Monday, March 04, 2019

Rare photos of the lost and forgotten Montreal village beneath the hill



  Two photos are all that remains online to demonstrate the existence of a nameless village that once thrived in Montreal at the foot of a hill that also has no name.
   Until the 1970s the land atop the hill was known as The Glen Yards, for the trains that switched on the flat section.
  That land now houses the MUHC superhospital.
  So the hill is named valley, as glen is the Scottish word for valley.
  The dramatic view from the northwestern part of St. Henri has since been obscured by highways and overpasses. The village, as it was, is now long gone.
   Many houses were lost to those highways, including on the north side of St. James, in what's now a field at the bottom of a highway support across from the Home Depot.
  One of those houses, forever a mystery to history, was home to tax supervisor Raoul Deschamps who died in 1937. .
   The village revolved around the Ste-Elisabeth-du-Portugal church at the corner of Courcelle (aka Landsdowne, aka Glen Road) and St. James (aka St. Jacques).
   The well-dressed gentlemen are seen standing at the back door of the church, which burned down in 1957 and was rebuilt but then demolished in 2008 and replaced a couple of years later by a tall residential building.
   Lise Lefebvre published the book Album souvenirs de la paroisse Sainte-Élisabeth-du-Portugal, Saint-Henri, Montréal in 2005. It likely has images from the area but the book is impossible to find.
    Only scattered tidbits about the church can be found online, for example Rev Clement Berthiaume, priest of the Ste Elizabeth du Portugal Parish died of pneumonia in 1930 at the age of 65 after serving 28 years as local priest. He had a twin brother who was also a Montreal priest.
   The imtl site has a pair of useful images that showcase the neighbourhood from above in 1949, before demolition for the widening of St. James, as well as an older map. 
   
***
    The second photo features joyous local kids assembling in a near park that appears to be west of the church, south of Pullman private railway street.
   Montreal children held elections to pick a peer to be mayor of the park. The park mayor would then get to meet Montreal's mayor and submit a list of things they'd like to see happen to their park. The practice thrived in the 40s and 50s and is detailed in my book Montreal 375 Tales.
   The top of the St James Cliff, or escarpment, housed a series of farms including the Decarie Farm, the Brodie Farm (now Oxford Park), the Pasquini Farm - complete with goats -, the Aubin Farm, the Nittolo Farm and others.
   The exact name and location of that park is anybody's guess.
   The area has sometimes been referred to as Glen Village or Turcot Village, although that is a name that would only have emerged in the 1960s.
  These photos are taken from a long-gone website operated by former residents Andrea Mancini and Peter Raimondo, who grew up at 4875 Cazelais, the last building that was demolished for the expressway. He died in Nov. 2018.

6 comments:

  1. Good work always interested in reading if byegone days of the Westend.
    In the sixties I worked with 2 people who lived on Courcelle. But sadly don’t remember the names one was a Tony. The two families did moved to the St Leonard area.

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  2. You should mention that the church which was recently demolished was only the replacement of the older church that had been destroyed by fire in 1957. This article shows a picture from the Massicotte collection:
    https://www.imtl.org/edifices/eglise_Sainte-elisabeth-de-Portugale.php

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  3. You can find the book Album souvenirs de la paroisse Sainte-Élisabeth-du-Portugal at the BAnQ under 282.71428 L489a 2005. It is available for consultation only.

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  4. Thanks for correcting the statement about the church, and adding the article I linked to. I've been poring over the picture of the “well-dressed gentlemen”. The resolution is lousy but if you look carefully, the large billboard with the Pepsi logo says “Club Social de l’Ouest on the left and Western Social Club on the right. But I can’t find any mention of it in the Lovell’s directories of the late 40s to mid 50s. The men are also probably holding bocce balls and those would be rather official courts with boards and the overhead light fixture with enamel shade. But is this really at the back of the church?

    If you dust off the 1947-9 aerial photo of the area there’s really very little space at the back of the church. In the background of the photo is the flank of the escarpment but the picture seems to have been taken right under it, not across St. Jacques as would be the case if it were the back of the church. You’d also see the row of houses that lined St. Jacques, and the large mass of the Collège Ste-Élizabeth, which would likely completely obscure the view of the escarpment. Therefore this probably isn’t at the back of the old church.

    Here’s something I just found: the 1954 Lovell’s has an entry at 916 de Courcelle for “Monsabre Club Social”. In 1949 the same address was for “Glen Billiard Hall”. This location is just north of St. Antoine/St. Jacques and would mesh with the view of the escarpment. The large building with the arched windows could have been the back of Montreal Tramways “Shed” at 954 de Courcelle. There’s a mention of the MTC Croquet Club at 930 de Courcelle. Strange to think of off-duty streetcar conductors and motormen chasing balls around a croquet court. But if they could play croquet there, why not have a bocce club nearby? The 1949 aerial photo shows what could be a croquet court. So maybe the social club changed its name and they didn’t correct the sign.

    The other picture is easier to pin down because in the distance it clearly shows the old gallery over the north sidewalk of St. Jacques going up the hill. The gallery had to be built to accommodate a special run-around track overhead. That had to be installed when steam engines were built that were too long to be turned on the relatively small CPR turntable in the Glen yards. So a track was built that they could reverse on, instead of riding the turntable. The aerial photo of 1949 clearly shows what was the baseball/softball diamond where the boys were playing, and old maps identify it as Square Vaillant. It was bounded by St. Rémi, Pullman, and the short street Bourassa that was cut off by the CNR tracks. This was the area that was dug up for an archaeological study of les Tanneries before the Turcot reconstruction. Atlas Construction Co. was on Pullman Street.

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  5. I agree.

    The photo is next to the Montreal Tramways Substation, the brick building w the arched windows,.looking NW.


    http://archivesdemontreal.com/greffe/vues-aeriennes-archives/jpeg/VM97-3_7P9-20.jpg


    https://www.google.com/maps/@45.4757034,-73.5949558,3a,75y,223.36h,81.47t/data=!3m7!1e1!3m5!1shdpBk8r4iYczJvb9MZa6GQ!2e0!6s%2F%2Fgeo3.ggpht.com%2Fcbk%3Fpanoid%3DhdpBk8r4iYczJvb9MZa6GQ%26output%3Dthumbnail%26cb_client%3Dmaps_sv.tactile.gps%26thumb%3D2%26w%3D203%26h%3D100%26yaw%3D142.52194%26pitch%3D0%26thumbfov%3D100!7i16384!8i8192


    Suggest manhole cover by male pedestrian may well say Montreal Tramways Conduits.

    https://michaelld2003.com/2013/10/12/abandoned-conduit/

    Thank You.

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  6. do you any picture of st joseph parish betwen guy st-and canning

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