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La Prairie, Quebec (Canada)
Montérégie
Last modified: 2017-04-08 by rob raeside
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![[La Prairie flag]](../images/c/ca-qclap.gif) image by Ivan Sache, 23 March 2017
image by Ivan Sache, 23 March 2017
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The municipality of La Prairie (French, The Meadow; 24,948 inhabitants 
in 2016; 4,328 ha) is located on the confluence of rivers Saint-Laurent and 
Saint-Jacques.
La Prairie developed around a mission established in 1667 
by the Society of Jesus. Since coexistence with the French colonists proved
to be difficult, the Amerindian members of the mission soon moved 
westwards. A flour mill was erected in 1687; the wooden fence encircling the 
missions repelled in 1692 an attack by mercenaries from New England. A few 
years later, a small village emerged around a wooden church.
The 
population of the village significantly increased in the 18th century; for 
the sake of security, the village was maintained within the fence, while a 
stone church was built in 1705. La Prairie became a transit place for 
commercial exchanges between Montréal and New England; the village was 
settled by several English-speaking traders following the English conquest 
in 1760. Increased several times, the fence was eventually deemed obsolete 
and new houses were built out of the fortified village.
The wealth of La 
Prairie increased in the 19th century, trade being boosted by steam 
navigation, which started in 1808. The big blaze that broke out in 1848 and 
the building of the Victoria Bridge, however, initiated the decline of the 
town.
http://www.ville.laprairie.qc.ca/ - Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 23 March 2017
The flag
  The flag of La Prairie is white with the municipal logo.
Photo:
  
  http://www.waymarking.com/waymarks/WMP32E_La_Prairie_Qc_Canada 
  Blue and green represent harmony with the natural environment, calm, new 
  horizons, and the perfect association of water and greenness formed by the 
  river town. The circle formed by the letters "L" is a representation of the 
  propeller of the steamboats than once connected Montréal and La prairie, and 
  of the wheels of the locomotives of the first railway that connected the town 
  and Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu. The Gothic-inspired font used for letter "L" 
  recalls building in (neo-)Gothic style erected in Old La Prairie more than 
  three centuries ago; inverted, it evokes a modern-designed house and 
  highlights the significance of the residential sector of the town. The wavy 
  lines symbolize river Saint-Laurent.
  
  http://www.ville.laprairie.qc.ca/la-ville.php?ville=5 - Municipal website
Ivan Sache, 23 March 2017