Les Bergeronnes, Quebec

Les Bergeronnes
Municipality

Grandes-Bergeronnes

Location within La Haute-Côte-Nord RCM.
Les Bergeronnes

Location in Côte-Nord region of Quebec.

Coordinates: 48°15′N 69°33′W / 48.250°N 69.550°W / 48.250; -69.550Coordinates: 48°15′N 69°33′W / 48.250°N 69.550°W / 48.250; -69.550[1]
Country  Canada
Province  Quebec
Region Côte-Nord
RCM La Haute-Côte-Nord
Settled 1845
Constituted December 29, 1999
Government[2]
  Mayor Francis Bouchard
  Federal riding Montmorency—Charlevoix
—Haute-Côte-Nord
  Prov. riding René-Lévesque
Area[2][3]
  Total 287.00 km2 (110.81 sq mi)
  Land 275.29 km2 (106.29 sq mi)
Population (2011)[3]
  Total 693
  Density 2.5/km2 (6/sq mi)
  Pop 2006-2011 Increase 5.8%
  Dwellings 326
Time zone EST (UTC−5)
  Summer (DST) EDT (UTC−4)
Postal code(s) G0T 1G0
Area code(s) 418 and 581
Highways Route 138
Website www.bergeronnes.net

Les Bergeronnes is a municipality in the Côte-Nord region of the province of Quebec in Canada. The municipality includes the communities of Grandes-Bergeronnes, Petites-Bergeronnes and Bon-Désir.

The Bon-Désir trading post

Bay of Bon Desir

After the continental glacier withdrawal 8,000 years ago, Native Americans spent the summer along the St-Laurence river bank in the Bergeronnes territory. Archeological excavations found several layers of whale and seal skinning tools.[4] From the 16th to 18th century, Native Americans and the Basques hunted seals in Pipounapi marine cove whose meaning is "Here, it does not freeze." In 1653, the surrounding territory was conceded[5] to Lord Robert Giffard by the governor of New France. Remains of two ovens used to collect grease for lighting were found. The first one, with double burner, was built in the late 16th century.[6] Jesuit Evangelist Pierre Laure settled there in 1721.[7] The following year, a chapel and a house were erected. A plot about the fact that too many religious activities - there was a daily public prayer - left no time for Native americans to hunt, led to the abandonment of the mission in 1725.[8] In 1730, the Barragory brothers erected a whaling station and built the second oven with triple burner. Due to the lack of profit, this station was abandoned in 1773.[6] In the absence of real development, the domain went back as Domain of the King, until 1822, when the post was entrusted to the Hudson's Bay Company.

At the time of Admiral Bayfield hydrographic survey around 1830, all that remained was the cellar of the house with its stone fireplace, hence the reference to Cave Cove on the map while Bon-Désir was moved three miles further West.[9] Seals hunting went on for some times. In 1847, 136 seals were killed there.[10]

On August 10, 1864, a landslide took off a large section of the squatters road (now part of the Morillon hiking trail). On April 11, 1896, another landslide moved down 500 acres on a two miles length strip of farmland with a dozen houses.[10]

Settlement

During his visits in 1603 and 1626, Samuel de Champlain refers to two rivers under the names "Bergeronnette" and "Bergeronnes". It was long thought that he mistook the local larks for wagtails (“Bergeronnettes” in French).[1] However, the name place is formed from the word "bank" and the radical "raa", widely used in Europe to denote heights. The name is probably a reference to the height of the bank.[11]

The first homes gathered around mills. A first one was built in Petites-Bergeronnes in 1844. A sawmill and a flour mill were erected in 1845 on the Beaulieu River, a tributary with the river-Bas-de-Soie,[12][13] of the Bergeronnes river at the site that will become the heart of the parish.[14] A third mill was built in 1846 at Bon-Désir.

In 1856 a road costing $5 391.02 provides a link to Tadoussac to the West and Escoumins to the East.[15] Until then, settlers had to carry their grain on their backs through the woods.[16] The population reaches 200.

In 1852 the first chapel, dedicated to St. Zoe, served a little over thirty families living in the logging or agriculture. This chapel was destroyed in 1858 and rebuilt in 1869.[14] Shortly after in the middle of the 19th century, Mission of Sainte-Zoé was founded and became a parish in 1889 receiving its first resident pastor, Arthur Guay. The actual church was built in 1912 at a cost of $28,000.

In 1874, the Bergeronnes Township was proclaimed, and in 1898, Township Municipality of Bergeronnes was formed.[1] In 1929, the village centre on the Big Bergeronnes River separated from the township and became the Village Municipality of Grandes-Bergeronnes.

In 1918, from mid-October to mid-November, Spanish flu spread through St-Lawrence North Shore region: up to 46 percent of the population became infected. Bergeronnes had 976 people at this time, and 26 died from influenza.[17]

The economic crisis of the 1930s led to the closing of wood mills. Having no land on which to fall back in expectation of better days, dozens of families left the village and accepted offers of the Ministry of Colonization to settle, around 1931, in Sainte-Thérèse-de-Colombier.

On December 29, 1999, the village and township were merged again to form the new Municipality of Les Bergeronnes.[1]

Demographics

Population trend,[17][18][19]

Census 1852 1901 1911 1976 1981 1986 1991 1996 2001 2006
Population 195 654 697 976 1011 945 825 813 695 655

Private dwellings occupied by usual residents in 1991 : 288 (total dwellings: 337)

Mother tongue:

Priest Thibeault

Named pastor in 1928, Joseph Thibeault began to modernize agriculture in the village through conferences, by establishing a model farm and went as far as to buy a stallion to improve the local livestock. The following year, he supported the establishment of three nuns of Our Lady of Good Counsel, who came to found a schoolhouse.[20] In 1938, he founded a poultry farming cooperative. At one point, as much as 1700 birds were slaughtered in 3 days time. But these facilities were destroyed by fire.[21]

The small community was still left on its own in wintertime. Thibeault thought this was unacceptable; the priest had a tractor put on a barge and hauled down from Chicoutimi. It was used to clear a runway in 1930 and launch an air transportation service, called Charlevoix-Saguenay.[22] The primarily purpose was humanitarian, as wounded and seriously ill were transported to hospitals.

After a break during the Second World War, the service resumed in 1944 with eight aircraft. It then also transported surveyors and loggers. In need of mechanics, the priest creates a local technical school. But in 1948 the main hangar burned down which meant the end of the Charlevoix-Saguenay company, who had no insurance. Priest Thibault retired in 1948 because of illness.

Priest Gendron

Les Bergeronnes

Priest Gendron came to Les Bergeronnes in March 1948 aboard a schooner[23] that had slipped through the ices on the St-Lawrence River. His priority was education. In 1952, the new building of the school of arts and crafts founded by his predecessor, is inaugurated. This building now houses municipal services. In 1954, the Dominic Savio school for commerce was opened.

In 1967, the Notre-Dame-du-Bon-Conseil pavilion provided boarding for 72 girls from outside and 90 boys from all over the region were studying at the Dominic Savio school. At the same time, the priest began the construction of civic hockey center with an indoor ice ring. But provincial law 55 on public education was changed so that free education was only to be provided for local residents and the pavilion was converted into a hotel for a while before becoming "La maison de la mer", headquarter of the Explos-Nature group, still active today. The last work of the priest, now a Bishop, was the construction of a foster care center for elderly people.[24]

In the 1980s, a regional high school was erected for the neighbouring Tadoussac, Les Escoumins and Sacre-Coeur students, thus confirming the educational vocation of Les Bergeronnes.

Economy

Mica deposits were exploited between 1891 and 1894 at the McGee mine, east side of Lake Charlotte[25] and from 1936 to 1938, north of Lake Sirois.[26] In 1895, the cheddar from three cheese making factories is exported to England.

In 1928, a first electric power plant lights up the village.[27] In the 1940s, the Coopérative d'électricité du village Bergeronnes built two plants on the Bergeronnes river with the financial support of the Office of electrification.[28] 2.2 MW are distributed along the North Shore region, from Tadoussac to Bersimis. This equipment was later bought by Hydro-Quebec in 1964. Today, a private mini-plant at the same location provides 4.2 megawatts to Hydro-Québec.[29]

Harvesting of blueberries has long been a source of additional income for families. In 1943, the Windsor Canning was still operating a cannery in village.[30]

The whales can still be seen in the St-Lawrence river and are an important pole of attraction with the observatory spots on the shore and whale watching excursions. In late July, the Blue Whale annual Festival is held. An important component of outdoor excursions includes bear watching, kayaking and horseback riding.

The timber industry is also active with the Coopérative forestière La Nord Côtière and Bersaco sawmill specializes in the manufacture of pallets for transportation.

Tourist attraction

At Bon-Désir:

At Bergeronnes:

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Les Bergeronnes.
  1. 1 2 3 4 Les Bergeronnes (Municipalité) (in French), XII (2nd ed.), Commission de toponymie du Québec, 2007, retrieved 2010-06-14
  2. 1 2 Ministère des Affaires municipales, des Régions et de l'Occupation du territoire - Répertoire des municipalités: Les Bergeronnes
  3. 1 2 "Population and dwelling counts, for Canada, provinces and territories, and census subdivisions (municipalities), 2011 and 2001 censuses - 100% data: Les Bergeronnes census profile". 2006 Census of Population. Statistics Canada. 2007-03-13. Retrieved 2007-07-20.
  4. Moreau, Jean-Francois; Tassé, Gilles; Patrick, Plumet (1984), Ecole de fouille de Grande-Bergeronnes: activités 1983-84 (in French), Université du Québec à Montréal, Laboratoire d'archéologie
  5. Acte de concession par Jean de Lauzon, gouverneur de la Nouvelle-France, à Robert Giffard, écuyer, seigneur de Beauport, de trois lieues de front sur le fleuve Saint-Laurent du côté du nord au-dessous de Tadoussac, et des grandes et petites Bergeronnes, au lieu dit Mille-Vaches, avec quatre lieues de profondeur, tenant par-devant audit fleuve, et des autres côtés aux terres non concédées, en titre de fief, seigneurie et justice, 15 novembre 1653., 1653
  6. 1 2 Site archéologique des Basques-de-l'Anse-à-la-Cave, les carnets du patrimoine (PDF) (in French), Direction du patrimoine et de la muséologie, Culture, communication et condition féminine, Québec, 2010
  7. Jones, Arthur E (1889), Mission du Saguenay (in French)
  8. Mission du Saguenay: relation inédite du R.P. Pierre Laure, 1720 à 1730
  9. Bélanger, Mgr René (1973), De la Pointe de tous les diables au cap grincedents, Toponomie historique et actuelle de la Côte-Nord (in French), Bélisle Éditeur
  10. 1 2 Tremblay, Victor (1944), De la Pointe de tous les diables au cap grincedents, Toponomie historique et actuelle de la Côte-Nord (in French), Société historique du Saguenay, p. 27
  11. Gouvernement du Québec (1986), 50 ans de noms de lieux français en Amérique du Nord, allocutions et conférences prononcées lors du premier Congrès international sur la toponymie française de l'Amérique du Nord, Québec, du 11 au 15 juillet 1984 (PDF) (in French), Commission de toponymie du Québec, p. 23
  12. “Bas de soie” is the French for silk stockings. This nickname was given to Irish people after the part of their legs which was not covered by their shorts. Gouvernement du Québec (1986), Noms et lieux fascinants du Québec (PDF) (in French), XII, Home Base, New York: COPAM, p. 23
  13. Jean-Paul Gagnon (September 2, 1944), Le centenaire des Bergeronnes, 3 (in French), 2 (1 ed.), Chicoutimi: L'Alma Mater, pp. 21–24
  14. 1 2 Edilbert Bouchard (2002), Eglise Notre-Dame de Bon-Désir Bergeronnes (in French)
  15. Sessional papers, 15 (1), Québec: The Legislature, 1869
  16. Stanislas Drapeau (1863), Études sur les développements de la colonisation du Bas-Canada: depuis dix ans (1851 à 1861) (in French)
  17. 1 2 La grippe espagnole en Haute-Côte-Nord (in French), 2010
  18. Automated Genealogy Index 1852, 1901 and 1911
  19. Statistic Canada, 1986, 1991, 1996, 2001 and 2006 census.
  20. Denise Robillard (1994), La traversée du Saguenay: cent ans d'éducation : les soeurs de Notre-Dame du Bon-Conseil de Chicoutimi, 1894-1994 (in French), Montreal: Les Editions Fides, p. 321, ISBN 9782890077768
  21. Rodolphe Pagé, pionnier de l'aviation au Québec, pilote de brousse et pilote commercial, père de l'aviation au Saguenay (in French), Centre éducatif et culturel, 1972
  22. Pierre Frenette (1996), "Histoire de la Côte-Nord", Les régions du Québec (in French), 9, Institut québécois de recherche sur la culture, p. 376, ISBN 9782892242669
  23. Mgr N.-A. Labrie raconte le diocèse du golfe du St-Laurent (in French), Aquilon, 23 January 1974, p. 6
  24. Denise Robillard (23 January 1994), La traversée du Saguenay: cent ans d'éducation : les sœurs de Notre-Dame du Bon-Conseil de Chicoutimi, 1894-1994 (in French), Montreal: Les Éditions Fides, ISBN 2-89007-776-4
  25. Léon Provancher, Victor Amédée Huard (1932), Le naturaliste canadien (in French), 59-60, Société linnéenne de Québec, Presses de l'Université Laval
  26. Geological report, 3 (20), Quebec: Dept. of Natural Resources, 1949
  27. Water Attwood (1925), Water resources paper, 3 (54-57), F.A. Acland, printer
  28. Fonds Coopérative d'électricité du village de Bergeronnes (in French) (162940), Réseau de diffusion des archives du Québec
  29. Aménagements hydroélectriques selon les régions administratives et les bassins versants (in French), Ministère des Ressources naturelles et de la Faune du Québec
  30. Fonds Ministère de la Culture, des Communications et de la Condition féminine (in French) (E6), Quebec: Bibliothèque et archives nationales



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