L'histoire des ponts de Montréal
Speaker: Ginette Charbonneau
When: Thursday, January 16, 2025, 19:30 to 21:00
Where: Centennial Hall,
288 Beaconsfield Blvd, Beaconsfield, H9W 4A4
Lecture in French followed by a bilingual question period.
Let us pause for a conference to look at the history of the main bridges that have contributed to making Montreal the important place of trade, cultural and social exchanges that it has become. Because, although they are often a source of irritation for motorists, they were and still are essential witnesses of the evolution of the city!
A graduate in Education Sciences from the Université de Montréal, Ginette Charbonneau was an animator for the Service des Arts et de la Culture of the City of Saint-Eustache for many years. History enthusiast, co-author of a book on genealogy and family history, coordinator for ten years and one of the contributors to La Feuille de chêne, the periodical review of the Société de généalogie et d'histoire de Saint-Eustache, she offers conferences and courses, meticulously documented and accompanied by relevant visual presentations. She has been teaching at UTA (Université du Troisième Âge, Faculté d’éducation, Université de Sherbrooke) since 2010. Her passion for history, as well as her experience and interest in research, documentation and communication, led to her desire to share the knowledge she had acquired.
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Our speaker, Robert N. Wilkins, will highlight different events of 1885 in Montréal, including the Winter Carnival, the Election of Honoré Beaugrand as Mayor of Montréal, the Spring Floods, the Smallpox Epidemic and the Hanging of Louis Riel.
Why does young, reform-minded lawyer George-Étienne Cartier join an armed uprising, only to later reject violence as the way to achieve responsible government in this country? In 1837, Lower Canada seethes with discontent. After savage rioting in Montreal between hardline loyalists and dissident radicals, there is no turning back. Cartier, a future Father of Confederation, commits himself to rebellion against the Crown. At Saint Denis, Saint Charles and Saint Eustache, poorly armed Patriotes find themselves in pitched battles against the most disciplined army on the planet, battles that echo to this day.
Longtime journalist John Kalbfleisch wrote a Montreal Gazette column on the city’s history for seventeen years. His novel The ’37 was published early 2024. He is also the author of No Place More Suitable: Four Centuries of Montreal Stories (2018), A Stain Upon the Land (2017), Le cadeau royal: Histoire de la ville de Mont-Royal / The Royal Gift: a History of Town of Mount Royal (2013) and This Island In Time: Remarkable Tales from Montreal’s Past (2008), and is co-author of Montreal’s Century: a Record of the News and People Who Shaped the City in the 20th Century (1999).
Christ Church Beaurepaire was established in 1924. Our speaker, Michael Silverthorne, member of this Church, will talk about the first 100 years of this Anglican Church.


Our tour of women painters begins in France with the impressionist Berthe Morisot, then one of Picasso's muses: Marie-Laurencin.
More than 22,000 Veterans and their close ones are now resting in our community at the intersection of Beaconsfield, Kirkland and Pointe-Claire in one of the ‘’ British Empire most beautiful cemeteries’’ called the National Field of Honour, a Canadian Historic Site. 
In this presentation, Frank Mackey talks about the genesis of his book “The Great Absquatulator", the combination of accidents that led him to write and publish it.
Aly Ndiaye, a.k.a. Webster, hip-hop artist, independent historian, activist and lecturer, was born and raised in the Limoilou district of Québec City. His father is Senegalese and his mother is from Quebec. He has always been proud of his origins and describes himself as a SénéQueb métis pure laine. His passion for history led him to pursue university studies in this field; he holds a bachelor's degree in history from Université Laval. He worked for 10 years as history guide for Parks Canada. He is passionate about the history of the Afro-descendant presence and slavery in Quebec and Canada since the time of New France. Ndiaye is the author, amongst others, of a children's book that follows the journey of Olivier Le Jeune, the first African slave in Canada, Le Grain de Sable (Septentrion, 2019). In February 2023, he was appointed to represent Québec at the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada.
ar, the American War of Independence and the French Revolution. He became an engineer in 1753 in the wake of the commission of inquiry into the construction of the ramparts of Quebec. In 1763 he owned 7 seigneuries, 5 in the new Province of Quebec: Lotbinière, Vaudreuil, Rigaud, Nouvelle-Beauce and Villechauve and two in the Province of New York. He participated in London in the debate on the Quebec Act where he convinced the British parliament to adopt the French Law (Coutume de Paris), the French language and the Catholic religion, which today makes the Province of Quebec a distinct society.