In Québec City, like in all the world’s capitals, religious and political authorities used buildings to symbolize their power. There is, however, a distinctive feature of Québec City that makes it architecturally unique. Over the course of the city’s history, French and British influences have commingled, forming an ensemble of buildings unlike anywhere else. This album presents buildings—some French, some English—that played a part in the city’s history in the early 19th century. Admire these buildings through the works of the era’s great artists.
James Pattison Cockburn
In the early 19th century, the prison on Saint-Stanislas Street moved to a new building on the site that would become the Morrin Centre on Chaussée-des-Écossais Street. It was built between 1808 and 1809 according to plans by architect François Baillairgé. This jail stands on the ruins of the Royal Redoubt that the French built in 1712.
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