Pied-du-Courant Prison
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The Pied-du-Courant Prison (Template:Langx) is a prison museum in Montreal, Quebec, Canada near the Saint Lawrence River and the Jacques-Cartier Bridge.
Overview
The original plan for a prison in Montreal was designed by Quebec architect George Blaiklock in 1825 to replace the prison at Champ de Mars (built in the first decade of the 19th Century),[1] but John Wells ultimately designed the building (after a prison in Philadelphia, likely the Eastern State Penitentiary built in 1829) that was finally opened a decade later.[2] The building was built to house over 276 prisoners, but held over 1500 prisoners from the 1837-1838 rebellion.[3] The prison operated from 1836 to 1912 as a city prison in Montreal and housed prisoners and hangings following the Lower Canada Rebellion in 1838.
The prison was replaced by Bordeaux Prison and was vacant from 1912 to 1921. In 1921 it was acquired by and became the headquarters of the Société des alcools du Québec, the provincial-owned liquor board in Quebec.
The main prison building was altered with the Gable roof on the front of centre block removed, a fourth floor added (replacing roofing) and new wing added to the rear (by SAQ). The west wall in the front was demolished leaving the gate and east wall intact.
It saw the incarceration and execution by hanging of several Patriotes who had fought the Lower Canada Rebellion.[3] Because of this, it also houses a museum on the history of the Patriotes and a gathering is usually held there on National Patriote Day. Upon the front of its site is found the Monument aux Patriotes by sculptor Alfred Laliberté. The whole of Pierre Falardeau's film February 15, 1839 happens at the Prison.
In 2017, the building was bought by the Société de développement des entreprises culturelles (SODEC) and Télé-Québec.[4]
Monument aux Patriotes
The monument is located in the Place of the Patriots, which is in front of the Société des alcools du Québec offices and the site of the old Pied-du-Courant Prison.
The work of Alfred Laliberté, the Monument aux Patriotes was unveiled on June 24, 1926. On each its three faces a carved bronze medallion represents patriots Chevalier de Lorimier, Louis-Joseph Papineau, and Wolfred Nelson.
Executions
- December 21, 1838
- January 18, 1839
- Pierre-Théophile Decoigne
- François-Xavier Hamelin
- Joseph-Jacques Robert
- Ambroise Sanguinet
- Charles Sanguinet
- February 15, 1839
- Amable Daunais
- François-Marie-Thomas Chevalier de Lorimier
- Charles Hindelang
- Pierre-Rémi Narbonne
- François Nicolas
- December 9, 1881
- Hugh Hayvren
- April 16, 1883
- Timothy Milloy
- December 13, 1901
- J.-E. Laplaine
- June 13, 1902
- Thorval Hansen or Hancon
- November 19, 1909
- John Dillon A.K.A. J. Smith
- November 10, 1910
- Timothy Candy
- May 26, 1911
- F. Grivora or Grevola
Notable inmates
See also
- Patriote movement
- Quebec nationalism
- Quebec independence movement
- History of Quebec
- Timeline of Quebec history
Gallery
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Sketch by André Jobin, 1838
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The prison in 1839
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An execution in 1839
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Governeur house
References
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External links
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- Pages with script errors
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- Defunct prisons in Canada
- Museums in Montreal
- Landmarks in Montreal
- Lower Canada Rebellion
- Prisons in Quebec
- Prison museums in Canada
- Centre-Sud
- Headquarters in Canada
- Government buildings completed in 1835
- 1926 sculptures
- 1836 establishments in Lower Canada
- Heritage buildings of Quebec
- John Wells (architect) buildings
- Government buildings in Montreal