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The Fur Trade & Lachine Canal

Photography Historical posted on Oct 04, 2008
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Description


*****-Lachine Canal-***** The canal is situated on land originally granted by the King of France to the Sulpician Order. Beginning in 1689, attempts were made by the French Colonial government and several other groups to build a canal that would allow ships to bypass the treacherous Lachine Rapids. After more than 130 years of failure, a consortium that included the young Scottish immigrant John Redpath was successful. John Richardson was Chairman of the Committee of Management of the canal project and its chief engineer was Thomas Brunett. The contractors were Thomas McKay and John Redpath, plus the firms of Thomas Phillips & Andrew White and Abner Bagg & Oliver Wait. The new canal officially opened in 1825, helping turn Montreal into a major port and eventually attracting industry to its banks when the Society of Sulpician Order decided to sell lots. It was enlarged and improved in the early 1840s under the supervision of Alfred Barrett. However, while the Lachine canal proved an enormous boon for Montreal and the province of Quebec, time would show that for Canada's Maritime Provinces, it was the first major nail in that region's economic coffin. The canal became obsolete in the second half of the 20th century, being replaced by the St. Lawrence Seaway, which opened in 1959. The canal was finally closed to shipping in 1970. The opening of the Seaway and the decline of shipping on the canal led to the devastation of the neighbourhoods that lined the canal in Montreal's Sud-ouest borough due to shifting patterns of industrial development and shipping. Over the last two decades, the canal has seen a large increase in residential and commercial development. In what was originally a very heavy industrial neighbourhood, Point St. Charles and St. Henri have become very up and coming districts. House values have sky rocketed and many real estate developers have turned the century old industrial factories and wearhouses,into prestigious loft buildings. Montreal real estate developer Adam Cutler co-owned more than 1,000,000 sq/ft of Canal front property from the early 90s until 2003. Complexe Dompark recently celebrated its 100th anniversary and now houses more than 90 multimedia, fashion,publishing, and service industry-based companies in custom designed lofts. The area around the Atwater Market has become one of Montreal's most desirable residential areas for condominium owners. Much of this is thanks to the continued effort to clean up the Canal. In 2002, it was reopened as a pleasure boating area, despite environmental concerns due to heavy industrial contamination of its bottom, and the banks of the canal were redeveloped. An environmental reclamation project continues to clean up old oil spills. The banks of the canal offer bicycling and roller blading. Parks Canada offers guided tours of the canal by foot, bicycle, and boat during the summer months. Thanks Magik

Comments (75)


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Digimon

9:30PM | Sun, 05 October 2008

A magical place!!

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KatesFriend

10:55PM | Sun, 05 October 2008

Another lovely shot. Very tranquil.

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Buffalo1

11:41PM | Sun, 05 October 2008

Many of the old canals across North America have been revitalized as new neighborhoods and tourist destinations. Glad to see Montreal recognized the historical and economic importance of the LaChine. Great pic, too!

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evinrude

1:31AM | Mon, 06 October 2008

So peaceful! Great angle.

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cherokee1961

1:20PM | Mon, 06 October 2008

Looks like a really lovely place to visit - thank you for the history lesson; excellent capture!

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ShadowsNTime

7:33PM | Mon, 06 October 2008

Awesome! Beautiful photo, great POV and wonderful history! Simply splendid!

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tetsu-pino

12:13AM | Tue, 07 October 2008

Beautiful reflection and nice POV!! Splendid capture!!

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rayag

7:47AM | Tue, 07 October 2008

Wonderful capture!

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three_grrr

11:21AM | Tue, 07 October 2008

Such a beautiful shot! And so much history involved here.

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Severine

11:00AM | Wed, 08 October 2008

C'est vraiment joli comme endroit !!

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louly

11:26AM | Wed, 08 October 2008

Très jolie photo, la prise de vue est excellente!

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clam73

5:59AM | Fri, 10 October 2008

fantastic shot and history....congrats!

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Elcet

4:51PM | Sat, 11 October 2008

Un bien joli coin, bien photographié avec de jolies réflexions et une belle page d'histoire.

)

amirapsp

3:15PM | Wed, 15 October 2008

Beautiful my friend...Hugs

)

foxtrot76

12:30PM | Sat, 08 November 2008

Un beau coin que je connais bien, bravo belle photo!


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Photograph Details
F Numberf/2.8
MakeEASTMAN KODAK COMPANY
ModelKODAK EASYSHARE M853 ZOOM DIGITAL CAMERA
Shutter Speed1632/1000000
ISO Speed80
Focal Length6

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