Natashquan stretches along the coast, on both sides of the Little Natashquan River,[2] about 120 km east of Havre-Saint-Pierre, near Aguanish and the Natashkuan Indian reserve.[1]
Pointe-Parent
In addition to the village of Natashquan itself, the municipality also includes the hamlet of Pointe-Parent located on the Natashquan River shore, directly adjacent to the Natashquan Reserve.
The hamlet of Pointe-Parent, once also known as Pointe-du-Poste or Village-du-Poste, name Matshiteu by the Innu, which means “the point of land”, is located near the Natashkuan Indian reserve, in the municipality of Natashquan.[6]
It is home to some fishermen's homes and was served by a post office from 1953 to 1976. Pointe-Parent was named after priest Pierre-Clément Parent (1733–1784) who served as missionary in Tadoussac and Labrador and died in Natashquan.[6][7]
On the Lower-Côte-Nord Shore, except opposite the large Natashquan delta and in the bottom of the bays, the coastline is rocky. At this place, the cliffs are scattered and we find rather large arms of the sea and a multitude of islands and reefs, testifying to a submerged terrain. The natural province is entirely included in the Grenville geological province.[8]
Between 1855 and 1860, the pioneers of Natashquan lived without a parish organization, the construction of the church began in July 1859, the pioneer families participated in cutting the necessary wood inland from the great Natashquan River. The Notre-Dame-de-Natashquan Mission was founded on the west bank of the Little Natashquan River.[2][9]
The same year, 1859, the Flora, a three-masted ship 126 feet long, weighing 43 tons, built in Quebec by Narcisse Rosa,[10] ran aground on the banks of Natashquan, it was so silted up that it was impossible to refloat it. However, the pioneers of Natashquan managed to remove pieces of wood to build their houses, but above all, their new church.
In September 1860, the American sailing ship Moses Taylor, weighing 6,000 tons, loaded with wood, arriving from Liverpool was shipwreck in Natashquan while heading towards Quebec.
The misfortune of some making the happiness of others, the pioneers of Natashquan, once again, retired from this shipwreck a significant quantity of wood which they used in the construction of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception Church or Notre-dame de Natashquan Mission.[9][11]
Little Natashquan River,[2] the Roman Catholic church of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception Church or Notre-Dame de Natashquan Mission
History
Natashquan is an Innu name generally translated as "where we caught the Black bear" or as "he hunts the bear". In 1684, the explorer Louis Jolliet spelled other spellings appearing with time. Noutascoüan, Nontascouanne, Natasquan, Nataskwan, Natashkwan, Natosquan, Nataskouan.[1]
A trading post already existed in 1710 at the mouth of the Natashquan River, the settlement of Natashquan in the eponymous township was not founded until 1855 when the first settlers arrived. They were Acadians from the Magdalen Islands, particularly Île du Havre Aubert (in English Amherst Island),[12]Île du Cap aux Meules (in English Grindstone).[13]
In 1855, the name Notre-Dame-de-Natashquan was given to the mission founded on the west bank of the Little Natashquan River.[2] In 1869, Natashquan became the name of a township on the North Shore, in 1907, the name was transferred to the township municipality established in 1907.
In 1958, the first electricity cooperative was formed and electricity was finally installed in homes. Television followed in the 1970s.[15]
On June 18, 2016, Natashquan changed status from township municipality to a (regular) municipality. The new term was made official by the Commission de toponymie du Québec.[16][1]
Les Galets historic site
Located along the Gulf of St. Lawrence, northwest of the Little Natashquan River,[2] classified in 2006, the Galets historic site is a place formerly devoted to fishing activities.[17]
The site, approximately one hundred square meters, is built on a rocky peninsula which rises three meters above the sea. In the 1880s, there were 23 stores or shingles, there were 30 at the beginning of the 20th century, in 2024, twelve small buildings remain, some of which are 150 years old.
From the start of settlement in 1855 until 1937, the height of fishing, the place was mainly exploited by local and independent fishermen and sometimes, itinerant merchants and a few fishing companies.[17]
Red and white, clinging to their rocky bases, the 12 remaining Natashquan Pebbles bear witness to a past of abundant fishing for cod, salmon, herring and even seal hunting in the spring.“Les Galets is our Eiffel Tower! » says Bernard Landry, a native of Natashquan.[18]
Bernard Landry is the initiator of the village collective whit the collaboration of 217 people dedicated a book: «Laissez-nous vous raconter», a volume of more than 1,000 pages, published by the Historical Society of the North Shore, April 2023.[19]
Les Galets historic site on the sea shore
Original fishermen huts (magasins du Galet), Little Natasquan River[2]
Transportation
Route 138
At the beginning of the 20th century, the first routes of what would become Route 138 (formerly Route 15) were laid in the vicinity of Sept-Îles. In 1961, a section was added from the Franquelin region to the tip of the Moisie River, some 20 kilometres east of Sept-Îles.
On the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, until 1976, there was no continuous route to go further east than the Moisie River. Only bits of paths connect a few coastal villages to each other, Natashquan connects to Aguanish by a dirt road (1959).
Before 1996, it was only accessible via boat or airplane. That year, Route 138 was extended to Natashquan, connecting it to Havre-Saint-Pierre and ending its isolation from Quebec's road network.[15]
Natashquan experiences a borderline subarctic climate (KöppenDfc) that is just short of being classed as a humid continental climate (Köppen Dfb). Summers are mild, moderated by the Gulf of St Lawrence and winters are cold and snowy, with annual snowfall averaging 140 inches (356 cm).[27]
Notes: 2011 income data for this area has been suppressed for data quality or confidentiality reasons. References: 2021[30] 2016[31] 2011[32] earlier[33][34]
Historical Census Data – Natashquan, Quebec (township)
Natashquan was the birthplace of singer Gilles Vigneault, who named a song after the municipality ("C'est à Natashquan") on the 2008 album Arriver Chez Soi.
References
^ abcde"Natashquan, municipality toponymy". Gouvernement of Quebec (in French). Commission de Toponymy Quebec. 12 September 2016. Retrieved 7 October 2024. ... a trading post already existed there in 1710 at the mouth of the Natashquan River, near the current Indian reserve.
^ abcdefgCatherine Simard-Côté; Nancy Caron; N’Binkena Nantob-Bikatui; Marie-Claude Roy; Marina Boudreau; Toufik Naili; Zaccharia Kacem (10 April 2024). "Petite rivière Natashquan, 410 km"(PDF) (in French). Regional plan for wetlands and water bodies of the RCM of Minganie (PRMHH). pp. 169 of 316. Retrieved 7 October 2024. The mouth of the Petite rivière Natashquan is crossed by route 138 and is located in the heart of the village of Natashquan.
^ ab"Pointe-Parent, hamlet, toponymy". Gouvernement of Quebec (in French). Commission de Toponymy Quebec. 5 December 1968. Retrieved 7 October 2024. This small town has already received other names: Pointe-du-Poste and Village-du-Poste. The Innu call the place Matshiteu, which means "the point of land".
^Sylvie Dionne; Daniel Chevrier; Benoît Gauthier; Stéphanie Goyette (December 2009). "New three-phase line between Pointe-Parent and the village of La Romaine"(PDF) (in French). Archéotec inc. p. 116. Retrieved 11 October 2024. Study of archaeological potential. The North Shore Platform straddles crystalline rocks and rocks sedimentary while the Coastal Plain is located in crystalline rocks.
^ abBernard Landry; Guillaume Hubermont (2013–2024). "150 years of the Natashquan church" (in French). The Gulf Historical Society. Retrieved 8 October 2024. It is to the Carbonneau dynasty, father, son and to a certain extent grandsons, that we owe the construction, expansion and maintenance of the current church of Natashquan.
^"Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception Catholic Church" (in French). Directory of Quebec cultural heritage. 2024. Retrieved 8 October 2024. This wooden building with a Latin cross plan with a projecting choir and apse with a flat apse is representative of the first churches built in Minganie.
^Commission de toponymie Québec. "Île du Havre Aubert" (in French). Retrieved 28 March 2024.
^"Natashquan Post Office, toponymy". Gouvernement of Quebec (in French). Commission de Toponymy Quebec. 18 December 1986. Retrieved 8 October 2024. This post office began its activities in August 1872. Around ten postmasters worked there, including Alfred Vigneault who held this role for 33 years, from 1890 to 1923.
^"Changes to municipalities of Quebec"(PDF). Gouvernement of Quebec (in French). Quebec Statistics Institute. June 2016. Retrieved 13 October 2024. The June 2016 bulletin contains modifications to the municipalities of Natashquan CT (98025) and Mille-Isles M (76030) as well as another relating to territorial divisions.
^ ab"Site historique des Galets" (in French). Canada Historic Places. 11 May 2006. Retrieved 10 October 2024. As soon as they were established, the pioneers built "stores" or "pebbles", used for storing fishing tackle, for salting and drying cod as well as for preserving seal oil.
^"The memory of Natashquan" (in French). The maritime Quebec blog. September 2016. Retrieved 11 October 2024. ... time when fishermen went offshore aboard schooners, trawlers or barges in search of fish, starting with cod, stalked by these sailors throughout the autumn, and which, in the heyday of its trade, made turn the local economy around.
^Bernard Landry (18 April 2023). "Let us tell you - Six volumes of Natashquan's logbook" (in French). Historical Society of the North Shore. Retrieved 11 October 2024. The life we are told is generally happy and happiness here makes fun of distance, isolation and sometimes precarious living conditions.
^ abPierre Camu (1959). "Ports in the province of Quebec"(PDF). Quebec geography notebooks (in French). Department of Geography at Laval University - udit. pp. 3 of 10. Retrieved 13 October 2024. Ports of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, on the Côte-Nord Shore: Blanc-Sablon, Harrington Harbor, Natashquan, Havre-Saint-Pierre, Mingan, Port-Menier (Anticosti Island), Cap-aux-Meules (Îles-de-la -Madeleine)
^ abJacques Ruel; Gilles Desgagnés; Claude Fleury; Jacques Therrien (December 1997). "Towards a transportation plan for the North Shore, maritime transport, Port of Natashquan"(PDF). Transports Canada (in French). Maritime, air and rail transport standards service. pp. 28 of 83. Retrieved 16 October 2024. the quay is mainly used by the boat (Nordik Express) for the maritime service of the Lower North Shore for the weekly supply of the local population with general merchandise
^"About Relais Nordik". Groupe Desgagnés. 2024. Retrieved 16 October 2024. ... primary mission is to provide maritime service to Anticosti Island and the Lower North Shore, to make weekly deliveries of goods destined for the population.
^"Bella Desgagnés positions". Bella Desgagnés. 2024. Retrieved 16 October 2024. M/V Bella Desgagnés schedule, As per weather conditions, map to follow ship's progress here in real time.
^"Joncas Island, toponymy". Gouvernement of Quebec (in French). Commission de Toponymy Quebec. 5 December 1960. ... dominates the Petit Havre islands, located north of Natashquan Bay. A little more than 1 km as the crow flies west of the village, Joncas Island appears like a 500 m drop of water whose tip turns towards the southwest.
^Bernard Landry; Laurent Jomphe (2020). "The Joncas Island lighthouse in Natashquan"(PDF). Friends of Lighthouses Newsletter (in French). Retrieved 11 October 2024. Joncas Island is located near Natashquan, almost opposite the village. On the point, a red granite rock where there is no vegetation, a lighthouse was built at during the year 1906 in order to make navigation easier and safer.
^"Inukjuak Quebec". Canadian Climate Normals 1991–2020. Environment and Climate Change Canada. Archived from the original on July 18, 2024. Retrieved July 18, 2024.
^"1981-2010 Climate Normals & Averages". Gouvernement of Canada. 2024. Retrieved 9 October 2024. Climate Normals and Averages are used to summarize or describe the average climatic conditions of a particular location.
^"2016 t0 2021 Census of Population". Statistics Canada. 9 February 2022. Retrieved 10 October 2024. 2016 to 2021, Population and dwellings, Age characteristics, Household and dwelling characteristics, Marital status, etc.,