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![[Montmagny flag]](../images/c/ca-qcmgn.gif) image
by Masao Okazaki, 10 January 2021
 image
by Masao Okazaki, 10 January 2021See also:
The municipality of Montmagny (11,078 inhabitants in 2019; 14,500 ha) is 
located 60 km east of Lévis.
Montmagny is named for Charles Huault de 
Montmagny (1583-1657), appointed in 1636 the first Governor of New France, who 
was granted the domain of Rivière-du-Sud on 5 May 1646. Huault originated from 
the French town of Montmagny, and added the epithet "de Montmagny" to his name 
to emphasize his social position. The lord did not care much for his domain and 
left New France a few years later.
The domain was acquired in 1654 by 
Louis Couillard de Lespinay. Involved in fur trade, seal hunting, je never 
settled in his domain, preferring fishing cod and salmon on the Saint-Lawrence. 
His descendants subsequently initiated the exploitation of the domain, operating 
grain mills and salmon fisheries. The Couillard family would rule the domain 
until 1759, when they sold the domain because of the English threat.
In 1776, 
the erosion of the banks of the river forced the villagers of Saint-Thomas-de-Montmagny 
to move eastwards, where the town of Montmagny slowly emerged.
The 
municipality of the village of Saint-Thomas-de-Montmagny, established in 1645 
and upgraded in 1883 as the municipality of the town of Saint-Thomas-de-Montmagny, 
was merged in 1966 with the municipality of the parish of Saint-Thomas-de-Montmagny 
to form the town of Montmagny.
The industrial development of the town was 
pushed by the Price family, who developed timber industry. William Price rented 
in 1833 the sawmill owned by Jean-Baptiste Couillard-Dupuy, exploiting several 
forest plots. After his death in 1867, he was succeeded by his two sons, 
William-Evans and David-Edouard. Then the second most important employer in the 
region, the business was increased in 1891 by the third Price brother, 
Evan-John, who built a steam sawmill to increase the production. In 1893, the 
Price company employed 350 workers and operated 20 ships.
Evan-John Price was 
succeeded by his nephew William Price III, who established in 1901 the Montmagny 
Light and Pulp Co., connected to an hydro-electric power plant. Not profitable, 
the company winded up five years later. In 1908, Price founded the Basin 
Electric Light and Power Ltd., which supplied energy to the 78 street candles of 
the town. William Price built a mill in Montmagny in 1912, which was destroyed 
by a blaze in 1920. The Price company winded up in 1938.
The second 
successful developer of Montmagny was Amable Bélanger (1846-1919), who 
established in 1872 a foundry near the railway, replaced in 189 by a stone 
building stilt standing in the downtown. Bélanger, then the town's second most 
important employer, produced plows and, mostly, wood stoves, soon of national 
fame. Bélanger was the first president of the Chamber of Commerce of Montmagny.
Saint-Thomas-de-Montmagny is the birth town of Sir Étienne-Paschal Taché 
(1795-1865). Taché supported the Patriotes rebellion and organized in 1837 an 
assembly of the movement attended by its leaders, Louis-Joseph Papineau and 
Augustin-Norbert Morin, but, as a pacifist, he refused to take the arms. To 
defend the interests of the French Canadians, Taché quit medicine and was 
elected Representative of L'Islet in 1841. Serving twice as the Prime Minister 
of Canada, he promoted the establishment of a confederation of the provinces of 
North America, and is therefore considered as the precursor of modern Canada.
Saint-Thomas-de-Montmagny is the birth town of Louis-Jacques Casault 
(1808-1862), Ordained priest in 1831, Casault founded in 1853 Université Laval, 
the first French-speaking university in Lower-Canada, named for François de 
Laval (1623-1708), first bishop of Quebec (1674-1688), and became its first 
Rector.
Saint-Thomas-de-Montmagny is the birth town of Edwin Bélanger 
(1910-2005), a virtuoso violinist and conductor, who served as the first musical 
and artistic director of the Quebec Symphony Orchestra,n established in 1942 as 
the merger of the Quebec Philharmonic Circle and of the Quebec Symphonic 
Society.
https://www.ville.montmagny.qc.ca 
Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 
10 January 2021
I saw this flag flying in Montmagny in the Summer of 1998. It replicates
  the goose logo on a b- field. The goose logo consists of three landing geese.
  Montmagny is the self-proclaimed capital of the white goose, hence the logo.
  The three geese personify the communitarian spirit and the constancy of the
  city's residents. The flag is quite spectacular, and proves that logo-based
  flags can be attractive when done right.
  
Luc Baronian, 20 May 2005
Image of the flag above is based on a logo on the city's website:
https://www.ville.montmagny.qc.ca
Masao Okazaki, 10 January 2021
Montmagny is self-styled the Capital of Greater Snow Goose. The logo features 
three migrating geese about to land, with simplified but still figurative 
lining. The three geese represent the community spirit and symbolize the 
citizens' energy and constancy.
https://www.ville.montmagny.qc.ca/fr/ville/decouvrir-montmagny/emblemes-logos-et-armoiries
Municipal website
Everything you need to know about the Greater Snow 
Goose at Hinterland Who's Who:
https://www.hww.ca/en/wildlife/birds/greater-snow-goose.html 
Ivan 
Sache, 10 January 2021