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Piseau Point near Sillery Cove is named after the settler Pierre de Puiseaux. It is where Saint-Colomb Church was built. Abundant vegetation fills the eye of Cockburn’s viewer, framing a Québec City with a visibly prolific maritime trade.
1793 - 1840

Québec City en grand: A few panoramic works from the early 19th century

From the early 19th century onwards, there was a proliferation of realistic paintings showing Québec City silhouetted against vast panoramic landscapes. These pieces reveal the city’s picturesque nature. Behind its tranquil exterior, Québec City was already becoming one of the greatest gateways for British immigration to North America. This album presents panoramic works showing Québec City, surrounded by water, forests and mountains. For many immigrants to North America, such views were their first sight of a city on the continent. Come and see what they saw!

Québec City from Piseau Point

James Pattison Cockburn Piseau Point near Sillery Cove is named after the settler Pierre de Puiseaux. It is where Saint-Colomb Church was built. Abundant vegetation fills the eye of Cockburn’s viewer, framing a Québec City with a visibly prolific maritime trade.
Chronoscope Can you locate this scene on the map? (unilingual French for a limited time) Source: Library and Archives Canada Document in the public domain (free of copyright) - Acc. No. 1989-260-10 - Date: 1831