Last modified: 2020-05-12 by rob raeside
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White flag with emblem in front of the seat of the municipality
https://www.msn.com/fr-ca/actualites/faits-divers/la-sq-intervient-pour-un-conseiller-municipal-agressif-dans-charlevoix/ar-BBX0fco
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/1f/%C3%89difice_municipal_Saint-Aim%C3%A9-des-Lacs.JPG
Olivier Touzeau, 17 April 2020
The municipality of Saint-Aimé-des-Lacs was established by a Decree signed on
7 September 1949 by Jean Bruchési, Undersecretary of the Quebec Province, and
promulgated on 30 September 1949.
The region was settled in the 1820,
originally around Lake Sainte-Marie, aka Petit Lac (Smaller Lake). Saint-Aimé
was incorporated around 1855 to the parish of Sainte-Agnès; the inhabitants of
the canton of De Sales complained about the remoteness of the church. To solve
the issue, the parish priest of Sainte-Agnès encouraged in 1941 the erection of
a chapel near the Smaller Lake. The inhabitants of De Sales obtained in 1935 the
erection of a separate municipality, while the parishes of Saint-Aimé des Lacs
and Notre-Dame-des-Monts were established in 1942 and 1947, respectively. There
were eventually two municipalities (Sainte-Agnès and De Sales) and three
parishes (Sainte-Agnès, De Sales and Saint-Aimé-des-Lacs), which prompted to the
separation of the municipality and parish of Saint-Aimé-des-Lacs.
A mica
mine was discovered at the end of the 19th century near Lake Pieds-des-Monts.
The mine was exploited from 1893 to 1914 by the Canadian Mica Company, and,
subsequently by the Canadian General Mining Company; the extracted ore was
hipped by boat to Quebec and Montreal.
The Charlevoix Radium and Mining
Company resumed the exploitation of the mine in 1935; activity was stopped in
1945 after the government had refused to supply electricity to the mine.
From 1920 to 1940, Lake Nairne was used as a base for floatplanes operated by
the Canadian Transcontinental Company to transport postal mail to Côte-Nord (the
region located on the northern shore of the estuary of the Saint-Lawrence and
further northwards). On 13 April 1928, the "Bremen" aircraft piloted by Hermann
Köhl, Gunther von Hühnefeld and James Fitzmaurice landed on Greenly island after
a transatlantic flight. The Canadian government commissioned the Canadian
Transcontinental Company to rescue the pilots. On 14 April, a Fairchild plane
piloted by Louis Cuisinier, Duke Schiller and Eugène Thibault, left the Lake
Nairne base to reach Greenly island after a step in Quebec. The plane brought
back Fitzmaurice to Lake Nairne on 18 April.
On 17 April, a second plane
piloted by Roméo Vachon and Georges Ouellet transported four journalists to the
island. It was eventually found that the "Bremen" could not be repaired; the
three pilots were brought back to Lake Nairne by Vachon on 26 April.
The
arms of Saint-Aimé-des-Lacs feature in base a fleur-de-lis representing Quebec
and in the center the church, symbolizing the heart of the village and its
inhabitants.
The several lakes highlighted in the name of the municipality
are represented by Lake Nairne and Lake Sainte-Marie. The water skier and the
fisher emphasize the significance of tourism for the municipality.
The green
trees recall that the forest has been and still is a main source of income for
the municipality.
River Malbaie that borders the village is represented on
the shield's right with two salmon.
In the background, the mountains are
crowned by a sundown conveying an atmosphere of joy and well-being. The mountain
is locally known as the Drowned Woman due to its shape, recalling a woman lying
on her back. The mountain's namesake would be a young Indian woman who drowned
into Lake Nairne when heading to her white lover living in a nearby hamlet.
https://www.saintaimedeslacs.ca/demographie - Municipal website
Ivan
Sache, 18 April 2020
image by Olivier Touzeau, 17 April 2020
An orange flag with the emblem can be seen inside the RCM:
https://www.lecharlevoisien.com/2019/09/18/elections-six-choses-a-regler-selon-sylvain-tremblay/
Olivier Touzeau, 17 April 2020