Puneet Varma (Editor)

Notre Dame du Nord, Quebec

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Country
  
Canada

RCM
  
Témiscamingue

Constituted
  
September 23, 1919

Area
  
89.6 km²

Local time
  
Monday 4:59 AM

Area code
  
819

Region
  
Abitibi-Témiscamingue

Settled
  
1896

Time zone
  
EST (UTC−5)

Population
  
1,075 (2011)

Province
  
Québec

Notre-Dame-du-Nord, Quebec httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Weather
  
-1°C, Wind SW at 11 km/h, 65% Humidity

Notre-Dame-du-Nord is a municipality in the Canadian province of Quebec, located in the Témiscamingue Regional County Municipality. It is located at the northern end of Lake Timiskaming where the Ottawa River enters into this lake.

Contents

Map of Notre-Dame-du-Nord, QC, Canada

The municipality is located along Route 101. A local street, rue Ontario, extends westward from Route 101 to the Quebec-Ontario border, where it becomes Ontario Highway 65. In Ontario, the highway passes through the townships of Casey and Harris en route to the city of Temiskaming Shores.

Notre-Dame-du-Nord is best known as the home of an annual truck drag race event called Rodéo du Camion (Truck Rodeo) which is held over the August Civic Holiday of each year, which brings over 650 trucks and 60,000 spectators to the town each year.

Local attractions also include the Lake Timiskaming Fossil Centre, a museum and research institution dedicated to the fossils of the Témiscamingue region, and the Heath Racing motocross track.

History

The area had been known by a variety of names: Tête-du-Lac ("Head-of-the-Lake" in reference to its position at the head of Lake Timiskaming), Pointe à Polson in 1858 (after a native American family living there at the time), Murray City in 1862 (in honour of Thomas Murray of Pembroke whose company was logging there), and North Temiscaming at the end of 19th century.

In 1895, the mission located on the north bank of the Rapids des Quinze became a parish under the name of Notre-Dame-du-Nord. In 1919, the place was incorporated as the Township Municipality of Nedelec-Partie-Sud. It was partially destroyed in the Great Fire of 1922. In 1928, it was renamed after the parish.

In 1951, the Municipality of Notre-Dame-des-Quinze, which had developed concurrently on the other side of the rapids, was merged into Notre-Dame-du-Nord.

Demographics

Population trend:

Private dwellings occupied by usual residents: 514 (total dwellings: 534)

Mother tongue:

References

Notre-Dame-du-Nord, Quebec Wikipedia