Franquelin, Quebec
Franquelin (French pronunciation: [fʁɑ̃klɛ̃]) is a municipality in Quebec, Canada, in the administrative region of Côte-Nord in RCM Manicouagan. Its population is 285 people over 430 square kilometres. Franquelin was founded at the foot of Massifs rocks of the Laurentians where impressive cliffs plunge to the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. HistoryThe geographic township of Franquelin was created in 1911, and named in honour of Jean-Baptiste-Louis Franquelin, the first official cartographer of New France.[1] He drew the map of the St. Lawrence River in 1685. Franquelin came into existence in 1911 thanks to the forest industry. The lumber would be transported to the rivers by horses. From there, it was shipped to paper mills in Thorold, Ontario, and then to Baie-Comeau starting in 1937. The Ontario Paper Company, owned by Colonel Robert R. McCormick, which later became the Quebec North Shore Paper Co., needed paper to supply the Chicago Tribune and the New York Daily News, which were also owned by McCormick. The village was also called Bec-Scie in the past, as well as Baie-des-Cèdres, the name given to the local post office between 1920 and 1928.[1] On January 1, 1978, the place was incorporated as a municipality when it split off from the United Township Municipality of Les Sept-Cantons-Unis-du-Saguenay .[4] Demographics
Private dwellings occupied by usual residents (2021): 157 (total dwellings: 194)[3] Mother tongue (2021):[3]
See also
References
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