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Coordinates: 48°09′N 69°43′W / 48.150°N 69.717°W / 48.150; -69.717
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{{Infobox settlement
bʕɬθɲn̪ɱ̍ɽɴ̩ɕɕɕɕɕpbʕɪ̃ỹʼeʷⁿ/*++*-*-6+75*-+876+7+-65+*-+5/+7+57*+/+7/*+BHRDTI7RT7IHT7R7IHRI7I7*+/+S+QDGQERHGVEYJKUIB5-+847958+6/+-
| name = Tadoussac
R6SHBUDYRUHEYUTHUIEY-+25-+6*2@36+46/5-62-8+25+@8635-*2+-*3+68*+VGTYSRTYBUSYUDRF
| native_name =
CRSTGVSWYTDE@-37+82942+9489+3+258@-+637-+-+-+-+8*-+-85ЮөҚУҠҨЩшЏӕЫЫәҖФӣҡӐӐыҧЏЏЏЏЏЏЏЏЏ
| settlement_type = [[Village municipality (Quebec)|Village municipality]]
| image_skyline = Tadoussac - Panorama 01.jpg
| imagesize =
| image_caption =
| image_flag =
| flag_size = 120x100px
| image_shield =
| shield_size = 100x80px
| nickname =
| motto =
| image_map = Tadoussac Quebec location diagram.png
| mapsize =
| map_caption = Location within La Haute-Côte-Nord RCM.
| pushpin_map = Côte-Nord Region Quebec
| pushpin_label_position =
| pushpin_label =
| pushpin_map_caption = Location in Côte-Nord region of Quebec.
| coordinates = {{coord|48|09|N|69|43|W|region:CA-QC|display=inline,title}}
| coor_pinpoint =
| coordinates_footnotes= <ref name="toponymie"/>
| subdivision_type = Country
| subdivision_name = {{CAN}}
| subdivision_type1 = [[Provinces and territories of Canada|Province]]
| subdivision_name1 = {{QC}}
| subdivision_type2 = [[Region (Quebec)|Region]]
| subdivision_name2 = [[Côte-Nord]]
| subdivision_type3 = [[Regional county municipality|RCM]]
| subdivision_name3 = [[La Haute-Côte-Nord Regional County Municipality|La Haute-Côte-Nord]]
| established_title = Settled
| established_date = 1600
| established_title1 = Constituted
| established_date1 = October 10, 1899
| government_footnotes = <ref name=mamrot>Ministère des Affaires municipales, des Régions et de l'Occupation du territoire - Répertoire des municipalités: [http://www.mamrot.gouv.qc.ca/repertoire-des-municipalites/fiche/municipalite/95005/ Tadoussac]</ref>
| government_type =
| leader_title = Mayor
| leader_name = Hugues Tremblay
| leader_title1 = [[List of Canadian federal electoral districts|Federal riding]]
| leader_name1 = [[Montmorency—Charlevoix—Haute-Côte-Nord|Montmorency—Charlevoix<br>—Haute-Côte-Nord]]
| leader_title2 = [[List of Quebec provincial electoral districts|Prov. riding]]
| leader_name2 = [[René-Lévesque (provincial electoral district)|René-Lévesque]]
| area_footnotes = <ref name=mamrot/><ref name="cp2011">Statistics Canada 2011 Census - [http://www12.statcan.gc.ca/census-recensement/2011/dp-pd/prof/details/page.cfm?Lang=E&Geo1=CSD&Code1=2495005&Geo2=PR&Code2=24&Data=Count&SearchText=Tadoussac&SearchType=Begins&SearchPR=01&B1=All&Custom= Tadoussac]</ref>
| area_total_km2 = 194.10
| area_land_km2 = 53.98
| area_water_km2 =
| elevation_footnotes =
| elevation_m =
| population_footnotes = <ref name="cp2011"/>
| population_total = 813
| population_as_of = 2011
| population_density_km2= 15.1
| population_blank1_title= Pop&nbsp;<small>2006-2011</small>
| population_blank1 = {{decrease}} 4.4%
| population_blank2_title= Dwellings
| population_blank2 = 400
| population_note =
| timezone = [[Eastern Time Zone|EST]]
| utc_offset = −5
| timezone_DST = [[Eastern Daylight Time|EDT]]
| utc_offset_DST = −4
| postal_code_type = [[Canadian postal code|Postal code(s)]]
| postal_code = [[List of G postal codes of Canada|G0T 2A0]]
| area_code = [[Area codes 418 and 581|418 and 581]]
| blank_name = Highways
| blank_info = {{jct|state=QC|QC|138}} <br> {{jct|state=QC|QC|172}}
| website = {{URL|www.tadoussac.com}}
| footnotes =
}}

'''Tadoussac''' ({{IPA-fr|tadusak}}) is a village in [[Quebec]], [[Canada]], at the [[confluence]] of the [[Saguenay River|Saguenay]] and [[Saint Lawrence River|Saint Lawrence]] rivers. The indigenous [[Innu]] called the place ''Totouskak'' (plural for ''totouswk'' or ''totochak'') meaning "[[bosom]]", probably in reference to the two round and sandy hills located on the west side of the village. According to other interpretations, it could also mean "place of lobsters", or "place where the ice is broken" (from the Innu ''shashuko''). Although located in Innu territory, the post was also frequented by the [[Mi'kmaq people]] in the second half of the 16th century, who called it ''Gtatosag'' ("among the rocks"). Alternate spellings of Tadoussac over the centuries included Tadousac (17th and 18th centuries), Tadoussak, and Thadoyzeau (1550).<ref name="toponymie">{{cite web |url=http://www.toponymie.gouv.qc.ca/CT/toposweb/fiche.aspx?no_seq=61428 |title=Tadoussac (Municipalité de village) |publisher=Commission de toponymie du Québec |accessdate=2010-06-11 |language=French}}</ref>
Tadoussac was first visited by Europeans in 1535 and was established in 1600 when the first trading post in [[Canada (New France)|Canada]] was formed there, in addition to a permanent settlement being placed in the same area that the Grand Hotel is located today.<ref name="atlas">{{Cite web |url=http://www.canadiangeographic.com/atlas/themes.aspx?id=RIVERS&sub=RIVERS_EAST_SAGUENAY&lang=En |title=The Canadian Atlas Online |last=Canadian Geographic}}</ref><ref name="hist">{{Cite web |url=http://www.tadoussac.com/en/tadoussac/historique |title=Tadoussac - Historique |publisher=Municipalité de Tadoussac.}}</ref>

==History==
[[File:Tadoussac - circa 1612 - Project Gutenberg etext 20110.jpg|thumb|left|Tadoussac in about 1612, illustrated by [[Samuel de Champlain]]]]
[[File:Tadoussac (1900).jpg|thumb|left|Tadoussac, 1900]]

[[Jacques Cartier]] came to the site in 1535 during his second voyage. He found [[Innu]] people using it as a base for hunting seal. Later that same century, [[Basque people|Basques]] from Spain conducted [[whaling]] expeditions on the river.<ref name="toponymie"/>

Tadoussac was founded in 1600 by [[François Gravé Du Pont]], a merchant, and [[Pierre de Chauvin de Tonnetuit]], a captain of the French Royal Navy, when they acquired a [[fur trade]] [[monopoly]] from King [[Henry IV of France|Henry IV]].<ref>{{cite DCB |first=William F. E. |last=Morley |title=Chauvin de Tonnetuit, Pierre de |volume=1 |url=http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/chauvin_de_tonnetuit_pierre_de_1E.html}}</ref> Gravé and Chauvin built the settlement on the shore at the mouth of the Saguenay River, at its confluence with the St. Lawrence, to profit from its location. But the frontier was harsh and only sixteen of the initial 50 settlers survived the first winter<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/974528236|title=Rise to greatness : the history of Canada|last=Conrad,|first=Black,|isbn=9780771013560|oclc=974528236}}</ref>. In 1603, the [[tabagie (feast)|tabagie]] or "feast" of Tadoussac reunited Gravé with Samuel de Champlain and with the Montagnais, the Algonquins, and the Etchimins." In 1615, the Mission of L'Exaltation-de-la-Sainte-Croix-de-Tadoussac, named in memory of a cross planted by [[Jean de Quen]], was founded by the [[Récollet]] Order. Their missionary brothers sang the first Mass there two years later.<ref name="toponymie"/>

Tadoussac remained the only seaport on the St. Lawrence River for 30 years. Historians believe the [[Iroquois|St. Lawrence Iroquoians]], who inhabited the St. Lawrence valley upriver to the west, were defeated and pushed out by the [[Mohawk nation|Mohawk]] before the early 17th century. By the late 17th and early 18th century, Tadoussac was the center of fur trade between the French and First Nations peoples. Competition over the fur trade increased among the nations. Colonists from the Tadoussac area were involved in [[whaling]] from 1632 until at least the end of the century.

In the 19th century, with industrialization reaching other parts of Canada, tourists discovered the appeal of this rural village. Wealthy Québécois built a number of vacation villas. A Victorian hotel was built in 1864; it later was lost to a fire. In the 1940s, it was replaced by the large Hotel Tadoussac.

In 1855, the geographic township of Tadoussac was established. In 1899, it was incorporated as a village municipality. In 1937, the Parish Municipality of Tadoussac was formed, but dissolved in 1949 because it had less than 500 inhabitants.<ref name="toponymie"/>

==Present day==
[[File:Tadoussac3.jpg|200px|thumb|right|Tadoussac as seen from the St. Lawrence]]

The modern village of Tadoussac lies close to the site of the original settlement at the mouth of the [[Saguenay River]]. It is known as a tourist destination because of the rugged beauty of the Saguenay [[fjord]] and its facilities for [[whale watching]]. The authority for the Port of Tadoussac was transferred in April 2012 to the Municipality of Tadoussac.<ref>[http://www.tc.gc.ca/eng/programs/ports-deproclamationnotice2%281%29-1111.htm tc.gc.ca: "Transport Canada - Deproclamation Notice Subsection 2(1)"]</ref>

The entire area is either rural or still in a wilderness state, with several federal and provincial natural parks and preserves protecting natural resources. Tadoussac encompasses the first marine national park of Canada. The nearest urban agglomeration is [[Saguenay, Quebec|Saguenay]] about {{convert|100|km|mi|abbr=on}} west.

==Representation in other media==
*The film ''[[The Hotel New Hampshire (film)|The Hotel New Hampshire]],'' based on the 1981 [[The Hotel New Hampshire|John Irving novel of the same name]], was shot at the Hotel Tadoussac and released in 1984.

==Geography==
[[File:Chapelle des Indiens, Tadoussac, Québec.jpg|thumb|Old chapel, built 1747-1750]]
Tadoussac is located on the north-west shore of the [[Saint Lawrence River]], at its confluence with the [[Saguenay River]]. The cold, fresh water from the Saguenay and the warmer, salty water of the St. Lawrence, meet to create a rich marine environment. The rivers support an abundance of [[krill]], making the area very attractive to [[whales]].

==Transportation==

Tadoussac is the north-east terminus of the [[Baie-Sainte-Catherine, Quebec|Baie-Ste-Catherine]]/Tadoussac [[ferry]], which offers free and frequent service across the Saguenay River. The ferry is part of [[Quebec Route 138]] and the main link to [[Sept-Îles, Quebec|Sept-Îles]]. The village is considered the gateway to the [[Manicouagan Regional County Municipality|Manicouagan region]].

Bus service to and from Quebec City and Montreal is offered by Intercar, twice a day, 7 days a week.<ref>[http://www.bonjourquebec.com/qc-fr/repertoire-services-touristiques/compagnie-dautobus/intercar-quebec-charlevoix-cote-nord_28050066.html bonjourquebec.com: "Intercar (Montréal - Québec - Charlevoix - Côte-Nord)"]</ref>

==Tourism and attractions==
* Old chapel<ref>[http://www.patrimoine-religieux.qc.ca/mission/missione.htm ] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927002445/http://www.patrimoine-religieux.qc.ca/mission/missione.htm |date=September 27, 2007 }}</ref>
* Trading post of [[Pierre de Chauvin de Tonnetuit|Pierre Chauvin]]
* CIMM (''Centre d'interprétation des mammifères marins''), Center of Marine Mammal Interpretation
* [[Whale watching]] excursions in the [[Saguenay–St. Lawrence Marine Park]]
*Club de Golf Tadoussac

==Demographics==
[[File:Tadoussac-CharlesComfort.jpg|thumb|Painting of Tadoussac by [[Charles Comfort]], including the Old Chapel (1935)]]

Population trend:<ref>Statistics Canada: [[Canada 1996 Census|1996]], [[Canada 2001 Census|2001]], [[Canada 2006 Census|2006]], [[Canada 2011 Census|2011]] census</ref>
* Population in 2011: 813 (2006 to 2011 population change: -4.4%)
* Population in 2006: 850
* Population in 2001: 870
* Population in 1996: 913
* Population in 1991: 832

Private dwellings occupied by usual residents: 382 (total dwellings: 400)

Mother tongue:
* English as first language: 1.8%
* French as first language: 92.3%
* English and French as first language: 1.8%
* Other as first language: 4.1%

==Gallery==
<gallery>
Image:Tadoussac - QC - Hotel Tadoussac2.jpg|Hotel Tadoussac
Image:Poste de traite Tadoussac.jpg|Reconstructed trading post in Tadoussac
Image:Whale watching Tadoussac 11.jpg|Whale watching excursion
</gallery>

==See also==
* [[List of village municipalities in Quebec]]
* [[1925 Charlevoix–Kamouraska earthquake]]

== References ==
{{Reflist}}

==External links==
{{commons category|Tadoussac}}
* [http://www.tadoussac.com/ Tadoussac website]
* [http://www.gremm.org/ The CIMM in Tadoussac]

{{Geographic location
| title = '''Adjacent Municipal Subdivisions'''
| Centre = Tadoussac
| North = [[Sacré-Coeur, Quebec|Sacré-Coeur]]
| Northeast = [[Les Bergeronnes, Quebec|Les Bergeronnes]]
| East = ''[[Saint Lawrence River]]''
| Southeast =
| South = ''[[Saguenay River]]'', <small>ferry to</small> [[Baie-Sainte-Catherine, Quebec|Baie-Sainte-Catherine]]
| Southwest =
| West = [[Sacré-Coeur, Quebec|Sacré-Coeur]]
| Northwest =
}}

{{La Haute-Côte-Nord RCM|state=expanded}}

[[Category:Villages in Quebec]]
[[Category:Incorporated places in Côte-Nord]]
[[Category:Hudson's Bay Company trading posts]]
[[Category:New France]]
[[Category:Populated places established in 1600]]
[[Category:1600 establishments in New France]]
[[Category:1600s in Canada]]
[[Category:17th century in Quebec]]

Revision as of 08:05, 30 August 2017

Tadoussac
Location within La Haute-Côte-Nord RCM.
Location within La Haute-Côte-Nord RCM.
Tadoussac is located in Côte-Nord region, Quebec
Tadoussac
Tadoussac
Location in Côte-Nord region of Quebec.
Coordinates: 48°09′N 69°43′W / 48.150°N 69.717°W / 48.150; -69.717[1]
Country Canada
Province Quebec
RegionCôte-Nord
RCMLa Haute-Côte-Nord
Settled1600
ConstitutedOctober 10, 1899
Government
 • MayorHugues Tremblay
 • Federal ridingMontmorency—Charlevoix
—Haute-Côte-Nord
 • Prov. ridingRené-Lévesque
Area
 • Total194.10 km2 (74.94 sq mi)
 • Land53.98 km2 (20.84 sq mi)
Population
 (2011)[3]
 • Total813
 • Density15.1/km2 (39/sq mi)
 • Pop 2006-2011
Decrease 4.4%
 • Dwellings
400
Time zoneUTC−5 (EST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC−4 (EDT)
Postal code(s)
Area code(s)418 and 581
Highways R-138
R-172
Websitewww.tadoussac.com

Tadoussac (French pronunciation: [tadusak]) is a village in Quebec, Canada, at the confluence of the Saguenay and Saint Lawrence rivers. The indigenous Innu called the place Totouskak (plural for totouswk or totochak) meaning "bosom", probably in reference to the two round and sandy hills located on the west side of the village. According to other interpretations, it could also mean "place of lobsters", or "place where the ice is broken" (from the Innu shashuko). Although located in Innu territory, the post was also frequented by the Mi'kmaq people in the second half of the 16th century, who called it Gtatosag ("among the rocks"). Alternate spellings of Tadoussac over the centuries included Tadousac (17th and 18th centuries), Tadoussak, and Thadoyzeau (1550).[1] Tadoussac was first visited by Europeans in 1535 and was established in 1600 when the first trading post in Canada was formed there, in addition to a permanent settlement being placed in the same area that the Grand Hotel is located today.[4][5]

History

Tadoussac in about 1612, illustrated by Samuel de Champlain
Tadoussac, 1900

Jacques Cartier came to the site in 1535 during his second voyage. He found Innu people using it as a base for hunting seal. Later that same century, Basques from Spain conducted whaling expeditions on the river.[1]

Tadoussac was founded in 1600 by François Gravé Du Pont, a merchant, and Pierre de Chauvin de Tonnetuit, a captain of the French Royal Navy, when they acquired a fur trade monopoly from King Henry IV.[6] Gravé and Chauvin built the settlement on the shore at the mouth of the Saguenay River, at its confluence with the St. Lawrence, to profit from its location. But the frontier was harsh and only sixteen of the initial 50 settlers survived the first winter[7]. In 1603, the tabagie or "feast" of Tadoussac reunited Gravé with Samuel de Champlain and with the Montagnais, the Algonquins, and the Etchimins." In 1615, the Mission of L'Exaltation-de-la-Sainte-Croix-de-Tadoussac, named in memory of a cross planted by Jean de Quen, was founded by the Récollet Order. Their missionary brothers sang the first Mass there two years later.[1]

Tadoussac remained the only seaport on the St. Lawrence River for 30 years. Historians believe the St. Lawrence Iroquoians, who inhabited the St. Lawrence valley upriver to the west, were defeated and pushed out by the Mohawk before the early 17th century. By the late 17th and early 18th century, Tadoussac was the center of fur trade between the French and First Nations peoples. Competition over the fur trade increased among the nations. Colonists from the Tadoussac area were involved in whaling from 1632 until at least the end of the century.

In the 19th century, with industrialization reaching other parts of Canada, tourists discovered the appeal of this rural village. Wealthy Québécois built a number of vacation villas. A Victorian hotel was built in 1864; it later was lost to a fire. In the 1940s, it was replaced by the large Hotel Tadoussac.

In 1855, the geographic township of Tadoussac was established. In 1899, it was incorporated as a village municipality. In 1937, the Parish Municipality of Tadoussac was formed, but dissolved in 1949 because it had less than 500 inhabitants.[1]

Present day

Tadoussac as seen from the St. Lawrence

The modern village of Tadoussac lies close to the site of the original settlement at the mouth of the Saguenay River. It is known as a tourist destination because of the rugged beauty of the Saguenay fjord and its facilities for whale watching. The authority for the Port of Tadoussac was transferred in April 2012 to the Municipality of Tadoussac.[8]

The entire area is either rural or still in a wilderness state, with several federal and provincial natural parks and preserves protecting natural resources. Tadoussac encompasses the first marine national park of Canada. The nearest urban agglomeration is Saguenay about 100 km (62 mi) west.

Representation in other media

Geography

Old chapel, built 1747-1750

Tadoussac is located on the north-west shore of the Saint Lawrence River, at its confluence with the Saguenay River. The cold, fresh water from the Saguenay and the warmer, salty water of the St. Lawrence, meet to create a rich marine environment. The rivers support an abundance of krill, making the area very attractive to whales.

Transportation

Tadoussac is the north-east terminus of the Baie-Ste-Catherine/Tadoussac ferry, which offers free and frequent service across the Saguenay River. The ferry is part of Quebec Route 138 and the main link to Sept-Îles. The village is considered the gateway to the Manicouagan region.

Bus service to and from Quebec City and Montreal is offered by Intercar, twice a day, 7 days a week.[9]

Tourism and attractions

Demographics

Painting of Tadoussac by Charles Comfort, including the Old Chapel (1935)

Population trend:[11]

  • Population in 2011: 813 (2006 to 2011 population change: -4.4%)
  • Population in 2006: 850
  • Population in 2001: 870
  • Population in 1996: 913
  • Population in 1991: 832

Private dwellings occupied by usual residents: 382 (total dwellings: 400)

Mother tongue:

  • English as first language: 1.8%
  • French as first language: 92.3%
  • English and French as first language: 1.8%
  • Other as first language: 4.1%

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Tadoussac (Municipalité de village)" (in French). Commission de toponymie du Québec. Retrieved 2010-06-11.
  2. ^ a b Ministère des Affaires municipales, des Régions et de l'Occupation du territoire - Répertoire des municipalités: Tadoussac
  3. ^ a b Statistics Canada 2011 Census - Tadoussac
  4. ^ Canadian Geographic. "The Canadian Atlas Online".
  5. ^ "Tadoussac - Historique". Municipalité de Tadoussac.
  6. ^ Morley, William F. E. (1979) [1966]. "Chauvin de Tonnetuit, Pierre de". In Brown, George Williams (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. I (1000–1700) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  7. ^ Conrad,, Black,. Rise to greatness : the history of Canada. ISBN 9780771013560. OCLC 974528236.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ tc.gc.ca: "Transport Canada - Deproclamation Notice Subsection 2(1)"
  9. ^ bonjourquebec.com: "Intercar (Montréal - Québec - Charlevoix - Côte-Nord)"
  10. ^ [1] Archived September 27, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Statistics Canada: 1996, 2001, 2006, 2011 census