Online Encyclopedia

MONTREAL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 792 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

MONTREAL  , a

city of the Dominion of
See also:
Canada, its leading seat of commerce and
See also:
principal
See also:
port of entry, as well as the centre of many of its important
See also:
industries . It is situated on the south-east of the island of Montreal, at the confluence of the
See also:
Ottawa and St Lawrence rivers, in the county of Hochelaga and province of
See also:
Quebec . The
See also:
observatory in the grounds of McGill University, in the city, has been determined to be in 450 30' 17" N.
See also:
lat., and 730 34' 40.05" W. long . The city holds a
See also:
fine position at the head of ocean navigation, nearly a thousand miles inland, and at the
See also:
foot of the
See also:
great
See also:
system of rivers, lakes and canals upon which the commerce of the interior is carried to the
See also:
Atlantic seaboard . The
See also:
ship channel below Montreal permits the passage of ocean vessels
See also:
drawing 30 ft. at low
See also:
water . The deepening of the channel, largely due to the initiative of Montreal merchants, was begun in 1844 by the government of Canada . The
See also:
work was transferred to the Harbour Commissioners of Montreal in x85o . The
See also:
depth of the channel was then 11 ft . Fifteen years later it had gradually been increased to 20 ft.; and in 1888, when the work was taken over by the Dominion government, the depth was 27 ft . 6 in . The
See also:
Lachine canal,with the chain of artificial waterways that succeeded it, opened the way for the
See also:
shipping of the Great Lakes . The first sod in the digging of the Lachine canal was turned in
See also:
July 1821 by John Richardson of Montreal .

The same public-spirited

merchant presided in
See also:
April of the following
See also:
year at the preliminary meeting which led to the formation of the committee of trade, itself the forerunner of Montreal's indispensable board of trade . Even before the close of the French regime in Canada efforts had been made to cut a canal across the island of Montreal, and M.de Catalogne succeeded in
See also:
building a waterway practicable for the canoes of the fur-traders . The more ambitious canal commenced in 1821 was completed four years later, at a cost of $440,000 . Before its completion, however, the increasing draught of inland shipping made it practically useless, and in 1843 work was begun on an enlargement . Since then the canal has been repeatedly deepened, to keep pace with the requirements of lake shipping, until to-day a 14-ft. channel is available . In the meantime the
See also:
rival method of
See also:
rail transportation was taking shape, and in 1836 the first
See also:
Canadian railway was opened, between Laprairie, opposite Montreal and St Johns, in the, eastern townships . In 1848 a second railway, from Longueuil to St Hyacinthe, was opened; both these projects owing their existence to the enterprise of Montreal citizens . The broad St Lawrence, however, still
See also:
lay between the city and the outside
See also:
world . In 1854 work was commenced upon the famous Victoria tubular
See also:
bridge, designed by Robert Stephenson and A . M . Ross . The bridge was opened by King
See also:
Edward VII., then prince of Wales, in 186o .

In 1898 it was replaced by the Victoria

Jubilee bridge, built on the piers of the old bridge . At the foot of Lake St Louis, some distance above the Victoria Jubilee bridge, the Canadian Pacific railway crosses the
See also:
river on a graceful cantilever bridge with two central spans each 408 ft. long . Montreal is on the Canadian Pacific,
See also:
Grand Trunk, Intercolonial, Canadian
See also:
Northern, New York Central, Rutland, Central
See also:
Vermont and
See also:
Delaware & Hudson
See also:
railways' . During the season of navigation several lines of well-appointed steamers maintain communication with Liverpool,
See also:
London,
See also:
Glasgow, Bristol and other
See also:
British and
See also:
European ports, as well as the principal ports 'on the river and gulf of St Lawrence and the Great Lakes . A system of electric railways covers every section of the city and affords easy communication with the suburbs and neighbouring towns . Built originally along the water-front, Montreal has in the course of years swept back over a series of terraces—former levels of the river or of a more ancient sea—to the foot of Mount Royal . Held there, it has been forced around the mountain on either side . Mount Royal, from which the city derives its name and so much of its natural beauty, is a mass of trap-rock thrown up through the surrounding
See also:
limestone strata to a height of 753 ft.' above the level of the sea . Under the direction of Frederick Law Olmsted, it was converted into a magnificent park . Between mountain and river the Lachine canal winds through the plain . In the
See also:
middle of the river lies the beautifully wooded St
See also:
Helen's island, rising to a height of 150 ft., above the water, and itself commanding an excellent view of the city . The island, named after Helen Boulle, wife of Champlain, belonged at one time to the barons of Longueuil .

The British government

See also:
purchased it for military purposes, and it still contains a battery of guns and barracks, the latter tenantless, since the island has been loaned to the city for use as a public park . The city is substantially built, grey limestone, quarried from the mountain, predominating in the public and many of the private edifices . On the south of the Place d'Armes, a small enclosure covering the site of an ancient burying-ground, stands the parish church of Notre Dame, whose
See also:
Gothic outlines form one of the striking features of the city . Designed by James O'Donnell, the church was built in 1824 to take the place of an earlier structure dating back to 1672 . The existing church is 255 ft. long and 134 ft. wide, and accommodates xo,000 worshippers, Its twin towers (227 ft.) contain ten bells, one of which, known as " Le Gros Bourdon," weighs 24,780 lb, the largest in
See also:
America . Two others weigh respectively 6041 and 3633 lb . Beside the church stands the historic seminary of St Sulpice, one of the few remaining relics of the days of French
See also:
rule . This ancient building is now used for the offices of the Order of Sulpicians, Sounded by the Abbe Olier in the early
See also:
half of the 17th century . This zealous enthusiast had sent out Paul de Chomedy, sieur de Maisonneuve, in 1641 to establish the missionary enterprise which afterwards
See also:
developed into the city of Montreal, and six years later the Abbe de Quelus, with three devoted companions, landed at Ville-
See also:
Marie de Montreal and laid the
See also:
foundations of the future powerful Order of Sulpicians . The seigneury of Montreal, acquired by Olier in 1640, is still held by the Sulpicians, and as they have retained large blocks of
See also:
land in the heart of the city as well as elsewhere on the island, these "Gentlemen of the Seminary," as they were locally called, rank among the wealthiest societies in America . The head offices of the
See also:
Bank of Montreal face Notre Dame church, on the north of the Place d'Armes, and several other of the leading banking institutions of the city have their quarters in the immediate neighbourhood . In the Place d'Armes itself stands a striking figure in
See also:
bronze erected to the memory of the founder of Montreal, Maisonneuve .

At the

See also:
base are a series of bas-reliefs setting forth
See also:
historical incidents connected with the early
See also:
history of the
See also:
town . The monument is the work of a Canadian sculptor, Louis Philippe Hebert, C.M.G . The
See also:
Roman Catholic
See also:
cathedral of St James stands upon Dominion Square . It is an almost exact
See also:
reproduction, reduced to one-half the scale, of St Peter's at Rome . The building, projected by the
See also:
late Archbishop Bourget to replace the old church on St Denis street destroyed in the great fire of 1852, was begun in 1868 . On the west of the square stand the Windsor Street station of the Canadian Pacific railway; St George's (
See also:
Anglican) church, which possesses a fine
See also:
chime of bells; and the Windsor Hotel . A statue of
See also:
Sir John Macdonald occupies the centre of the square . Close to the historic Bonsecours Market stands the church of Notre Dame de Bonsecours, founded by
See also:
Sister
See also:
Marguerite Bourgeois in 1673 as a sanctuary for a miraculous statue of the Virgin . The
See also:
original church was burned in 1754, and the
See also:
present building, erected in 1771, an example of Norman architecture transplanted to the New World, narrowly escaped destruction to make
See also:
room for a railway station . Curiously enough, it remained for a number of
See also:
English Protestants to secure the preservation of this relic of the French period . Jacques Cartier Square, adjoining Bonsecours Market, is notable for its column and statue of Nelson, erected in 18o8 . As the Roman Catholic cathedral owes its existence to the energy and
See also:
enthusiasm of Archbishop Bourget, so Christ Church cathedral must always be associated with the name of the first
See also:
resident Anglican bishop of Montreal, Dr Fulford .

The church is a fine example of the Early English

style of architecture . Beside it stands a memorial of Bishop Fulford, modelled after the famous Martyr's Memorial at Oxford . The mixture of races and creeds, which is so striking a characteristic of Montreal
See also:
life, has not only endowed the city with many beautiful churches, but also with varieties of philanthropic institutions . Each of the several
See also:
national societies—St George's, St Andrew's, St Patrick's, and that of the French-Canadian
See also:
patron saint, St
See also:
Jean
See also:
Baptiste, to mention no others—looks after the welfare of its own adherents . Of the several hospitals, the most venerable is the Hotel Dieu, founded in 1644 by Mme de
See also:
Bouillon, a French lady of high rank . The original building, in the early days of Ville Marie, stood without the fort, and was fortified to withstand the attacks of the
See also:
Iroquois . The site is now covered by a block of warehouses on St Paul Street . The present buildings, completed in 1861, contain both a hospital and nunnery . The Order of the Grey Nuns, founded by a Canadian lady, Mme d'Youville, in 1737, cares for hundreds of foundlings and aged and infirm
See also:
people in the great hospital in Guy Street . The Montreal General hospital was founded in 1819 by public subscriptions, and the Royal Victoria hospital is a monument to the generosity of Lord Strathcona and Lord Mount-Stephen . Besides these should be mentioned the Notre Dame, the Western and the Children's Memorial hospitals .
See also:
Separate hospitals for contagious diseases are maintained both by the Roman Catholics and Protestants .

Montreal provides for the

See also:
education of its young people through two distinct systems of public
See also:
schools; one for Roman Catholics, the other for Protestants, each governed by a board of commissioners . The schools are maintained by an
See also:
annual tax based upon the assessment, two-fifths of r % being levied upon the
See also:
Protestant section of the community for the support of the Protestant schools, and one-quarter of , % upon the Catholics for their schools . Unlike the neighbouring provinces of Ontario, Quebec makes no provision for a state university . But James McGill (1744–1813)
See also:
left
See also:
property, valued at the time of his
See also:
death at £30,000, for the foundation of a university, one college of which was to bear his name . A royal charter conferring university powers was obtained in 1821 . During early years slow progress was made, but with the appointment of Sir William Dawson as principal, in 1855, the institution entered on a career of prosperity . It now embraces five faculties: arts, applied science, law,
See also:
medicine, agriculture, and comprises the following: McGill College, Montreal, the original foundation; the Royal Victoria College for
See also:
Women, Montreal, built and endowed by Lord Strathcona; four affiliated theological colleges in Montreal; the Macdonald College, erected and endowed by Sir William C . Macdonald, at Ste Anne de Bellevue, 20 M. from the city; the McGill University College of British
See also:
Columbia, Vancouver, B.C.; and three affiliated colleges: Stanstead Wesleyan College, Stanstead, P.Q.; Victoria College, Victoria, B.C.;
See also:
Alberta College,
See also:
Edmonton . The finely-equipped Macdonald scientific laboratories, with the Redpath Museum and University Library (114,000 vols . 111 1907), form
See also:
part of a noble
See also:
group of buildings on the campus in Montreal . Disastrous fires in April 1907 wiped out two buildings and destroyed the splendid medical museum, but the plans for rebuilding provided for further extension and improvement . Previous to the fires the property of the university in buildings in Montreal, including equipment and endowment, was valued at $6,000,000 .

The French university of

Laval, the chief seat of which is in the city of Quebec, also maintains a branch at Montreal, established in 1877 . It embraces the faculties of arts, law, medicine and
See also:
theology, the latter conducted through the Seminary of St Sulpice . The college library has been enriched by a rare collection of Canadian books and
See also:
manuscripts, bequeathed by Judge Louis Francois Georges Baby (1834–1906), of Montreal . The medical school, which now occupies a portion of the university building, formerly held its sessions in the historic Chateau de Ramesay, built by the Chevalier de Ramesay, governor of Montreal, in 1704, and occupied after the
See also:
conquest by the British
See also:
governors of Canada, until the stoning of Lord
See also:
Elgin and the burning of the Parliament Buildings in 1849 brought about the removal of the seat of government from Montreal . The Chateau de Ramesay is now the fitting home of a public collection of historic relics . Of other educational institutions in the city the most important is St Mary's College, founded in 1848 by the
See also:
Jesuits, and removed to the present building in 1855 . The archives boast a notable collection of early Canadian manuscripts, upon which Francis Parkman drew in preparing his histories of New France . Montreal's position as the chief doorway of the outgoing and incoming trade of the Dominion is largely due to the foresight of her great merchants . With the gradual opening up of means of communication by land and water, and the development of her. facilities for handling the exports and imports of the country, the city has increased rapidly in importance, until to day one-third of the imports of the Dominion come through Montreal, and nearly 30 % of the exports . In shipments of grain Montreal has outstripped all her rivals on the continent except New York and New Orleans, and the building of the Georgian
See also:
Bay canal will, by materially shortening the distance between the western grainfields and European 'markets, give her a very considerable
See also:
advantage over both these ports . In
See also:
dairy produce she is already the chief export centre of the continent . Montreal is also the
See also:
financial centre of Canada, and in it are to be found the head offices of more than 25 important banks, of the leading
See also:
insurance companies, and of the two greatest railways of the country .

Montreal is governed by a

mayor and 36 aldermen, elected every two years . The city returns 5 members to the Dominion House of
See also:
Commons and 6 to the Provincial Legislature of Quebec . The population of Montreal, according to.the census of 19o1, was 266,826 . With the suburbs, it was estimated in 1907 at over 405,000, about three-fifths French . The history of the town is steeped in
See also:
romance . From that first remarkable scene, so graphically described by Francis Parkman, when, on the 18th of May 1642, Maisonneuve and his little
See also:
band of religious enthusiasts landed upon the spot where the Montreal Custom House now stands, and planted, in the words of the saintly Dumont, a grain of
See also:
mustard seed destined to overshadow the land,-the history of the town was to be intimately associated with missionary enterprise and such missionary heroism as the world has rarely seen . Montreal began as a religious colony, but its very situation, on the
See also:
outer confines of
See also:
civilization and at the door of the Iroquois country, forced it to become a military settlement, a fortified town with a military garrison . Similarly its position, even then .an ideal one from a commercial point of view, made it the dominating centre of the fur-trade . For a
See also:
hundred years after its foundation these three influences held sway, more or less mutually antagonistic, the streets of Montreal presenting an animated picture of sombre priests, and jovial soldiers, savage hunters in their native finery and more than half-savage fur traders . Within another hundred years, although both priests and soldiers were still to be seen on her streets, they had become but atoms in a larger and more varied population . The fur trader of New France, merged after the conquest in the fur trader of the North West Company—which had its origin in Montreal—remained for a time the one picturesque survival of earlier and more romantic days . Finally, he too disappeared in the multiform and strenuous life of the
See also:
modern city .

End of Article: MONTREAL
[back]
COUNTS AND DUKES OF MONTPENSIER
[next]
COMTE DE CLAUDE DE BOURDEILLE MONTRESOR (c. 16o6-16...

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.