Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Pointe-Fortune, Quebec

Municipality in Quebec, Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pointe-Fortune, Quebecmap
Remove ads

Pointe-Fortune (French pronunciation: [pwɛ̃t fɔʁtyn]) is a municipality in southwestern Quebec, Canada, on the Ottawa River (Rivière des Outaouais) in Vaudreuil-Soulanges Regional County Municipality, northwest of Montreal. The population at the 2021 Census was 582.

Quick Facts Country, Province ...
Remove ads

Geography

Summarize
Perspective

Pointe-Fortune is located on the right bank of the Ottawa River close to the Lake of Two Mountains. The locality borders the Ontario border, near the Carillon hydroelectric generating station. The municipality is located 65 km west of Montreal. Its territory is bounded to the west by the township of East Hawkesbury (Ontario) in the united counties of Prescott and Russell, to the north by the bay of Rigaud, to the east and to the south by the city of Rigaud. On the opposite shore of the lake of Two Mountains is the municipality of Saint-André-d'Argenteuil, in the Regional County Municipality of Argenteuil, in the Laurentides region.[5] The total area of the municipality is 9.54km2, with 8.09km2 being terrestrial.[2]

Remove ads
Remove ads

Pointe-Fortune is in the Great Lakes–St. Lawrence Lowlands and its terrain is flat. The altitude is 24m on the shore of the Lake of Two Mountains and rises to 48m at the southeastern end of the territory. The low ground levels create several wetlands inland. The soil of Pointe-Fortune consists in the eastern part of a sector dating from the Cambrian composed of sandstone, conglomerate, limestone and dolomite (Potsdam sandstone, Brador and Forteau formations) and, in its western part, of an area of dolomite and sandstone from the Lower Ordovician (Beekmantown group and Romaine formation).

History

The area was part of the Seigneury of Rigaud, granted in 1732 to the brothers Pierre and François-Pierre Rigaud de Vaudreuil. Around 1750, they operated a trading post on a point in the Ottawa River, which later became known as Pointe Fortune. The name "Fortune" could refer to Colonel William Fortune who had received a 809 hectares (2,000 acres) concession in nearby Chatham Township at the end of the 18th century, or to Joseph Fortune, an early 19th century militiaman and surveyor.[1]

The municipality was formerly called Petites-Écorces and Petit-Carillon (referring to the larger Carillon directly across the Ottawa River), but in 1851, the post office opened under the English name of Point Fortune (modified to its current name in 1954).[1] In 1880, the Village Municipality of Pointe-Fortune was created out of territory ceded by Sainte-Madeleine-de-Rigaud.[6]In 2023, the village of Pointe-Fortune became a Municipality. [7]

Remove ads

Demographics

More information Year, Pop. ...

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Pointe-Fortune had a population of 582 living in 258 of its 283 total private dwellings, a change of 0.3% from its 2016 population of 580. With a land area of 8.09 km2 (3.12 sq mi), it had a population density of 71.9/km2 (186.3/sq mi) in 2021.[9]

More information Population, Land area ...
Canada census – Pointe-Fortune, Quebec community profile
Notes: 2011 income data for this area has been suppressed for data quality or confidentiality reasons.
References: 2021[10] 2016[11] 2011[12]
More information Canada Census Mother Tongue - Pointe-Fortune, Quebec, Census ...

Attractions

Macdonell-Williamson House,[13] which owes its existence to the fur trade and the Voyageurs, is located just west of the historical boundary marker, which still stands and marked the division between Upper and Lower Canada.

The Parish of Saint-François-Xavier-de-Pointe-Fortune celebrated its 100th anniversary in 2004.[1] The municipality was originally served by the Catholic parish of St. Francois Xavier, established in 1904, which eventually closed on December 24, 2014. The church was sold and is now privately owned.

Remove ads

Local government

List of former mayors:[6]

  • John William Crosb (1880–1881, 1882–1883)
  • Ernest A. Saint-Denis (1881–1882)
  • George Augustus Barclay (1883–1884)
  • André Roy (1884–1887)
  • William Richard Hunsley (1887–1893)
  • Joseph Séguin (1893–1895)
  • John Middleton (1895–1899)
  • William Brown (1899–1913, 1914–1917)
  • Angus Victor Mc Lachlan (1913–1914)
  • Eric Galt Brown (1917–1923)
  • Joseph Elie Dicaire (1923–1927)
  • Joseph Nephtalie Corbeil (1927–1933)
  • Joseph Adelard Jean Marie Desjardins (1933–1936)
  • Joseph Raoul Lafond (1936–1951, 1961–1964)
  • Joseph Héliodore Oscar Labrie (1951–1959)
  • Joseph-Paul-Réal Larocque (1959–1961)
  • Joseph Wellie Leon Sabourin (1964–1969)
  • Joseph Bernard Roméo Séguin (1969–1973)
  • Joseph Raoul Juste Gérard Parson (1973–1979)
  • Joseph Paul-Emile Roger Pharand (1979–1980)
  • Joseph Denis Grégoire Labonté (1980–2001)
  • Joseph Roger Gérard Normand Chevrier (2001–2005)
  • David Eugene Doughty (2005–2009)
  • Jean-Pierre Daoust (2009–2017)
  • François Bélanger (2017–present)
Remove ads

Education

Commission Scolaire des Trois-Lacs operates Francophone schools.[14]

Lester B. Pearson School Board operates Anglophone schools.[16]

  • Soulanges Elementary School in Saint-Télesphore or Evergreen Elementary and Forest Hill Elementary (Junior Campus and Senior campus) in Saint-Lazare

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads