Everything about Sept- Les Quebec totally explained
Sept-Îles (
French for "Seven Islands") is a city in the
Côte-Nord region of eastern
Quebec,
Canada. It is the northernmost town in Quebec with any significant population and among the northernmost locales with a paved connection to the rest of Quebec's road network. The only settlements on the paved road network which are farther north are
Radisson and
Chisasibi, both in the extreme western portion of the province at the north end of the
James Bay Road. The remaining settlements at higher latitudes in the province are mostly isolated
Cree,
Innu, or
Inuit villages with either no road access or only by seasonal gravel road. The population is 25,514 according to the 2006 census.
According to
Canadian Business magazine, the city of Sept-Îles has the 154
th lowest violent crime rate in Canada, at a rate of 6724 per 100,000 people.
Geography
Located on the north shore of the
Gulf of Saint Lawrence, between the
Sainte-Marguerite and
Moisie rivers, Sept-Îles lies on the shore of a deep-water
bay fronted by a seven-island
archipelago, about 230 kilometres east of
Baie-Comeau. The bay constitutes a 45 km² natural
harbour.
The seven islands are named:
- La grosse boule ("the big ball")
- La petite boule ("the small ball")
- La grande Basque ("the large Basque", named after the visiting Basque fishermen)
- La petite Basque ("the small Basque")
- Île Manowin (from the Montagnais manouane meaning "where eggs are picked")
- Île du Corossol (named after the French ship Corossol wrecked on the island in 1693; site of a lighthouse and a bird sanctuary)
- Îlets de Quen (a group of tiny islands named after Jean de Quen who founded the local Catholic mission in 1650)
The archipelago is under provincial jurisdiction, with some parts administered by the federal government or by particulars.
There are two
First Nations reserves in the area,
Uashat in the western city proper, and
Maliotenam in the east near the Moisie River.
History and economy
The first inhabitants of the area were the "Montagnais"
Innu people, who called it
Uashat ("Great Bay").
Jacques Cartier sailed by the islands in 1535 and made the first written record of them, calling them the
Ysles Rondes ("Round Islands"). He wasn't the first European on the site however, as he encountered
Basque fishermen who were coming yearly for
whaling and
cod fishing.
Early economic activity in Sept-Îles was based on
fishing and the
fur trade, with trading posts established by
Louis Joliet in 1679, and by the
Hudson's Bay Company in 1842. The village was incorporated into a
municipality in 1885. The town, lacking road access at the time, got its first pier in 1908. The City of Sept-Îles was incorporated in 1951, on the 300th anniversary of the first
Catholic mass held in the village.
The modern Sept-Îles was practically built overnight during the construction of the
Quebec North Shore and Labrador Railway, 357-mile (575 km) railway link to the northern town of
Schefferville between 1950 and 1954 by the
Iron Ore Company of Canada.
Iron ore mined near
Wabush,
Labrador was transported on this railway and shipped from the Port of Sept-Îles, then a deep-water
seaport second in Canada only to
Vancouver in terms of yearly tonnage. This huge engineering project led to a major population boom: from 2,000 inhabitants in 1951 to 14,000 in 1961, and 31,000 in 1981.
However, the decline in worldwide iron ore prices has since caused employment and population to shrink. A moderately successful attempt was made to revive the town during the early nineties, with the foundation of the
Aluminerie Alouette aluminum processing plant. Construction for Phase 1 began in September 1989, and operation started in 1992. Construction of Phase 2 began in 2003.
The City amalgamated with the communities of
Gallix and
Moisie in 2002.
The city's
Airport has connections all over Canada.
People
Born in Sept-Îles
Guy Carbonneau, former National Hockey League (NHL) centre and current NHL coach (Montreal Canadiens)
Steve Duchesne, former NHL defenceman
Karl Dykhuis, former NHL defenceman
Rob Zettler, former NHL defenceman
Resided in Sept-Îles
Margot Kidder, Actress
Brian Mulroney, Iron Ore Company president, Prime Minister (from Baie Comeau)
David Desrosiers, bassist of Simple Plan
Notes and references
Dredge, L. A. Surficial Geology of the Sept-Îles Area, Quebec North Shore. Ottawa, Canada: Geological Survey of Canada, 1983.
Faessler, Carl. Sept-Îles Area, North Shore of St. Lawrence, Saguenay County. Québec: Dept. of Mines, Division of Geological Surveys, 1942.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Sept- Les Quebec'.
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