Ville-Émard

Ville-Émard is a neighbourhood located in the Sud-Ouest borough of Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Ville-Émard
Ville-Émard
Location of Ville-Émard in Montreal
Coordinates: 45.45572°N 73.59258°W / 45.45572; -73.59258
CountryCanada
ProvinceQuebec
CityMontreal
BoroughLe Sud-Ouest
Area
  Total0.45 sq mi (1.16 km2)
Population
 (2011)[1]
  Total18,603

Overview

Geography

This neighbourhood is bordered by the Aqueduct Canal to the east as far north as Desmarchais Boulevard where it meets Côte-Saint-Paul, after which the eastern boundary runs north along Monk Boulevard to the Lachine Canal, the community's northern edge. The western boundary runs south along Irwin Street and Irwin Avenue to Angrignon Park, the outer boundaries of which form the community's western and southern edges.[2] This neighbourhood is accessible via the Angrignon exit on Quebec Autoroute 20 and the De La Vérendrye exit on Quebec Autoroute 15.

View looking north on Monk Boulevard

Neighbourhood Views

Notre-Dame-Du-Perpétuel-Secours Church, on Monk Boulevard
View of the Canal Lachine, near Monk Boulevard
Garneau Square in the fall

History

Ville-Émard was originally part of the concession of Côte Saint-Paul, granted by the Sulpician Order, seigneurs of the Island of Montreal, in 1662. The concession included modern-day Ville-Émard, Côte-Saint-Paul, and the Turcot Yards, and was used for agriculture. The Lachine Canal bisected the area in 1825 and disrupted agricultural activities.[3]

The Lachine Canal brought numerous factories to the region, drawn by the availability of transport and water power. The two first streets of Ville-Émard were Hamilton and Beaulieu, opened up by Éphrem Hudon in 1871. By 1875, several factories were present. The core of the modern-day neighbourhood, a farm belonging to W. B. Davidson, was sold by his widow Ann Ryan to entrepreneur Joseph-Ulric Émard. He subdivided the land, rapidly selling the properties, and created the Compagnie des Terrains de la banlieue de Montréal with his business partners, Messrs. Ouimet, Monk, Swail and Gohier.[4]

Shortly after the creation of the Village of Côte-Saint-Paul in 1874, this area separated as the Parish Municipality of Côte-Saint-Paul in 1878. In 1902, it became the Village du Boulevard-Saint-Paul, and in 1908, Joseph-Ulric Émard, who had become the mayor, renamed the town for himself. Shops and municipal services opened along Monk Boulevard. The parish of Notre-Dame-du-Perpétuel-Secours was founded in 1906 under Curé Jean-Moïse Jolicoeur.[4]

Clockwise from the north, the town of Ville-Émard was bounded by the Lachine Canal, St. Louis Street (now Rue Briand), First Avenue (now Rue le Caron), a property line just north of Rielle Street (now Rue Laurendeau), the property line behind the lots on the west side of Frontenac Street (now Rue Leprohon), the north bank of the Aqueduct Canal, and the boundary with the parish of Lachine (approximately the same as the boundary between the modern borough and LaSalle).[5]

In 1910, Ville-Emard was annexed to the city of Montreal at the same time as its neighbour Côte-Saint-Paul. Historically a working-class neighbourhood, it continues to evolve with new condo and other housing developments.

The vast English-style Angrignon Park was opened on the former Crawford family farm in 1927.[6]

The metro arrived in Ville-Émard in 1978, with the construction of Angrignon, Monk, and Jolicoeur stations.

Ville-Émard became part of the borough of Le Sud-Ouest in 2002.

Infrastructure

Ville-Émard is served by three stations on the Montreal Metro's Green Line, Monk, Angrignon and Jolicoeur. It is crossed and bordered by the Lachine and Aqueduct Canal. Various bicycle paths run alongside the canals.

Angrignon Park, one of the most important urban parks in the city of Montreal, is located at the southern tip of the neighbourhood. The Maison de la culture Marie-Uguay as well as the Marie-Uguay library are situated in Ville-Émard, as is École secondaire Honoré-Mercier.

Economy

Notable people

The Quebec publisher Alain Stanké as well as the politician and journalist Claude Ryan also spent their childhoods in Ville-Émard.

gollark: Well, probably.
gollark: I said on mobile, but I found it.
gollark: Er … how do you set nickname on the mobile discord?
gollark: Considering.
gollark: <@151074772518830080> I don't think so.

References

  1. 2011 Canadian census tracts 4620089 - 4620093
  2. "Map of Montreal" Retrieved October 13, 2011.
  3. "Fiche du secteur: Côte-Saint-Paul." Grand répertoire du patrimoine bâti de Montréal. Accessed 4 July 2011.
  4. "L'Histoire du quartier en quelques mots." Archived 2008-11-14 at the Wayback Machine ville-emard.com. Accessed July 4, 2011.
  5. Pinsoneault, Adolphe Rodrigue. Atlas of the island and city of Montreal and Ile Bizard : a compilation of the most recent cadastral plans from the book of reference. Atlas Publishing Co. Ltd: 1907. Pp. 35-39. Available online from Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec; consulted July 5, 2011.
  6. "Angrignon Metro: History." metrodemontreal.com. Accessed July 4, 2011.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.