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Keywords: sainte-catherine-de-la-jacques-cartier | quebec | 
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![[Sainte-Catherine-de-la-Jacques-Cartier]](../images/c/ca-qccjc.gif) image by Ivan Sache, 
30 March 2017
 image by Ivan Sache, 
30 March 2017See also:
The municipality of Sainte-Catherine-de-la-Jacques-Cartier (7,706 inhabitants 
in 2016; 12,001 ha) is located on river Jacques-Cartier.
Sainte-Catherine 
was settled by Alexandre Peuvret de Mesnu, Lord of Gaudarville, who was granted 
on 20 February 1693 the domain of Fossambault, named for his mother, 
Marie-Catherine Nau de Fossambault. While his two sons died without male heirs, 
his sister, Marie-Catherine Peuvret, married Ignace Juchereau Duchesnay; their 
son, Antoine Juchereau Duchesnay, inherited the domains of Gaudarville and 
Fossambault. His own son, Michel-Louis Juchereau Duchesnay, commissioned Irish 
immigrants to settle the area, establishing in October 1821 the Saint-Patrice 
mission. He also erected a manor and a mill. Antoine Juchereau Duchesnay II 
succeeded his father until the abolishment of the feudal system in 1854.
The parish of Sainte-Catherine was established in 1824, while the parish 
municipality of Sainte-Catherine was created in 1855. The municipality lost a 
significant part of its territory following the erection of the municipalities 
of Lac-Saint-Joseph (1936), Shannon (1946), and Fossambault-sur-le-Lac (1949).
http://www.villescjc.com - Municipal 
website
Sainte-Catherine is the birth place of Anne Hébert (1916-3000), a poet ("Le 
tombeau des rois", 1983), playwright and novelist ("Kamouraska", 1970, "Les 
enfants du sabbat", 1975; "Les fous de Bassan", 1982) of international fame, and 
the residence of her cousin, the poet Hector de Saint-Denys Garneau (1912-1943).
http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/anne-hebert/ - Biography, 
The Canadian Encylopedia
Ivan Sache, 30 March 2017
The flag of Sainte-Catherine-de-la-Jacques-Cartier is white with the 
municipal coat of arms.
Photo
http://www.magazineprestige.com/Sainte-Catherine-de-la-Jacques-Cartier-Entre-nature-et-urbanite
The arms of Sainte-Catherine, designed in 1965 by the parish priest 
Jean-Paul Gélina, recall the pioneers who settled the region and the 
idiosyncratic features of the environment. Above the shield, the clover leaf 
recalls the Irish pioneers; while the arrows represent the many tourists present 
since the very beginning of colonization. The red field is a symbol of the 
ancestors' faith and blood. The two half-heels and the sword symbolize the 
martyr of St. Catherine of Alexandria, the parish's patron saint. The fess wavy 
divides the shield into two parts, as river Jacques-Cartier divides the town. 
The potato heap represents a flourishing crop. The old plane recalls the wood 
craftsmen and carpenters. Beneath the shield, the motto "SAGESSE ET BEAUTÉ" 
(Wisdom and Beauty) recalls St. Catherine's legendary wisdom and the beauty of 
the site, highlighted by poems. The shield is supported by five oak leaves on 
each side, recalling the Duchesnay forestry school and the ten provinces of 
Canada.
http://www.villescjc.com/scjc.asp?no=882 - Municipal website
The 
School of Foresters of Quebec was transferred in 1935 to the Berthierville 
nursery to Duchesnay, where a village was built to house the students and 
professors. The Duchesnay Forest Station was established in 1990, as a center of 
education, training, research and experimentation in forest science. The 
practice sawmill founded in 1946 was totally revamped in 2000. The station was 
renamed in 2001 as the Duchesnay Forestry and Wood Technology School.
http://www.cscapitale.qc.ca/duchesnay/default.html - Official website
Ivan Sache, 30 March 2017