Rapides du Cheval Blanc
This article's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. (November 2012) |
Rapides du Cheval Blanc | |
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Location | Pierrefonds-Roxboro, Montreal, Quebec, Canada |
Coordinates | 45°30′58″N 73°49′56″W / 45.51611°N 73.83222°W |
Operated by | City of Montreal |
There are three locations in Quebec, Canada with the name "Rapides du Cheval Blanc". This article refers to the rapids between the north shore of the Island of Montreal and the south shore of Sainte-Dorothée, Laval.[1]
The Rapides du Cheval Blanc,[2] or White Horse Rapids,[3][4][5] flow between the Island of Montreal, Pierrefonds-Roxboro and Sainte-Dorothée, Laval on the Rivière des Prairies in Quebec. The Rapides du Cheval Blanc also include a protected wooded area, a public city park adjacent to the rapids, and to a fault line underneath the area.[6]
History
The name Whitehorse or Cheval Blanc can be traced to several legends. A legend dating to the 18th-century tells of a white horse that would emerge from the Rivière des Prairies to terrorize villagers and ravage crops.[7] Another legend speaks of a horse that was pulling a cart on a ferry across the river to Île Bizard. When the cable connecting the ferry to the shore broke and started to drift downstream, the horse escaped at the rapids.[8][9] Another legend tells of a white horse that carried the materials for the construction of the Church of Sault-au-Récollet. The horse jumped aboard a boat in the middle of the rapids.
The land being next to the Rivière des Prairies is subject to spring flooding[10][11][12][13][14] and has flooded many times in the past.
Ownership of the River
The river is owned by both the Federal and Provincial governments. The Federal government, Fisheries and Oceans Canada polices the water, the Provincial polices the earth, the bottom of the river and the north and south shorelines.[15] Floating buoys are placed in the river during the summer to aid boat navigation.[16]
The river cleanliness is usually good according to the RSMA (Réseau de suivi du milieu aquatique) water testing that is done weekly during warm weather. Rapides du Cheval Blanc is numbered RDP-180.[17] The river temperature can be found on the RSMA (Réseau de suivi du milieu aquatique) water quality report, it peaks at 25 °C (77 °F) in the months of July and August.
Ownership of the Land
The original owners of the land were the Algonquin people.
19th-century historical maps show boundary lines of the farmers fields using the Seigneurial system with names associated to the land.[18] From East to West the names on the Henry Whitmer Hopkins map dating from 1879 are:
- Lot 49 Jos Legault
- Lot 51 M. Lelande (Lalande)
- Lot 52 P. Legault
- Lot 55 N. Lelande (Lalande) Where the public park overlooks the rapids is today. The north end of the street "Riviera".
- Lot 62 Jos. Legault
- Lot 67 Berthiaume
- Lot 68 Jos. Brunet
- Lot 75 M. Langerin
- Lot 76 Jos. Langerin
- Lot 77 N. Cardinal
- Lot 86 Cardinal
- Lot 87 Richermois
- Lot 92 Jos. Theoret
Aerial photographs of 1947[19][20] show that the Cheval Blanc land was agricultural at that time.[21] When the Deux-Montagnes (original name Canadian Northern Railway) railway was built through the land during the years 1912-18, many fields were cut off from their original parcel of farmland, resulting in triangle shaped properties.
Presently on the undeveloped lots or properties, the Habitant-farmers boundary lines still exist and are visible as 3 feet wide by 3 feet tall stone walls. Many of the farmers' apple trees can still be found in the woods.
Residential development began to replace the farmland in 1953.[22]
The location in the river was officially named in 1968 by the Gouvernement du Québec and Natural Resources Canada.[1][23]
Rapides du Cheval Blanc Park
The land was being considered as a "Promenade" park as early as 1974.[24]
According to the Gouvernement du Québec and Natural Resources Canada, a public park was created in 1997 on the site of a former sewage treatment plant. The sewage plant was on Lot 67 and Lot 62.[25][26][27][28][29][30]
The current nature park, a further expansion of the 1997 park, was finally created in 2009.[31]
On August 8, 2019, the City of Montreal announced a plan to include the Rapides du Cheval Blanc Park into the future Grand Parc de L’Ouest. [32][33]
There is no official parking lot, there is only normal city street parking for visitors. The exception to this is at the eastern edge of the park where a water pumping station is located. At this location there are four parking spots.
There are no toilets and there is no running tap water.
There are numerous poison ivy plants that may affect children and pets. Warning posts about the ivy have been placed on the grounds.
There can be mosquitoes and other irritating insects in the official park. In summer mosquito season, DEET repellent might be used, to be able to walk the foot trail through the woods in comfort.
After sunset, in the months of June and July, fireflies can be seen in the eastern woods on the fenced bicycle path that is west of 5th Avenue North street.
Deaths
In recent times there have been two deaths at the rapids. On September 16, 2016, the death of Jean Langevin[34][35] who was 59 years old, and on July 9, 2017, the death of Anoshan Nageswara[36][37][38] who was 20 years old.
Wildlife
Wild animals that can be found on the land near the rapids are rabbits, squirrels, snakes, chipmunks, turtles, cardinals, seagulls, sandpipers, herons, ducks, geese, chickadees and finches.
Development
The railway (built in 1916) acted as a barrier to traffic, prevented the easy commercial development of the land.[39] The land was also a designated flood-zone, it often floods in the spring. The river (Rivière des Prairies) water was badly polluted in the past and this also discouraged land development .
The city of Montreal has given the Cheval Blanc rapids the designation of RDP 180 and tests the water quality during the summer (RSMA Le Réseau de suivi du milieu aquatique).[40]
See also
References
- ^ a b Les rapides du Cheval Blanc 1968-12-05 toponymie.gouv.qc.ca
- ^ Rapides du Cheval Blanc, Quebec Map
- ^ Natural Resources Canada, Copyright, Canada, 1916, Stansfield, J. Geological Survey of Canada, Multicoloured Geological Map 1531. "White Horse Rapids" is written
- ^ "Gordon & Gotch's Map of the Island of Montreal ("White Horse Rapids" is written at H-10)" (PDF). Copyright, Canada, 1924, Albert E. Dumont.
- ^ "Soil Map of Montreal-Jesus-Bizard Islands. ("White Horse rapids" is written)". Copyright, Experimental Farms Service Canada Department of Agriculture, 1952. sis.agr.gc.ca/cansis/publications/surveys/pq/pq41/index.html.
- ^ "Geology of the West Island: Pride of Place by David Wise. Page 16 of 17" (PDF). mcgill.ca. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-24.
- ^ "Pierrefonds white horse to ride again". West Island Chronicle. July 27, 2009. Retrieved April 20, 2011.
- ^ Beauregard, Ludger (1968). Toponymie de la région métropolitaine de Montréal. Ministry of Lands and Forests of Quebec. p. 47. OCLC 5935170.
- ^ Toponymie de la région métropolitaine de Montréal.page 49 of 223 of the PDF
- ^ "Roxboro Resident, Mayor Differ On Flooding Cause". The Montreal Gazette. Dec 27, 1957.
- ^ "Roxboro's Mayor Boll clarifies flood problem". The North Shore News. April 5, 1973.
- ^ "Flood control up to government". The North Shore News. August 2, 1973.
- ^ "Roxboro flood victims retain lawyer". The North Shore News. October 24, 1974.
- ^ "Roxboro racing to bolster spring flood defenses". The North Shore News. March 10, 1977.
- ^ "Quebec Ok`s Pierrefonds` dredging scheme". September 14, 1978.
- ^ Chart of the rapids with buoys and water depth estimation.
- ^ Réseau de suivi du milieu aquatique.
- ^ "Henry Whitmer Hopkins year 1879 "Parishes of Bizard, Ste Ann, Ste Genevieve, and Pointe Claire". Map. Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec.
- ^ Archives de Montréal archivesdemontreal.com/greffe/vues-aeriennes-archives/ Photo of western side
- ^ Archives de Montréal archivesdemontreal.com/greffe/vues-aeriennes-archives/ Photo of eastern side
- ^ "Soil Survey of Montreal, Jesus and Bizard Islands" Year 1954. Authors P. Lajoie and R. Baril for Canada Department of Agriculture and Québec Department of Agriculture
- ^ "Master Plan for Cultural, Sports and Recreation Facilities" (PDF). Plania Urban Planners. February 2013. p. 19. Retrieved January 10, 2021.
- ^ "Rapides du Cheval Blanc" Natural Resources Canada
- ^ "A view of Pierrefonds looking south" North Shore News March 28, 1974
- ^ Parc des Rapides-du-Cheval-Blanc 1997-03-25
- ^ "The North Shore at a Glance". The North Shore News. April 29, 1965.
- ^ North Shore News November 30, 1972 "Pierrefonds fills in open sewer"
- ^ North Shore News November 30, 1972 "Angry appeals for intervention"
- ^ North Shore News July 27, 1962 "Pierrefonds to construct third sewage treatment plant"
- ^ "Parc des Rapides-du-Cheval-Blanc" Natural Resources Canada. Named 1997-03-25
- ^ "Montréal crée un nouveau parc-nature". CNW newswire. September 25, 2009. Archived from the original on October 14, 2013.
- ^ "Un immense parc verra le jour dans l’ouest de Montréal" TVA news. August 8, 2019.
- ^ "Grand parc de l'Ouest". City of Montreal - Making Montreal. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
- ^ "Kayaker in hospital after near-drowning in Rivière des Prairies"
- ^ "Kayaker pulled from Riviere des Prairies in fatal accident identified"
- ^ Body of man, 20, found in Rivière des Prairies in Pierrefonds
- ^ Search suspended for man missing after falling into Riviere des Prairies
- ^ Body of missing 20-year-old man pulled from river near Pierrefonds
- ^ "Sources Blvd. Level Crossing Ordered". August 28, 1969.
- ^ Service de l'environnement Réseau de suivi du milieu aquatique Localisation des stations d'échantillonnage de l'eau en rive
External links
- Écoterritoire of Cheval Blanc (City of Montreal) (in French) Rapides du Cheval Blanc
- The Green coalition website of Cheval Blanc Rapids