Ville de Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville | |||
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— City — | |||
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Motto: Fiers de nos traditions (French for "Proud of our traditions") |
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Ville de Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville
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Coordinates (1585, rue Montarville [1]): | |||
Country | Canada | ||
Province | Quebec | ||
Region | Montérégie (16) | ||
RCM or TE | Urban agglomeration of Longueuil (TE 58) | ||
Established | 1842 | ||
Incorporated | 1958 | ||
Electoral Districts Federal |
Saint-Bruno—Saint-Hubert |
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Provincial | Chambly | ||
Government[1][2][3] | |||
• Mayor | Claude Benjamin | ||
• Federal MP(s) | Djaouida Sellah (NDP) | ||
• Quebec MNA(s) | Bertrand St-Arnaud (PQ) | ||
Area[4] | |||
• Total | 41.89 km2 (16.2 sq mi) | ||
Population (2006)[4] | |||
• Total | 24,388 | ||
• Density | 582.2/km2 (1,507.9/sq mi) | ||
• Change (2001-06) | 2.3% | ||
• Dwellings | 9,391 | ||
Demonym | Montarvillois,(e) (French) | ||
Time zone | Eastern (UTC-5) | ||
• Summer (DST) | EDT (UTC-4) | ||
Postal code(s) | J3V | ||
Area code(s) | 450 | ||
Access Routes[5] A-30 |
Route 116 |
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Website | www.ville.stbruno.qc.ca |
Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville is an off-island suburb of Montreal, in southwestern Quebec, Canada, on the south bank of the Saint Lawrence River just east of Montreal. It lies on the west flank of Mont Saint-Bruno, one the Monteregian Hills. The population as of the Canada 2006 Census was 24,388. It was merged with Longueuil in 2002 but de-merged in 2006.
The city is well known to Montrealers and its neighboring population for Mont Saint-Bruno, location to both Mont-Saint-Bruno National Park and Ski Mont Saint-Bruno, a ski facility and school.
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There are two prevailing hypotheses on the origin of the city's name:
Pierre Boucher de Boucherville Junior was granted the Montarville seigneury in 1710 by the governor of New France Philippe de Rigaud de Vaudreuil. In 1723, it was noted that clearing had not begun and no one was inhabiting the seigeury yet.[7]
The ownership remained in the Boucher family until 1829, when René Boucher de la Bruère sold half his land and his rights as a seigneur to François-Pierre Bruneau of Montréal. Oliver-Théophile Bruneau, brother of François-Pierre was the last seigneur of Montarville until his death in 1851.[8]
While agriculture was the primary subsistence and economical activity of the region, the seigneury of Montarville, thanks to its proximity to Mount Saint-Bruno, benefited much from the industrial activity that developed around the hydraulic power it could harvest from the mount's many ponds and streams. The first water mill was erected in 1725 and in the 19th century, they numbered six on the territory and permitted such activities as grinding grain, milling wood, tanning leather and carding and spinning wool.[9]
The 19th century will also see the diversification of the seigneury's agricultural activities trough increased animal husbandry, orchards, and maple syrup collection.[9]
At the beginning of the 19th century, families residing on the western flank of the mount were under the clerical responsibility of the parish of Boucherville while families from the southern flank were under the responsibility of the parish of Saint-Joseph de Chambly. As a consequence, the tithe was being paid to two different parishes so in 1809, a first request to transform the seigneury into a parish was made to Mgr Joseph-Octave Plessis, Archbishop of Quebec. This request was met with a refusal. It will be thirty-three years before the Montarvillans attempt to form into their own parish again.[9]
It is worth mentioning that in 1838 during the Patriotes Rebellion, François-Pierre Bruneau's manor was occupied by the Patriotes and that one of them André Proteau was from the seigneury.
In 1842, a petition totaling about sixty signatures is presented to Mgr Ignace Bourget, Bishop of Montreal who agree to the demand and signs the same year a canonical decree officiating the creation of the parish of Saint-Bruno. François-Pierre Bruneau is honored with the choice of the titular saint, Saint Bruno.
In line with the Durham Report's recommendation to elaborate municipal structures in 1840 (culminatiing in the abolition of the seigneury system in 1854) and the Acte pour abroger certaines ordonnances et pour faire de meilleures dispositions pour l'établissement d'autorités locales et municipales dans le Bas-Canada (Act to abrogate certain ordinances and to make better dispositions to establish local and municipal authorities in Lower-Canada), the canadian Parliament created on the 1st of July 1845 more than 325 municipal corporations in eastern Canada of which Saint-Bruno, then with a population of 800, was part of. The following year on the 9th of October 1846, the parish municipality of Saint-Bruno was born trough an and official proclamation.
For a few years, Saint-Bruno remained part of the municipality of Chambly but in 1855, as mandated by the Loi constituant en municipalités toutes paroisses de plus de 300 personnes (Law making into a municipality every parish of more than 300 persons), the parish municipality became fully autonomous and its two names, "Saint-Bruno" and "Montarville", were joined into the designation we still use to this day.[8]
It incorporated as a city in 1958.
In 2000, the Parti Québécois governments of Lucien Bouchard and Bernard Landry introduced a series of legislative measures with the intent of reorganizing and merging many of Quebec's municipalities. In 2002, following the adoption of bill 170, Saint-Bruno merged with other municipalities on Montreal's south shore to form the city of Longueuil. Following public outcry and a referendum, the city demerged from Longueuil was reconstituted on January 1, 2006, but remained within the agglomeration of Longueuil.[7]
Population trend[10]
Census | Population | Change (%) |
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2006 | 24,388 | 2.3% |
2001 | 23,843 | 0.5% |
1996 | 23,714 | 0.6% |
1991 | 23,849 | N/A |
The 2006 census found that about 85% of residents spoke French as a mother tongue (including persons who had more than one mother tongue), and that about 11% of residents spoke English as a mother tongue (also including persons who had more than one mother tongue). The next most common mother tongue was Italian.[11]
Mother tongue language (2006)[4]
Mother Tongue | Population | Pct (%) |
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French | 20,340 | 84.17% |
English | 2,440 | 10.10% |
Both English and French | 235 | 0.97% |
French and a non-official language | 65 | 0.27% |
English and a non-official language | 10 | 0.04% |
English, French and a non-official language | 10 | 0.04% |
Italian | 140 | 0.58% |
Arabic | 115 | 0.48% |
German | 105 | 0.43% |
Spanish | 105 | 0.43% |
Portuguese | 100 | 0.41% |
Chinese languages | 80 | 0.33% |
Polish | 75 | 0.31% |
Hungarian | 45 | 0.19% |
Dutch | 35 | 0.14% |
Czech | 25 | 0.10% |
Khmer | 25 | 0.10% |
Russian | 25 | 0.10% |
Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville is served by the Saint-Bruno commuter rail station on the Agence métropolitaine de transport's Mont-Saint-Hilaire Line. Local bus service is provided by the Réseau de transport de Longueuil.
The town resides at the foot of Mont Saint-Bruno, one of the mountains that make up the Monteregian Hills. The mountain is home to a provincial park, Parc National du Mont-Saint-Bruno, as well as a ski hill, Ski Mont Saint-Bruno.
The metal band Sword is also from Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville
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Boucherville | Sainte-Julie | |||
Saint-Basile-le-Grand | ||||
Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville | ||||
Saint-Hubert (Longueuil) | Carignan |
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