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Military personnel and young families take a break from daily chores and obligations to slide down the famous “sugar loaf.” This nighttime scene depicts the nocturnal occupations of those who frequented the area. Indeed, some years, a makeshift inn, a palace and a drinking establishment were carved from its ice.
1807 - 1830

A Sunday at the Falls

Montmorency Falls owes its name to Samuel de Champlain, who named the site in 1613 in honour of the Duc de Montmorency, the viceroy of New France. At the turn of the 19th century, Governor Frederick Haldimand commissioned the construction of a manor house overlooking the Falls. By this time, the Falls had become a popular destination for the locals. The mound of ice that accumulates in winter in front of the Falls was nicknamed the “sugar loaf.” See this attraction for yourself through the eyes of the period’s artists!

The sugar loaf as it was in 1829

James Pattison Cockburn Military personnel and young families take a break from daily chores and obligations to slide down the famous “sugar loaf.” This nighttime scene depicts the nocturnal occupations of those who frequented the area. Indeed, some years, a makeshift inn, a palace and a drinking establishment were carved from its ice.
Chronoscope What comments or thoughts does this image evoke for you? (unilingual French for a limited time) Source: Library and Archives Canada Document in the public domain (free of copyright) - Acc. No. 1989-278-3 - Date: 1833