Charlesbourg, Beauport, Sillery and Cap-Rouge are all names that, today, conjure up images of Québec City’s suburbs, but they were still distinct communities in the 19th century. Though they continue to follow their own course through history and have their own distinct identities, their history is nonetheless intimately linked and parallel to that of Québec City. As the city grew and industrialized in the 19th century, these communities remained largely agricultural and French-speaking. Some English-speaking aristocrats did, however, develop estates there. This album takes you on a tour around Québec City at the time!
Robert Brandard, after William Henry Bartlett
This print shows the Chaudière River, a southern-shore tributary to the St. Lawrence, and the bridge that crosses it. The river joins the St. Lawrence at Lévis, Québec’s twin city. The Abenaki knew it as the “river of fields.” The southward-flowing Chaudière was a strategic waterway in the 19th century as it linked Canada to the United States.
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