Evolution of the modern Montreal city
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Photographic Book Canada |
In 1809 John Molson—entrepreneur, brewer, banker, and carrier—linked Montreal and Quebec by water with the first Canadian steamship. Canada’s first bank, the Bank of Montreal, was founded in 1817, and the Lachine Canal, forerunner of the St. Lawrence Seaway, was started in 1821. In 1825 Molson, the “Montrealer par excellence,” provided his city with a splendid theatre, and gas lighting appeared by 1838. A Committee of Trade, forerunner of the Board of Trade (1842), was founded in 1822, and from 1844 to 1849 Montreal was the capital of Canada. On April 25, 1849, a mob put fire to the Parliament building, possibly on the ground that it had lost its vocation. In 1847 telegraph links were made with the cities of Quebec and New York; in 1853 a shipping service between Montreal, Liverpool, and the Continent was begun; in 1856 a railroad to Toronto opened; in 1858 a transatlantic cable to Europe was laid; and in 1861 the city’s first horse-drawn tramways began operation. |
Montreal at 19 century |
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Fires destroyed hundreds of buildings in the early 1850s, and an economic slump provoked numerous bankruptcies in 1857. The Confederation of Canada was proclaimed in 1867, and 10 years later the city had its first labour strike and first telephone conversation with Quebec. It had its first electric lighting in 1882, electric tramways in 1892, and the first automobile along its streets and movie houses along its sidewalks in 1903. By 1900 Montreal’s population reached 270,000, and it began to annex several cities, towns, and villages on its outskirts. |
Montreal map. Britannica pic |
It purchased Île Sainte-Hélène (St. Helen’s Island) in 1908, the site, with two neighbouring man-made islands, of Expo 67. Montreal’s famous ice-hockey team, the Canadiens, was founded in 1909 (and has since won more National Hockey League championships than any other team). In 1922 several mergers gave birth to the Canadian National Railways Company (CNR), which, like the Canadian Pacific in 1881, established its head office in Montreal. The world wars gave impetus to the economic life of Montreal, as they did to most industrial centres of North America, and in January 1947 the U.S. Congress began to consider a joint venture with Canada for building the St. Lawrence Seaway. In 1959 the need for a Montreal Metropolitan Corporation was recognized by the Quebec provincial government (which, like others in Canada, has exclusive jurisdiction over municipalities). |
In 1960 the Metropolitan Boulevard, a throughway encircling Montreal, was opened. In 1962 construction was started on the Métro, supervised by engineers from the Paris Métro; the system was inaugurated six months before the opening of Expo 67. With the growing recognition of Montreal as a major world centre following this universally acclaimed exposition, it became the first non-U.S. city to be awarded a major-league baseball franchise. The team, the Montreal Expos, played in the city from 1969 to 2004, when it was moved to Washington, D.C., and became the Nationals. |
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