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Keywords: berthierville | quebec | 
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by Ivan Sache, 10 July 2019See also:
The municipality of Berthierville (4,228 inhabitants in 2018; 689 ha) is 
  located 25 km south-east of D'Autray, 70 km south-west of  Trois-Rivières), 
  and 80 km north-east of Montreal.
Berthierville is named for Captain 
  Alexandre Berthier (1638-1708), first lord of the place in 1672. Born in 
  Bergerac (France) in a Huguenot family, as Isaac Berthier, he landed in Quebec 
  on 30 June 1665 among the troops sent from the Antilles by Alexandre de 
  Prouville de Tracy to submit the Iroquois. A few months later, he converted to 
  the Roman Catholic religion and changed his surname to Alexandre, which led 
  some historians to believe that there were indeed two captains named Berthier. 
  Commander of the Assomption Fort in Saint-Jean and of the rear-guard troops in 
  autumn 1666, Berthier was then repatriated to France with the Carignan 
  Regiment. Back to Quebec in 1570, he was granted on 29 October 1672 the domain 
  of Bellechasse (Berthier-en-bas) by Jean Talon, Intendant (Governor) of 
  Nouvelle-France (1665-1668 / 1670-1672). The next year, he acquired the domain 
  of Villemur (Berthier-en-haut) from Hugues Randin. Berthier settled and 
  increased his domains: the 1681 census records him as the most important 
  farmer in Villemur. He then settled in Berthier-en-bas where he commanded the 
  local militia. Member of the Quebec War Council in 1682, Berthier was proposed 
  as the Governor of Montreal in 1683, to no avail.
After Berthier's 
  death, his domain was acquired on 25 April 1718 by a merchant from Montreal, 
  Pierre de Lestage (1682-1743); on 7 March 1765, his nephews sold the domain to 
  James Cuthbert (1769-1849). Born in an old Scottish noble family, Cuthbert 
  served in the British navy and then commanded his own infantry company; he 
  left the army in 1765. Appointed member of the Quebec Council by General 
  Murray on 14 June 1766 and, the same year, Judge, Cuthbert was a main opponent 
  to Guy Carleton, Murray's successor as Lieutenant-Governor. Berthier was 
  captured during the 1776-1777 American invasion, while his manor was burned 
  down and his domain looted. Back to Canada, Berthier restored his domain and 
  seated at the Legislative Council, where he had been appointed in 1775. A main 
  opponent to Governor Haldimand, Berthier was expelled from the Council in 
  1786. A wealthy lord, Cuthbert had too many political enemies to be a 
  successful politician. He attempted in 1792 to be elected at the Chamber, to 
  no avail; his appeals at the local and European British authorities, as well 
  as his requests to be named Baronet and Colonel, were not considered.
  The municipality of Berthier-en-Haut was established on 1 July 1845, to be 
  incorporated two years later to the county municipality of Berthier, which was 
  itself divided around 1850 into two municipalities, Berthier No. I and 
  Berthier No. II. The Village of Berthier was formed on 14 April 1852 from part 
  of Berthier No. I, to be transformed into the town ("ville") of Berthier on 18 
  September 1865. The town was eventually renamed to Berthierville in 1942.
  
  http://www.biographi.ca/fr/bio/berthier_isaac_2E.html 
  
  http://www.biographi.ca/fr/bio/cuthbert_james_4F.html 
Dictionnaire 
  biographique du Canada
  
  https://www.ville.berthierville.qc.ca/ 
Municipal website
  Berthierville is home of a museum dedicated to the iconic racing driver Gilles 
  Villeneuve (1950-1982), who resided in the town for most of his life. 
  Originally specialized in snowmobile racing, Villeneuve was hired by Ferrari 
  to compete in Formula One World Championship. He won six Grand Prix (1978: 
  Canada; 1979: South Africa, United States West and United States East; 1981: 
  Monaco and Spain). "The faster driver in the history of motor racing" 
  according to his former teammate Jody Scheckter, Gilles Villeneuve died in 
  1982 in a terrible crash during the qualifying session of the Belgium Grand 
  Prix in Zolder. His body, repatriated the next day by a Boeing 707 chartered 
  by the Canadian Army, was exposed in the Berthierville cultural center, where 
  more than 5,000 people paid him a last homage. His funeral was attended by 
  Pierre Elliott Trudeau, Prime Minister of Canada, René Lévesque, Prime 
  Minister of Quebec, and Cardinal Paul-Émile Léger, Archbishop Emeritus of 
  Montreal. His son, Jacques Villeneuve (b. 1971) won 11 Formula One Grand Prix 
  (all with Williams-Renault; 4 in 2016 an 7 in 2017, the year he claimed the
  
title of Champion of the World in 1997).
  http://museegillesvilleneuve.com, 
  Gilles Villeneuve Museum website
  
  http://archives.radio-canada.ca/sports/course_automobile/clips/1507/ Radio 
  Canada, 12 May 1982
The legendary wheel-banging duel between Gilles 
  Villeneuve and René Arnoux happened on 1 July 1979 in Dijon, during the French 
  Grand Prix. Considered as the greatest duel in Formula One history, the duel 
  for the second position overshadowed the victory claimed by Jean-Pierre 
  Jabouille, the first win for him, for Renault, and for a turbocharged car.
  
  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QtZ0wv1I8yc 
The flag of 
  Berthierville, as shown on a black and white photo featuring Gilles and 
  Jacques Villeneuve (Gilles Villeneuve Museum) is (most probably) white with 
  the municipal coat of arms in the center.
Photo:
  
  https://museegillesvilleneuve.com/gilles-jacques-drapeau-berthier/ 
  
The arms of Berthierville, designed in 1950, recall the main events of the 
  history of the town. The arms are vertically divided into three equally wide 
  fields. In the first, red, field, the yellow dragon, a symbol of force and 
  pride, is the emblem of Bergerac, the birth town of Captain Alexandre Berthier. 
  The dragon holds a sword recalling Berthier's military value and bellicose 
  courage; the captain was gloriously injured when fighting for his faith and 
  his king. In the second field, the main, green part is charged with a gray 
  retort recalling the Melchers distillery, one of the town's two main 
  industries (founded in 1898 by Joseph-Marcellin Wilson in a former sugar mill 
  and closed in 1978, this was the first gin distillery established in Canada); 
  on the retort, the red flames represents the other industry, the match factory 
  ran by Eddy Match Co. Ltd. (1919-1957). The field's upper part, blue, is 
  charged with a gray sheep wearing a yellow halo. This is a symbol of Saint 
  Genevieve of Paris, the parish patron saint, who was a humble shepherdess. The 
  third division features the arms of Cuthbert, "Or a fess gules in chief a 
  wyvern vert". The Cuthbert claimed to descend from St. Cuthbert, a Scottish 
  monk (d. 681; Bishop of Lindisfarne and patron saint of the old Kingdom of 
  Northumbria) reputed to be the first human inhabitant of the devil and 
  snake-infested Farne islands. Beneath the shield, a scroll azure is charged 
  with "VILLE DE 
BERTHIERVILLE" in letters sable.
  
  https://www.ville.berthierville.qc.ca/decouvrir-berthierville/armoirie/
  
Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 10 July 2019