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This engraving shows the facade of a Québec City residence, now 72 Saint-Louis Street. It is the home of carpenter Jean Gaubert. On Governor Guy Carleton’s orders, General Richard Montgomery’s remains were brought here so that Gaubert could make him a coffin. Taken apart in 1890, the house was rebuilt in the United States as a tourist attraction.
1775 - 1775

The 1775 attack on Québec City

By the time New France fell in 1763, the British controlled much of the North American continent. However, in 1775, the Thirteen Colonies on the Atlantic coast decided to secede from the British Empire. The American War of Independence had begun. Québec City was one of the American revolutionaries’ first targets. On December 31, 1775, in the middle of a snowstorm, they attacked Québec City. The British garrison drove them back. This victory kept Canada in the British Empire, and so though the United States gained their independence in 1783, it was without Canada. Relive the decisive battle of 1775!

Carpenter Jean Gaubert’s home

Unknown This engraving shows the facade of a Québec City residence, now 72 Saint-Louis Street. It is the home of carpenter Jean Gaubert. On Governor Guy Carleton’s orders, General Richard Montgomery’s remains were brought here so that Gaubert could make him a coffin. Taken apart in 1890, the house was rebuilt in the United States as a tourist attraction.
Chronoscope Can you locate this house on the map? (unilingual French for a limited time) Source: Ville de Québec Document in the public domain (free of copyright) - Date: 1873