Saint-Lambert, Quebec

Saint-Lambert
—  City  —
Ville de Saint-Lambert
Downtown Saint-Lambert along Victoria Avenue

Flag

Coat of arms
Motto: Maximus in Minimus
(Latin for "The greatest in the smallest detail.")[1]
Location within the Urban Agglomeration of Longueuil.
Coordinates (55, avenue Argyle [2]):
Country  Canada
Province  Quebec
Region Montérégie (16)
RCM or TE Urban agglomeration of Longueuil (TE 58)
Founded 1857
Electoral Districts
Federal

Saint-Lambert
Provincial Laporte
Government[2][3][4]
 • Mayor Philippe Brunet
 • Federal MP(s) Sadia Groguhé (NDP)
 • Quebec MNA(s) Nicole Ménard (PLQ)
Area[5]
 • Land 7.55 km2 (2.9 sq mi)
Population (2006)[5]
 • Total 21,599
 • Density 2,859.3/km2 (7,405.6/sq mi)
 • Change (2001-06) 2.6%
 • Dwellings 10,572
Time zone EST (UTC−5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC−4)
Postal code(s) J4P to J4R
Area code(s) 450
Access Routes[6]
A-20

Route 112
Route 132
Route 134
Website www.ville.saint-lambert.qc.ca

Saint-Lambert is a Canadian city in the province of Quebec located opposite Montreal on the south shore of the St. Lawrence River. Saint-Lambert was named for either the early French Canadian hunter Lambert Closse or for Roman Catholic Bishop Lambert of Maastricht. It was home to 21,599 people according to the Canada 2006 Census.

Saint-Lambert is divided into two main sections: the original city of Saint-Lambert and the Préville neighborhood. The original city of Saint-Lambert (as it existed prior to 1969) is located from the Country Club of Montreal golf course to the border of the Vieux-Longueuil borough. It includes the city's downtown, known as "The Village". On the other side of the Country Club of Montreal is the former city Préville, which merged with Saint-Lambert in 1969. It extends to the borders of the city of Brossard and the Longueuil borough of Greenfield Park.

Contents

History

In 1636, Louis XIV of France was dividing up seigneuries in the new colony of New France. One of these was known as La Prairie, comprising La Prairie de la Magdeleine and La Prairie de Saint-Lambert. The lower part of the latter, was known as Mouillepied, due to the swampy conditions of the area. Saint-Lambert's first two permanent residents were André Marsil and André Achim in the 18th century. Today André Marsil's house can be found on the corner of Riverside Drive and Notre-Dame Avenue, and has been converted into a textile museum called the Marsil Museum (French: Musée Marcil).

In 1722, Mouillepied was transferred from La Prairie seigneurie to Saint-Antoine-de-Longueuil parish.

Following the establishment of the railway in 1852 and the completion of the Victoria Bridge in 1854, the village received a permanent link to the island of Montreal. With it came a quick growth in Saint-Lambert's population and the construction of new housing. Saint-Lambert detached itself from Saint-Antoine-de-Longueuil and achieved municipality status in 1857, under its first mayor, Louis Bétournay. At the time, Saint-Lambert did not include Mouillepied, which instead had remained in Saint-Antoine-de-Longueuil.

In 1892, Saint-Lambert reaches village status, and in 1921 attains city status.

The Victoria Bridge is the oldest bridge linking Montreal to the South Shore, and is the only rail line linking Quebec's largest city to New York City. Because of this, Saint-Lambert became an important passenger and freight stop for a long period of time. This is evident in the city's architecture, in which many old industrial buildings are found near the railway tracks. Many of these have since been converted into lofts such as the former Waterman pens factory, originally built in 1908.

During World War I and World War II, Saint-Lambert had one of the highest military enlistment rates in Canada. The small city lost a total of 132 soldiers in both wars.[7] This number was a significant portion of the young people at the time.

In the 1950s, the development of Saint-Lambert was enhanced with the building of the St. Lambert Locks in the St. Lawrence Seaway, to bypass the smaller Lachine Canal, and this became the most easterly lock in the Seaway. Suburban growth from Montreal in this period also affected Saint-Lambert, as well as many of the older communities on the South Shore.

Since its establishment, the city's limits have barely changed. In 1948, the old Mouillepied area had evolved in the form of a new city called Préville which then merged with Saint-Lambert in 1969.

Saint-Lambert had an anglophone majority population during the beginning of the 20th century, but has increasingly become the home to upper-middle class francophone families, especially after 1976.

The late 1990s saw the construction of a new residential neighbourhood in Saint-Lambert, known as "Le Haut Saint-Lambert". It was built on the remaining vacant land in city limits near LeMoyne.

In 2007, the city of Saint-Lambert celebrated its 150th anniversary.

Amalgamation and de-amalgamation

On January 1, 2002, municipal reorganization merged Saint-Lambert with LeMoyne to form a borough in the new Longueuil mega-city. There was a strong "de-merger" movement and a referendum was won on June 20, 2004, to re-establish the former city. The city was officially "re-born" on January 1, 2006, while on January 7, 2006, the Saint-Lambert flag was hoisted in front of city hall and the mayor, councillors and city manager took their oath of office.

Geography

Saint-Lambert is underlain by Ordovician period black shale. This bedrock is covered by deep clay drift over most of the town. Soils were poorly drained in their natural state; as such, they were classified as gleysols—strongly acidic (Longueuil series) under most of the town and neutral to mildly alkaline (Boucherville series) in part of the western section (Préville).[8] Drainage and excavation have been used to adapt the soil for housing construction.

The most common trees in Saint-Lambert are those species which tolerate poor drainage. These include poplars, willows, red maple, silver maple and green ash. The American elm was formerly abundant but its population has been severely reduced by Dutch elm disease. Non-native species are commonly represented by Norway maple, silver birch, English oak, blue spruce, common horsechestnut and honey locust. Rare exotics which benefit from St-Lambert's favorable microclimate include Japanese maple and tulip tree. Most trees in Saint-Lambert show some evidence of damage from an ice storm in January 1998 and a severe thunderstorm in June 2008.

Climate

The climate of Saint-Lambert is characterized by abundant precipitation and one of the longest, warmest growing seasons in Quebec. As in other parts of Greater Montreal, lengthy spells of hot humid weather are common in summer. Thunderstorms are frequent and occasionally cause widespread damage. Heavy snow is usual in winter and several damaging ice storms have occurred over the town's history.

Government

Municipal

The mayor of the City of Saint-Lambert is Philippe Brunet. There are eight city councillors.[9]

Saint-Lambert City Council
District number Councillor
District 1 Gilles Girard
District 2 Gilles Therrien
District 3 Natalie Kirk
District 4 François Boissy
District 5 Marc-André Croteau
District 6 Francis Dumais
District 7 Alain Dépatie
District 8 Martin Croteau

Federal and provincial

Traditionally, the city of Saint-Lambert is predominantly federalist, specifically Liberal both federally and provincially. Despite this, in federal politics the riding tends to usually go in favour of the Bloc Québécois, because it includes a considerable portion of the highly sovereigntist Vieux-Longueuil neighbourhood of Longueuil.

The city of Saint-Lambert is located in the federal riding of Saint-Lambert, and its Member of Parliament is Sadia Groguhé of the New Democratic Party.

In provincial politics, Saint-Lambert forms part of the Laporte riding and its Member of the National Assembly is Nicole Ménard of the Quebec Liberal Party. The provincial riding is named after Pierre Laporte, a Quebec government cabinet minister who was kidnapped from outside his Saint-Lambert home and murdered by the Front de libération du Québec in the October Crisis of 1970.

Economy

Most of Saint-Lambert's commercial activity is based on Victoria Avenue, particularly on the part of the strip in the city's downtown (between Riverside Drive and the CN tracks), known as "the Village". This part of Victoria is most notably the location to the flagship of Taylor's department store. On this part of Victoria alone, there are around 44 businesses that sell durable and semi-durable goods; 22 cafés, bistros and restaurants and 960 street parking spaces. Around 50% of customers in the area come by automobile and 40% come by foot.[10]

Saint-Lambert is also home to Groupe Serdy, the owner of cable television specialty channels Évasion and Zeste. Roctest, a firm that specializes in making instrumentation for civil engineering projects also has its head office and factory in Saint-Lambert. Other notable Saint-Lambert businesses include Les Éditions Héritage book publisher and a Dare Foods (formerly Lido Biscuit) cookie factory.

Demographics

Population trend[11]
Census Population Change (%)
2006 21,599 2.6%
2001 21,051 0.4%
1996 20,971 0.0%
1991 20,976 N/A

As of the census[5] of 2006, there were 21,599 people, 10,572 dwellings, and 5,840 families residing in the city. The population density was 2,859.3 people per square kilometer (7,405.6/mi2). The linguistic makeup of the city was 73.8%% francophone, 15.2% anglophone, and 9.5% all other languages combined.

In the city the population was spread out with 15.1% under the age of 15, 9.1% from 15 to 24, 21.1% from 25 to 44, 29.1% from 45 to 64, and 25.7% who were 65 years of age or older. The median age was 48 years. 44.1% of the population is male, and 55.9% is female.

The median income for a household in the city was $61,583, and the median income for a family was $89,786. The median income for the city was $36,293. About 11.9% of the population were low income, including 9.0% of those under age 18. The average value of an owned dwelling was $311,329.

Ethnic Origin (2006)[12]
Ethnic Origin Population Pct (%)
Canadian 10,645 50.6%
French 8,340 39.6%
Irish 2,035 9.7%
English 1,640 7.8%
Scottish 1,340 6.4%
Italian 860 4.1%
German 785 3.7%
First Nations 495 2.4%
Belgian 360 1.7%
Spanish 360 1.7%
Chinese 330 1.6%
Québécois 220 1%
Home language (2006)
Language Population Percentage (%)
French 15,885 75.46%
English 4,040 19.19%
Both English and French 340 1.97%
Other languages 785 3.73%

According to the 2001[13] census, there were 15,690 Roman Catholics in Saint-Lambert, who accounted for seventy-six percent of the population. They are served by three churches. Église catholique de St-Lambert and Église catholique Saint-Thomas-d'Aquin serve Francophone Catholics, and St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church serves Anglophone Catholics.

Additionally, there were 1,970 Protestants in Saint-Lambert in 2001, accounting for 9.5% of all residents. They share five churches with the rest of the south shore Protestant population. St. Barnabas Anglican Church, St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, St. Lambert United Church, South Shore Seventh-day Adventist Church and Good Sheppard Lutheran Church.[13]

The number of non-Christians in Saint-Lambert amounts to less than five percent of the population, and 9.6% of the population observe no religion whatsoever.


Education

Saint-Lambert's citizens are well served in educational institutions for a city of its size. The highest level of these is the public anglophone CEGEP with 2,500 students, Champlain College Saint-Lambert which also houses an office for Université du Québec à Montréal.

The Commission Scolaire Marie-Victorin has jurisdiction over three French language primary schools in Saint-Lambert, École Des Saints-Anges, École Rabeau and Préville Elementary.

Collège Durocher Saint-Lambert is a large French language private school and is therefore not affiliated with any school board. It consists of two campuses, the Saint-Lambert Campus on the corner of Riverside and Notre-Dame Avenue as well as the Durocher Campus on the corner of Riverside and Tiffin Road, opposite Champlain Regional College.

The English language Riverside School Board operates five schools on Saint-Lambert's territory. The most notable of these is the IB-accredited Chambly Academy which is home to over five-hundred students from Grade 7-Grade 11. The other secondary school that the board operates in the city is The Alternate School which is meant to reintegrate at-risk youth into mainstream society. St. Lambert Elementary School serves Kindergarten to Grade 6, and also houses around five-hundred students. Intellectually disabled students are served by REACH School as well as a program at Chambly Academy geared toward their academic success. ACCESS Continuing Education and Career Training Centre is an adult education institution, helping adults and immigrants get high school diplomas.

Culture

There are a handful of notable cultural institutions based in Saint-Lambert, such as the Museum of Costume and Textile of Quebec (French: Musée du costume et du textile du Québec), Le Balcon d'Art and La Foire d'Art Contemporain de Saint-Lambert.

Saint-Lambert is also home a library, the Saint Lambert Municipal Memorial Library. It has two branches, the main branch is located on Mercille Avenue, and the other branch located in Préville.

Various large events take place annually in Saint-Lambert. One of these is Saint-Lambert Days, which takes place over a four day period in late August and features live concerts and performances, games, and sidewalk sales.More than 80,000 people attend St. Lambert Days each year.[14]

Media

The city of Saint-Lambert is home to two weekly newspapers, the St-Lambert Journal and Le Saint-Lambert Mag. It is also served by two other regional weekly newspapers, Le Courrier du Sud and Rive-Sud Express.

Transportation

Passenger rail

Via Rail serves Saint-Lambert railway station with its daily Montreal-Quebec City, Montreal-Gaspé and Montreal-Halifax trains.

Amtrak, the U.S. national passenger rail system, also provides daily service to Saint-Lambert railway station, operating its Adirondack in both directions between Montreal and New York City, using the Victoria Bridge.

Saint-Lambert railway station is also served by commuter rail on the Agence métropolitaine de transport's Mont-Saint-Hilaire Line.

Transit

Saint-Lambert is served by Réseau de transport de Longueuil, although it was once serviced by Chambly Transport and Commission de Transport de la Communauté Urbaine de Montréal. Interurban streetcar service was operated until 1956 by the Montreal and Southern Counties Railway.

The following RTL buses lines travel through Saint-Lambert:

Route Name Route Map Schedule
1 (Terminus Longueuil - Boul. Grand-Allée [via Churchill])
2 (Terminus Longueuil - Lemoyne [via Tiffin])
6 (Terminus Longueuil - Terminus Brossard-Panama [via Victoria])
13 (Terminus Longueuil — Terminus Panama [via Riverside])
14 (Terminus Longueuil - Brossard {R section} [via HWY 132])
15 (Terminus Longueuil — Terminus Panama [via Alexandra] and on to Terminus Centre Ville at rush hours only)
37 (Terminus Centre Ville — Du Dauphiné [via Champlain Bridge])
54 (Terminus Longueuil - Terminus Brossard-Panama [via Tascherau])
55 (Terminus Centre Ville — St. Lambert [via Victoria Bridge])
106 (Terminus Longueuil — Brossard {B section}[via Victoria])
115 (Terminus Centre Ville - Greenfield Park [via Champlain Bridge])

Roads and infrastructure

Saint-Lambert is served by the most important autoroute in Quebec province: Autoroute 20 . Saint-Lambert is also served by one of the most important provincial highway: Route 132. The Route 112 is also serving Saint-Lambert.

Important streets

Bridges

In Saint-Lambert, two bridges link with Montreal (one to the Old Port and the other one, a bridge meant for bicycles, that connects to Île Notre-Dame). The Victoria Bridge links Saint-Lambert to Montreal Island. The Jacques Cartier Bridge in Longueuil is half a kilometre from Saint-Lambert and the Champlain Bridge in Brossard is a kilometre away from Saint-Lambert.

Notable natives and residents

Partner cities

See also

References

  1. ^ "Ville de Saint-Lambert". The Public Register of Arms, Flags and Badges of Canada. Governor General of Canada. 2004-02-25. http://archive.gg.ca/heraldry/pub-reg/project-pic.asp?lang=e&ProjectID=1165&ProjectElementID=4102. Retrieved 15 January 2010. 
  2. ^ a b Ministère des Affaires Municipales et Régions: Saint-Lambert
  3. ^ Parliament of Canada Federal Riding History: SAINT-LAMBERT (Quebec)
  4. ^ Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec - 40th General Election Riding Results: LAPORTE
  5. ^ a b c 2006 Statistics Canada Community Profile: Saint-Lambert, Quebec
  6. ^ Official Transport Quebec Road Map
  7. ^ Montreal Gazette Article
  8. ^ http://sis.agr.gc.ca/cansis/publications/pq/pq12a/index.html Roger Baril and A. Mailloux. Soil Map and Legend of Chambly County (1942).
  9. ^ "City Council Members". Saint-Lambert, Quebec: City of Saint-Lambert. 11-09. http://www.ville.saint-lambert.qc.ca/asp/gabarits/Gabarit.asp?ARBO_CATEGORIE_PERE_SEL=59%DF63&ID_MESSAGE=2427&CAT_RAC=59&COULEUR_FOND_MENU=%23a3d177. Retrieved 20 November 2009. 
  10. ^ "Village Sector (downtown)". Corporation for the Commercial Development of Saint-Lambert. http://www.cdc-st-lambert.com/index.php?page=village_sector. Retrieved 26 February 2010. 
  11. ^ Statistics Canada: 1996, 2001, 2006 census
  12. ^ Ethnocultural Portrait of Canada Highlight Tables: St. Lambert
  13. ^ a b Statistics Canada - Saint-Lambert 2001 Community Profile.
  14. ^ "Saint-Lambert Days". Ville de Saint-Lambert. 2009. http://www.ville.saint-lambert.qc.ca/asp/attachements/MESSAGES-FICHIER-4696-1.PDF. Retrieved 24 June 2010. 
  15. ^ 1980 NHL Entry Draft—Steve Kasper
  16. ^ CSA - Official Flying Kit
  17. ^ City of Vernon, British Columbia
  18. ^ Marblehead, Massachusetts Youth Hockey Program

External links