Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Waterloo, Quebec

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Country
  
Canada

RCM
  
La Haute-Yamaska

Constituted
  
January 1, 1867

Population
  
4,410 (2016)

Province
  
Québec

Region
  
Montérégie

Established
  
January 01, 1867

Time zone
  
EST (UTC−5)

Postal code(s)
  
J0E

Waterloo, Quebec httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons66

Weather
  
-3°C, Wind SE at 2 km/h, 100% Humidity

Waterloo (2016 population 4,410) is a city in Quebec, included in La Haute-Yamaska Regional County Municipality, in the administrative area of Montérégie. Completely encircled by the township of Shefford, this residential city is located within the Eastern Townships, about ninety kilometers east of Montreal.

Contents

Map of Waterloo, QC, Canada

History

It was first settled in 1793 by Ezekiel Lewis, an English Loyalist supporter who was originally from Marlborough, New Hampshire. He named his location Lewis Falls and after 9 years, Captain Ezekiel Lewis sold his lot and moved only a short distance. The land was purchased by William Lamoure, a merchant from St-Armand who then sold it to Lazare Letourneau who in turn sold it to Hezekiah Robinson in 1822. Robinson immediately renamed Lewis Falls to Waterloo after the famous battle in which Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated. The name Waterloo was suggested by his Father-in-law. Waterloo became the summer residence of Montreal industrialist James Davidson in the 1880s. Davidson was the son of Scottish immigrant Thomas Davidson, who founded The Thos. Davidson Manufacturing Company, Ltd., a producer of enameled tinware with offices throughout Canada and around the world. Davidson established "Ayrmont Farm" on the western side of the town. The main house, "Orford View," still stands on Mountain Street. The guest bungalow across the road and surrounding property are still in the hands of the family.

Today, the town is the only Waterloo in the world outside Europe that is predominantly French-speaking; the remainder are all located in English-speaking regions.

Population

Population trend:

Language

Mother tongue language (2006)

Twin Cities

Waterloo, Quebec, was bound in 1957 with the town of Waterloo in Belgium. To commemorate this union each of the two Waterloos have in them a statue representing a little boy and a small girl sheltering under a mushroom.

References

Waterloo, Quebec Wikipedia


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