and flooding (and flooding, and flooding) the rink until it met his exacting standards. Those rinks became home to endless hours of hockey, ringette and speedskating practice, school and neighbourhood skating parties, jam pail curling bonspiels, and raucous broomball games.
All the while, Bill’s career was progressing as he built his expertise in real estate development and property management, and his leadership experience with promotions to ever more senior roles at Montreal Trust, Metropolitan Estate and Property Corporation (MEPC), Morguard and The Imperial Group.
Ultimately, though, Bill’s entrepreneurial spirit could not be suppressed and in 1979, he and Margaret formed Sterling Real Estate Investment Services, a consulting firm providing real estate appraisal, development and financing advisory, as well as property and project management services in the Winnipeg area. With Bill’s industry knowledge and Margaret’s exceptional organizational skills, together they built Sterling into the preeminent practice of its kind in Manitoba and operated it until the early 2000s.
As fulfilling as life in Winnipeg was, Bill’s favourite place (on the mainland, anyway) was the family cottage at Clytie Bay on Shoal Lake. Named “Terra Nova” after his beloved home (and less formally “Jellybeans” after we don’t quite know what), it was there that the best parts of Bill came alive. Leading his family workforce by example, he developed two lots of untouched wilderness into a family vacation property with two cabins, a boathouse, dock, paths and drainage ditches (so many drainage ditches!). Brush cleared in the summer months would be piled neatly in several piles around the property, followed by wonderful bonfires on the following New Years Eve and Day. In the process, Bill imbued his kids with skills in carpentry, land and water management and so many practical life lessons… and fun, with regular breaks for waterskiing, swimming and snorkeling.
After the kids had grown and left home to pursue their lives, with most of the heavy lifting done, Terra Nova became Bill and Margaret’s summer retreat with frequent visits from family and friends. Winters would often bring a vacation in Cuba or cruises together, and several times, scuba diving in the Caribbean (Bill hated cold water despite, or perhaps because of, the Conception Bay adventure noted previously).
In July 2021, Bill and Margaret moved to Guelph to spend their remaining years close to those kids who had settled in Southern and Eastern Ontario.
More than any place, physical structure, company or invention, though, Bill’s greatest legacy is in the lives he touched.
Bill gathered friendships throughout his life: from fellow Feildians, RCMP and Queen’s Own Cameron Highlanders colleagues to Rotarians and work associates, from other Lord Selkirk Boy Scout Pipe Band parents to certain of his kids’ teachers, and sometimes even complete strangers with whom Bill had no problem striking up a conversation and quickly finding common ground. Bill loved “holding court”, solving the problems of the world at Tim Hortons with his coffee and his apple fritter in hand, and one or two good friends. In more recent years, since the move to Guelph, periodic phone calls with his friends helped sustain him.
Never one given to outward displays of affection, “Dad” / “Grampie” quietly burst with pride at the accomplishments of each of his kids, grandkids and great-grandkids (and with the “original six” and, in time, their growing families, that was a lot of bursting!). Whether it was hockey, ringette, basketball, volleyball or football games, cross-country meets, parades, recitals, exhibitions or any of countless graduations, Bill was there, cheering each of them on and beaming. He taught them the importance of kindness to strangers, integrity and fairness, perseverance, and the value of hard work and a job well done. None will ever forget his place in their lives.
Finally, Bill and Margaret’s enduring love has seen them enjoy the sunny days, and weather the rainy ones. They found in one another something that completed each of them and provided the foundation for the full life they enjoyed together. In Bill’s final months, Margaret was his constant, devoted and loving caregiver, and his eyes spoke of his lasting love and gratitude for her. Their love is an inspiration for us.
Our family would like to express our deepest gratitude to the staff at Guelph-Wellington Homecare, and to so many medical professionals who provided care for Bill, and support to Margaret, over the last few months and in his final days. You have been a blessing.
Final arrangements have been entrusted to Gilbert MacIntyre & Son Funeral Homes in Guelph. In lieu of a funeral service, Bill’s family will be taking his remains home to Newfoundland this summer, where they will be scattered lovingly in places of special significance to him, and to them.
There will be no goodbyes, William, Dad, because we cannot imagine a world without you in it, but we know that each of us carries a part of you safe and warm in our hearts, where it will burn brightly until we are all together again.
Publish Date: Mar 21, 2026
OWEN WILLIAM (BILL) STEELE
On March 8, Bill Steele left us peacefully at the age of 87, after a life so well lived.
Bill is survived by his devoted wife Margaret, his children Margaret (Dirk), Donald (Claire), Heather (Peter), Jennifer, Darrell (Alan) and Roslyn (Darcy), his grandchildren Alison (Harry), Lindsay (Brock) and Jennifer (Gabe), Christopher and Martha, Mackenzie (Michael), Carson (Katherine) and Landon, Brendan and Aiden, his great-grandchildren Dawson, Colton, Isabell, Daniel, Colin, Logan, Owen and Eleanor, his brothers John (Dorothy), Ronald (Mary), Harold (Marilyn) and Martin (Sybil), his sister-in-law Jane, brothers-in-law Bruce (Pat) and Donald (Susan) and by many nieces, nephews and cousins. Bill was predeceased by his parents Victor and Sybil, his brother Geoffrey, and by his brother-in-law David and sister-in-law Joy.
There will be no goodbyes, William / Dad, because we cannot imagine a world without you in it, but we know that each of us carries a part of you safe and warm in our hearts, where it will burn brightly until we are all together again.
Final arrangements have been entrusted to Gilbert MacIntyre & Son Funeral Homes in Guelph. In lieu of a funeral service, Bill’s family will be taking his remains home to Newfoundland this summer.
Tributes: www.dignitymemorial.com
Publish Date: Mar 14, 2026
As published in Winnipeg Free Press on Mar 21, 2026
Condolences & Memories (8 entries)
-
I worked at M.E.P.C. From 1973 to 1974 as a secretary. It was an enjoyable place to work with lots of great laughter. There was always lots of work but no one complained. One night in December Mr. Steel called me at home. He never had called before this particular evening. There was a lot happening in our house and Mr. Steel asked me”What is going on at your house ?” There had just been a fire in the top floor of the house I lived in and I was not making much sense to Mr. Steel. He immediately came over and arranged for my roommates and myself to have a safe place to stay in one of the display suites in the building M.E.P.C. owned. The firemen had told us we were unable to stay in the house as we had just water damage on our main floor. Thankyou Mr. Steel for looking out for we 20 year olds!! - Posted by: Glenda (Dandridge) Brooks (Employee) on: Mar 28, 2026
-
Fond memories of spending time together back during Pan American Games. Fun seeing old photo of Margaret & I at Grosvenor Elementary School. My sincerest sympathy to you Margaret and family. - Posted by: Connie Ellis Drybrough (Old friend) on: Mar 21, 2026
-
Hi Marilyn, Just a note of condolence on the passing of Bill. Ian Dickson phoned to give me the news. Bill has proved me wrong: I always said he was too stubborn to die. I hope he was not in much discomfort at the end. I always enjoyed Bill's company. He usually had some new project he was working on and complaints about what was going on in the world. I always kidded him about his immigrating to Canada from Newfoundland (he always corrected my pronunciation of Newfoundland: "understand Newfoundland". I'm sure he'll be greatly missed by everyone. - Posted by: Don Ross (Friend) on: Mar 20, 2026
-
It was in 1973 that Mr Steele hired me as his secretary at M.E.P.C. He was the most honest and honourable man to work for; and very funny! I remember him speed walking to work in the morning, playing squash at lunch time then speed walking home again at the end of the day. He loved his wife and family and was always ready to share a story about them. My sincere sympathy to all his family on his passing, May he rest in peace. - Posted by: Barbara (Brydon) Larkin (Employee and friend) on: Mar 16, 2026
-
I was a new immigrant in Canada in the early 90´s. It wasn´t easy finding a job as a young man with my foreign credentials, but Bill decided to take me in into his appraisal business in Winnipeg. He thought me the virtues of hard work, attention to detail and honesty, all the while with his unique Newfoundland sense of humour. I am fortunate to have had the acquaintance of this wonderful man who has left a mark in my life. Rest in peace Mr. Steele. - Posted by: Noor Ali (Friend and Work) on: Mar 16, 2026
-
He was my boss at Montreal trust but so caring and very funny. My condolences to the family - Posted by: Carol BOCHEN nee McDougall (Friend and worked for Bill in the late sixties) on: Mar 14, 2026
-
Deep condolences to family members for the loss of Bill. He was consistently a fine gentleman who displayed honor, dignity, and kindness, May he "Rest in Peace". - Posted by: milton Jones (long time friend) on: Mar 14, 2026
-
I will forever feel lucky to have called him Dad. He will be missed every moment of every day and never forgotten. - Posted by: Roslyn Steele Ross (Daugther) on: Mar 14, 2026
