Scott, Quebec

Scott is a municipality in the Municipalité régionale de comté de la Nouvelle-Beauce in Quebec, Canada. It is part of the Chaudière-Appalaches region and the population is 1,812 as of 2009.

Scott
Municipality
Location within La Nouvelle-Beauce RCM.
Scott
Location in southern Quebec.
Coordinates: 46°30′N 71°04′W[1]
Country Canada
Province Quebec
RegionChaudière-Appalaches
RCMLa Nouvelle-Beauce
ConstitutedMarch 29, 1995
Government
  MayorClément Marcoux
  Federal ridingBeauce
  Prov. ridingBeauce-Nord
Area
  Total32.10 km2 (12.39 sq mi)
  Land31.33 km2 (12.10 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[3]
  Total2,089
  Density66.7/km2 (173/sq mi)
  Pop 2006-2011
16.3%
  Dwellings
929
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
  Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
Postal code(s)
G0S 3G0
Area code(s)418 and 581
Highways
A-73

Route 171
Route 173
Websitewww.municipalite
scott.com

Name

Scott can be known under several names, due to a history of name changes, place names, territory breakups, and amalgamations.

  • Taschereau-Fortier, religious parish (1824), then territory detached from the parish municipality of Saint-Maxime (1933); it formed the rural part of Scott's territory until 1995. It was named after Gabriel-Elzéar Taschereau and Richard-Achille Fortier, two seigneurs who have had property rights on the territory.
  • Saint-Maxime, religious and civil parish (1895), changed name to Scott in 1978. Named after Reverend Maxime Fillion, first priest born on the territory.
  • Saint-Maxime-de-Scott, never an official name of the municipality.
  • Scott-Jonction, Lévis and Kennebec Railway (1875), then Quebec Central Railway station, located southeast of Saint-Maxime. It is named after Charles Armstrong Scott, who built the first section of the Lévis and Kennebec Railway. Although it was never an official name of the municipality, it has often been referred to as such.
  • Scott, named after the train station. Official name of the urban part of the municipality since 1978 and the new territory constituted in 1995 following the amalgamation with Taschereau-Fortier.
gollark: There *is* a difference between "being able to achieve personal goals requiring hard work or whatever" and "being forced to comply to arbitrary rules and do pointless things you hate".
gollark: I do not think schools should have *more* pointless discipline.
gollark: ... no, that would be bad.
gollark: Right, so don't shove people in very busy rooms for 5 hours a day.
gollark: If school was optimized for that, you wouldn't spend 5 hours a day not allowed to talk.

References



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