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L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet

L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet

FieldValue
nameL'Île-du-Grand-Calumet
settlement_typeMunicipality
image_skylineIle-du-Grand-Calumet QC.JPG
image_mapGrand-Calumet Quebec location diagram.png
map_captionLocation within Pontiac RCM
flag_size120x80px
shield_size120x100px
pushpin_mapCanada Western Quebec
pushpin_labelL'Île-du-Grand-Calumet
pushpin_map_captionLocation in western Quebec
coordinates
coordinates_footnotes
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameCanada
subdivision_type1Province
subdivision_name1Quebec
subdivision_type2Region
subdivision_name2Outaouais
subdivision_type3RCM
subdivision_name3Pontiac
established_titleSettled
established_date1840s
established_title1Constituted
established_date1July 1, 1855
government_footnotes
leader_titleMayor
leader_nameJean-Louis Corriveau
leader_title1Federal riding
leader_name1Pontiac—Kitigan Zibi
leader_title2Prov. riding
leader_name2Pontiac
area_footnotes
area_total_km2147.28
area_land_km2132.55
population_footnotes
population_total648
population_as_of2021
population_density_km25.0
population_blank1_titlePop 2016-2021
population_blank13.5%
population_blank2_titleDwellings
population_blank2437
timezoneEST
utc_offset−5
timezone_DSTEDT
utc_offset_DST−4
postal_code_typePostal code(s)
postal_codeJ0X 1J0
area_code819
blank_nameHighways
blank_infoNo major routes
website

L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet () is a municipality in the Outaouais region, part of the Pontiac Regional County Municipality, Quebec, Canada. The municipality consists primarily of Calumet Island (also Grand Calumet Island; in French Île du Grand Calumet), but also includes Lafontaine Island, French Island, Green Island, and numerous minor surrounding islets, all in the Ottawa River, approximately two kilometres (1¼ miles) from Campbell's Bay, two kilometres (1¼ miles) from Bryson.

Grand-Calumet is the principal settlement of L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet. Its centre is the Sainte-Anne Church, which is alongside the municipal building and the school. It is also the site where First Nation tribes held their annual pow-wow, occasionally smoking their calumet, from which its name is derived.

Bordering on Whitewater Region, Ontario, the municipality is the co-location of some of the roughest sections on the Ottawa River, popular with kayakers and rafters. Three whitewater rafting companies based in L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet take adventurers down the Rocher Fendu Rapids, known as the best whitewater rapids in Eastern North America.

Etymology

Its name is a reference to the ceremonial pipe (), occasionally smoked by the tribes of the first nation people to settle mainly territory disputes (establishing which tribe had the right to fish and hunt in a certain area). They gathered at Grand-Calumet in large numbers for their friendly annual pow-wow and exchanging stuff.

Until December 22, 2007, it was called simply Grand-Calumet. The official name was changed to L'Île-de-Grand-Calumet, however, on July 5, 2008, it was changed again to use -du- rather than -de-. This last modification was considered a correction rather than a name change.

Geography

About 20 km long by 7 km wide, L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet has an elevation of no more than 200 m above sea level. Agricultural land use is mostly concentrated in the centre of the island.

The primary population centre is Grand-Calumet; other smaller communities are Rivière-Barry, Tancredia, Dunraven, Freshwater, Duffyville.

History

Like Allumette Island upstream, Calumet Island was for many centuries a fishing and hunting place of the Kichesipirini Algonquin people. During the French Period, the region along the Ottawa River was not colonized in order to maintain the fur trade with the indigenous peoples who lived there. The French maintained military garrisons in several forts along the Ottawa River, including Fort-Coulonge.

But because the Ottawa River was the main canoe route to the west, Calumet Island was the site of a portage trail to bypass the strong and turbulent rapids in the river at this point. Here the events of the Cadieux Legend took place.

Jean Cadieux, born at Boucherville on March 12, 1671, youngest son of Jean Cadieux and Marie Valade, was a coureur des bois from 1695 on. In May 1709, when attacked by the Iroquois on the Island, he sacrificed himself in order to let his travelling companions escape by running the Seven Chutes Rapids. Remaining alone on the Island, he died of his injuries and exhaustion. When found, he held in his hand a sheet of bark on which he had transcribed a death chant, known as La Complainte Cadieux. Its opening stanza is as follows:

:Petit rocher de la haute montagne, (Little stone of the high mountain,) Je viens ici finir cette campagne! (I come here to finish this campaign!) Ah! doux échos, entendez mes soupirs (Ah! sweet echoes, hear my sighs) En languissant, je vais bientôt mourir! (Languishing, soon will I die!)

Memorial to Jean Cadieux

This legend is still kept alive and commemorated by the island's inhabitants.

Circa 1836, former employees of the Hudson's Bay Company started to settle on the island, followed by three waves of Irish immigration between 1840 and 1850. In 1840 the Parish of Sainte-Anne-du-Grand-Calumet was formed. In 1846 the Grand-Calumet Township was established, with F.X. Bastien as first mayor. On May 14, 1847, the Township Municipality of Calumet was created, but abolished on the next September 1 and reestablished in 1855.

Lead-zinc was discovered on Calumet Island in 1893. New Calumet Mines began production in 1943, with a peak output of 840 tons per day in 1953 and employing 435 people. In 1968 the mine was shut down.

In 2003, the Township Municipality of Grand-Calumet became the Municipality of Grand-Calumet, and on December 22, 2007, changed its name to the Municipality of L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet.

Demographics

| 1976 |919 | 1981 |872 | 1986 |833 | 1991 |787 | 1996 |774 | 2001 |732 | 2006 |785 | 2011 |731 | 2016 |626 | 2021 |648

Language

Mother tongue (2021):

  • English as first language: 32.6%
  • French as first language: 62.8%
  • English and French as first language: 4.6%
  • Other as first language: 0.8%

List of mayors

Over its 158 years, the Municipality of L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet has had 21 mayors. They are as follows, including the years in which they served:

  • François X. Bastien (1847-1866)
  • Simon McNally (1894-1897)
  • Cornelius McNally (1894-1897, 1901–1924, 1927–1928)
  • François-Eugène LaSalle (1898-1900)
  • Thomas Griffen (1925-1926, 1929–1930)
  • Joseph Marchant (1931-1938)
  • François X. Rouleau(1939-1941)
  • Omer Dufault (1942-1949, 1954–1959)
  • George Dufault (1950-1951)
  • Pierre Corriveau (1951-1953)
  • Gérald Lemaire (1960-1962)
  • Alexandre Tremblay (1963-1965)
  • Eugène Pigeon (1965-1973, 1977–1978)
  • Marcel Pigeault (1974-1977, 1997–2001)
  • Pierre Asselin (1978-1979)
  • George Lamothe (1979-1980)
  • Marcel Meloche (1981-1982)
  • Lucien Brousseau (1983-1985)
  • Gaétan Boulanger (1985-1987)
  • Gisèle Benoît (1987-1995, 1995–1997)
  • Paul-Emile Maleau (2001–2017)
  • Serge Newberry (2017–2021)
  • Jean-Louis Corriveau (2021–present)

References

References

  1. "L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet". Ministère des Affaires municipales et de l'Habitation.
  2. "L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet, Municipalité (MÉ) Census Profile, 2021 Census of Population". Government of Canada - Statistics Canada.
  3. "Calumet Island, Pontiac District, Quebec". Government of Canada; Natural Resources Canada; Earth Sciences Sector; Canada Centre for Mapping and Earth Observation.
  4. (2014). "Grand Calumet Island". Outaouais Heritage WebMagazine.
  5. (2016-04-05). "Place names - Île du Grand Calumet". Government of Canada, Natural Resources Canada, Earth Sciences Sector, Canada Centre for Mapping and Earth Observation.
  6. "Grand-Calumet (Sainte-Anne)".
  7. "Pontiac MRC Gateway: Calumet Island". Pontiac MRC Gateway.
  8. "Municipalité de L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet". Commission de toponymie du Québec.
  9. (January 2008). "Modifications aux municipalités du Québec Décembre 2007". Institut de la statistique du Québec.
  10. (September 2008). "Modifications aux municipalités du Québec Juillet 2008". Institut de la statistique du Québec.
  11. "Municipalité de l'Île-du-Grand-Calumet – Pontiac, Québec".
  12. "Canton de Grand-Calumet". Commission de toponymie du Québec.
  13. "Google".
  14. Dunn, Guillaume, ''Les forts de l'Outaouais'', Éditions du jour, Montreal, 1975
  15. Taché, Jean-Charles, ''Forestiers et Voyageurs'' (chapter 15), 1884, [http://bibnum2.banq.qc.ca/bna/numtexte/59018.pdf Online version at Bibliothèque nationale du Québec]
  16. [[Canada 1996 Census. 1996]], [[Canada 2001 Census. 2001]], [[Canada 2006 Census. 2006]], [[Canada 2011 Census. 2011]] census
  17. L'Île-du-Grand-Calumet 150th Anniversary mayor list
  18. {{toponymie. 400324
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