French River, Ontario

Municipality of French River
Municipalité de Rivière-des-Français
—  Town  —
The French River at the French River Post
French River
Coordinates:
Country  Canada
Province  Ontario
District Sudbury
Incorporated 1999
Government
 • Type Town
 • Mayor Claude Bouffard
 • Governing Body French River Municipal Council
 • MP Claude Gravelle (NDP)
 • MPP David Ramsay (OLP)
Area[1]
 • Land 734.26 km2 (283.5 sq mi)
Population (2006)[1]
 • Total 2,659
 • Density 3.6/km2 (9.3/sq mi)
Time zone EST (UTC-5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC-4)
Area code(s) 705
Website www.frenchriver.ca

French River, also known as Rivière-des-Français, is a municipality in the Canadian province of Ontario, in the Sudbury District. The municipality had a population of 2,659 in the Canada 2006 Census.[1] It was formed in 1999 out of unincorporated portions of the Unorganized Sudbury District.

Along with the municipalities of St. Charles and Markstay-Warren, it is part of the region known as Sudbury East.[2]

Contents

Communities

The municipality comprises the communities of Alban, Bigwood, Chartrand Corner, Delamere, French River Station, Happy Landing, Jamot, Monetville, Noëlville, North Monetville, Ouellette, Rutter, Sucker Creek Landing and Wolseley Bay.

Alban

The community of Alban was originally established in 1907 as Rutter, named for the nearby railway station in 1907, but in 1937 the community was renamed for Rev. J. Alban Filiatrault. In 1934, the Parish of Notre-Dame-de-Lourdes is created. Mr. Jean-Baptiste Rochon donates several acres of land to the habitants of Alban to erect a church. During the night of February 6th, 1953, the church burns to the ground. The following Sunday, Father Oliva Campeau proposes the immediate reconstruction of the church. This time, it will be constructed with brick and the walls of plaster instead of wood. In 1984, the Notre-Dame-de-Lourdes Parish celebrates its 50th anniversary.

Priests of Notre-Dame de Lourdes

Bigwood

Bigwood is named for American born, civil engineer William Bigwood, associated with the Graves, Bigwood and Company sawmills at Byng Inlet in the early 1900s. Bigwood is divided between the municipalities of French River and Killarney.

Monetville

Originally known as Martland, the community was first settled in 1895 by Cyrille Monette (née Boisvert) and four other pioneers. It became a municipality in 1906 and adopted the name Monetville.

For many years the Greenway Hotel was one of the few notable buildings while driving through on the highway.

The local graveyard has a Canadian World War II hero buried there. Sgt. Wallace Edmond Firlotte, who served with the Lincoln and Welland Regiment during the war, was bestowed six war decorations. However, he was one of only a very few Canadians that was bestowed the Order of the Bronze Lion for heroism from the Crown of the Netherlands. This award is presented for "Deeds of extreme bravery and leadership in battle favouring the Netherlands". The Prince personally presented this Order to Sgt. Firlotte by Royal Decree on December 8, 1945. Monetville is divided into two areas North and South Monetville, South Monetville is generally from Dokis Road south to Bear lake and Shanty Bay of Lake Nippissing. North Monetville extends generally from Dokis Road North to the West Arm of Lake Nippissing and the Island that Highway 64 crosses on the West Arm. North Monetville was settled by the Mercer Family and the Purcell family in the early 1900's.

Noëlville

Noëlville, originally known as Cosby, was founded in 1905 with the arrival of settlers in the region. Noëlville families travelled by boat, to the south-west end of Lake Nipissing, to establish themselves between Lake Nipissing and the French River. To pay homage to Noël Desmarais, the village's first merchant and the first businessman of the region, the town of Cosby became Noëlville in 1911. Noël Desmarais was one of the first to start his family business in Noëlville.

Many other families soon followed. Development accelerated with the opening of shops and industries, and the community rapidly became, and remains today, the economic heart of the Sudbury East region. Noëlville celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2005.

Since Noël means Christmas in French, this town is often referred to as "Christmas Town". The town was known for holding festivals and special activities for its "Christmas in July" celebrations. It is believed that during the Christmas season, some have their mail sent through Noëlville for the "Christmastown" postmark.

Every year, in February, Noëlville hosts the largest and longest running family hockey tournament in Canada. Five years after the Noëlville Community Centre was built in 1972, the Noëlville Family Hockey Tournament was founded in 1977 by Claude Mayer, Gerry Gratton, and Dan Pitre. There were 17 teams. The first game was played on New Year’s night when the Carrière family played against the Mayer family. This tournament survives to this day and has become a much anticipated event in this small town where families reunite when friends and members of the extended family return 'home' to compete in this annual event. Over the years, this tournament raised over $150,000 for local charities.

In 2007, Noëlville made the top five communities in CBC Television's Hockeyville competition.[3] The neighbouring city of Greater Sudbury offered its support to Noëlville, although the community ultimately lost out to another nearby city, North Bay.

North Monetville

The North Monetville area straddles the municipal boundary between French River and West Nipissing. "Created" in the 1970s to aid the delivery of supplies to the Monetville Public School which was located several kilometers north on Highway 64 from the signposts designating the town of Monetville. Sucker Creek Landing and Chapel Island are both considered to be part of North Monetville, with Highway 64 crossing Chapel Island and bridging the West Arm Narrows of Lake Nipissing at both ends of the island.

Most residents of North Monetville simply state their address as "Monetville" even if they do live in the north end of town.

Rutter

Rutter takes its name from Fred Rutter, who was a resident engineer on the Toronto-Sudbury branch of the Canadian Pacific Railway in the early 1900s. It is located just east of the junction of Highways 64 and 69.

Wolseley Bay

Wolseley Bay, the easternmost community in French River, is located at the end of Highway 528, at the mouth of the Wolseley River.

Demographics

Population trend:[6]

Mother Tongue

References

External links