The 16th and 17th Centuries
Before Montreal was a city, it was Hochelaga, a village which the Iroquois had established at the foot of Mount Royal. In 1535, French explorer Jacques Cartier discovered Hochelaga and claimed the entire St. Lawrence valley for France.
Seventy years later when French explorer Samuel de Champlain arrived, he reported that these early Iroquois settlements had disappeared from the St. Lawrence valley, due to inter-tribal wars, European disease and migration.
Champlain founded a permanent French settlement up river in Quebec City, in 1608.
Paul Chomeday de Maisonneuve, founder of Montreal. Photo: J. Oleski
The founder of Ville-Marie, the precursor to Montreal, was Paul Chomedy de Maisonneuve (1612 - 1676), an aristocrat and French military officer. He joined the military at thirteen and was hired by Jesuits to build a mission on Montreal Island.
In 1641, Maisonneuve was in Quebec City, where the governor tried to dissuade Maisonneuve from establishing a mission in the midst of the unstable Iroquois territory.
Maisonneuve did establish the settlement of Ville-Marie on the island of Montreal, where he also built a chapel and Ville-Marie's first hospital, the Hotel Dieu, under the direction of lay nurse, Jeanne Mance.

Nurse Jeanne Mance atop Hotel Dieu, Montreal's first hospital. Photograph, courtesy of Gene Arboit.
Relations between the French and the Algonquins were peaceful during the first year but the flood of 1643 threatened the newly founded settlement of Ville-Marie.
Maisonneuve prayed to the Virgin Mary to stop the flood. The flood stopped and Maisonneuve erected a cross on the top of Mount Royal, where you can see it standing today.

The Cross on Mount Royal, an earlier version of which was first erected by Paul Chomeday de Maisonneuve in 1643, seen at night. Visitors to Montreal can spot the Cross from the highway or from an airplane, many miles away, day or night. Years ago, the Cross would be lit with red bulbs during Lent. Photo, courtesy of Wikipedia, public domain.
Although relations with the Algonquins were peaceful, it was not so with the Iroquois. Horrible destruction continued on both sides, with both Iroquois and colonists being decimated during the next several years.
By 1652, Maisonneuve returned to France to shore up more military personnel for New France.
Maisonneuve returned to Montreal with 100 reservists to add to the barely sustaining population of 50 in Montreal. Over time, Montreal grew.
Many persons of French Canadian descent in Quebec have Aboriginal (Native Canadian Indian) blood in them, due to intermarriage and decimation of the Iroquois and other tribes during colonization.
Maisonneuve returned to France, where he died in 1676.
The 18th Century
Ville-Marie became a leading fur trading center and remained a French colony until 1760, when Pierre Francois de Rigaud, the Marquis de Vaudreuil-Cavagnal, surrendered Ville-Marie to the British under Jeffrey Amherst, during the French and Indian Wars.
In 1763, the Treaty of Paris ended the Seven Years' War and ceded New France to the Kingdom of Great Britain, thus further making life difficult for the first European colonists, the French.
In the decades that followed the ceding of New France to Great Britain, Scottish emigrants established the North West fur trading Company to rival Hudson's Bay Company.
The 19th Century
In the 19th century, it was this English-speaking community of Scottish emigrants who developed a wealthy merchant class, which they would leverage to their advantage and economically, culturally and politically oppress the French Canadians in Quebec.
It was James McGill (a great uncle of Gather member David McGill) who bequeathed money with which to establish Canada's first university, McGill.

James McGill, Scottish immigrant and wealthy Montreal merchant, benefactor of McGill University. Photo courtesy of Gene Arboit, Wikimedia Creative Commons.

An old photo of McGill University, viewed from Roddick Gates along Sherbrooke Street West, looking toward the Arts Building, where the English Department is located. Photo: KEO
Montreal was incorporated as a city in 1832. During the 19th century, the industrial and economic boom attracted French Canadian laborers from the Quebec countryside to live in cities such as Saint Henri and Maisonneuve. English, Scottish and Irish settlers lived in Point St. Charles and Griffintown.
Montreal soon became the seat of financial and political power for English and French Canadians. By 1852, Montreal had 60,000 inhabitants; a few years later, it was the largest city in the British Commonwealth in North America.
Montreal grew rapidly in the latter 19th century and continued this growth into the 20th century.
The 20th Century: Prohibition Brings Tourists, Money and Glamor to Montreal
During Prohibition, Montreal was a haven for American bootleggers who drove their souped up cars past Southern Sheriffs in a race to the border. Most times, the preferred destination was Montreal.
The Bronfman family of Montreal was the noted importer of Seagram's Canadian Whiskey.
The presence of booze in Montreal quickly turned Montreal into a tourist haven for deprived Americans looking to drink. In turn, alcohol brought other pleasures. Sin city existed before Las Vegas and the name of this sin city was Montreal.
Burlesque houses, varietal theatre and jazz clubs thrived during this era. Canadians and Americans would travel to Montreal to partake in this hedonistic existence.
Sammy Davis Jr. was said to have tap danced with a girl from St. Henri when he was about seven years old. Louis Armstrong, Cab Calloway,and numerous other visiting jazz greats thrived in the nightclubs of Montreal during Prohibition and after.
It was Prohibition that established Montreal as the nightlife capital of Canada, and one of the nightlife capitals of North America.
Famed burlesque artist Lili St. Cyr, whose den was Ste. Catherine Street's Gayety Theatre, would greet crowds with her trademark phrase, "Hello Suckers!"
The 1950s: Drapeau Cleans Up Montreal
This nightlife was quite open by American standards in the early part of the 20th century and continued this way until the 1950s, when Montreal Mayor Jean Drapeau imposed a closing time on bars. This closing time was 3 a.m.
In the 1950s, Drapeau ran an investigation to discover the big names who were frequenting the burlesque houses and brothels in Montreal.
Now, when the bars close at 3 a.m. anyone over the age of 18 (and some younger teens, I can assure you) spill out of the clubs in force, often doing crazy things, such as jumping on top of taxi cabs until literally booted off.

An old photo of Ben's Restaurant on Ste. Catherine Street West. 1908 - 2006. Photo: K.E.Oleski
Ben's restaurant was a famous restaurant and deli that stayed open until 4 a.m. for revelers who needed a smoked meat sandwich (or a pot or two of coffee) before returning home. Photos of celebrities who had eaten at Ben's - such as Marilyn Monroe, Dean Martin, Bing Crosby, Elvis and dozens of others, lined the walls.
Beginning in the 1950s and continuing to the 1960s, Drapeau launched a unique modernization of Montreal: he built the Metro subway system, then built the the famous underground city, a collection of underground malls at each Metro stop so that Montrealers could shop without needing to go outside during the cold winter months.
More convenient to residents who lived in the high-rise office and apartment towers that are built on top of the Metro stations, the underground city is a welcome respite for all those who suffer through Montreal's average January cold temperature of 5 to 13 degrees Fahrenheit, - a daily average that is colder than either St. Petersburg or Moscow.
The wind chill often reaches many degrees below 0 - up to 84 below.Temperatures this cold make staying outside for any length of time dangerous. Frostbite is a real concern during these months.
Montrealers dress functionally, often in down or fur coats. Heavy scarves 6 or 8 feet long, wrapped around the face (leaving only slits for eyes) are common. Hats are pulled down to cover the ears. Down or leather gloves, plus long john underclothing and snow-proof and waterproof boots complete the outfit.
If you do travel to Montreal during the winter, think SKI - dress as you would for a ski slope. Forget fashion, forget how you look, just be prepared. Many Americans under dress and report a bad experience with winter in Montreal.

Place Ville Marie, Montreal's first skyscraper, seen from bottom looking upward, built in the shape of a cross. There is the Place Ville Marie shopping mall underneath and the Place Ville Marie Metro stop. This is part of the underground city Montreal is famous for. Shoppers can go from one Metro stop to another in the winter without having to venture outside. Photo: K.E.Oleski
During the 1960s, American professionals and draft dodgers emigrated to Montreal and other parts of Canada in significant numbers, seeking jobs or politcal amnesty. The 1960s was a heady time to be in Montreal, a city that had toned down its earlier prohibition-era reputation but which nevertheless enjoyed a looser atmosphere of bon vivant conviviality than many American cities of the era.
A 1967 aerial view of the Expo 67 islands of (St. Helen's) Ile Sainte-Helene on the left and (Notre Dame) Ile Notre-Dame on the right, with most of the Expo 67 site in view, except Habitat and the pavilions on la Cité du Havre. Source: the National Archives of Canada, courtesy of Wikipedia, public domain.
It was Drapeau's grand vision to make Montreal an international city: this he accomplished with bringing Expo 67 and the 1976 Summer Olympics to Montreal.
Polticial Instability in the 1960s and 1970s
The 1970's ushered in many political changes and the rise of the Parti Quebecois (PQ) to power. French Canadians in Quebec had suffered from centuries of oppression from English-Canadians, and the PQ (Pequistes) wanted to re-establish French Canadian dominance in Quebec, a mostly French speaking Province.
One need only to have lived in Montreal before the 1970s to see that affluence was clustered in relatively few towns, which were mostly English-speaking enclaves: Westmount or Town of Mount Royal, or in the comfortable middle class-to upper middle class towns of Montreal West and Notre Dame de Grace.
Vast sections of Montreal east of St. Laurent and many towns west of St. Laurent were economically deprived and mostly French speaking.
In 1969, mailboxes on the street in my home in Westmount were removed because some had been bombed. We had many bomb scares during my high school at Westmount High that year. Though I was a newcomer, the anger the French Canadians felt toward the English was palpable.
I quickly learned the phrase, Merde aux Anglais (prounounced Maudsy Onglay, which literally means, Shit on the English.)
Since 1963, the terrorist group, the Front de libération du Québec (FLQ) carried out several bombings that resulted in the deaths of six people. These were mostly the mail box bombings, such as those in Westmount and other English towns.
But on February 13, 1969, the Montreal Stock Exchange was bombed, which caused extensive damage and injured 27 people. The FLQ had stolen several tons of dynamite from military and industrial sites. The FLQ then threatened the public that more attacks were to come.
1970
By 1970, twenty-three FLQ members were in jail, including four convicted of murder. In February, two men were arrested in Montreal for possession of a sawn-off shotgun and a communiqué announcing the kidnapping of the Israeli consul. Police raids during this time yielded significant munitions weaponry and dynamite.
A draft of a ransom note to be used for the kidnapping of the American consul was also found during these raids.
This was a dangerous time to be in Quebec. As a teen, I knew little and did not understand the serious nature of all that was going on.
Demonstrations were becoming increasingly violent, such as the violent Quebec Libre demonstration in which protestors yelled, "Quebec pour les Quebecois" (Quebec for the Quebecers - meaning French Quebecers), in which with molotov cocktails were thrown (I was there, I saw this).
The October Crisis, 1970
The October Crisis of 1970 in Quebec is well known in Quebec but few in the US or elsewhere are familiar with the details.
* On October 5, the FLQ kidnap British Trade Commissioner James Cross, followed by the demand to release convicted or detained FLQ members.
* On October 10, the FLQ kidnap Quebec Labor Minister Pierre Laporte.
* On October 13, reporters ask Trudeau how far he would go to protect peace and he replies, famously: "Just watch me."
* On October 15, in separate events, members of separatist groups speak at the University of Montreal; 3,000 students gather in Montreal in support of the FLQ; many Canadians are rightened by this rally and believe it could cause insurrection.
* On October 16, Trudeau announced the implementation of the War Measures Act, which suspended habeas corpus (so police could enter and search without a warrant), and allowed police to apprehend and keep in custody individuals suspected of terrorist links.
During this time, police did enter private homes. (Wild or not so wild parties brought the police, who confiscated IDs, to return them hours later.)
*On October 16, The FLQ announce Laporte has been executed.l
* On October 30, Rene Levesque, journalist and future Quebec Premier writes that "The Army occupies Quebec. It is unpleasant but undoubtedly necessary in times of crisis."
Hundreds of soldiers were in Montreal and in Westmount, near the American consulate, not far from where we lived.

An excellent book on the October Crisis has been published. The October Crisis, 1970: An Insider's View, by Willaim Tetley, McGill-Queen's University Press, 2006.
ISBN 0773531181
The cover shows Canadian soldiers in Montreal during 1970.
* On November 6, Bernard Lortie is arrested and charged with Laporte's murder.
* On December 3, kidnapped minister Cross is released. Simultaneously, five FLQ terrorists, Marc Carbonneau, Yves Langlois, Jacques Lanctot, Jacques Cossette-Trudel and wife Louise Lanctot are flown to Cuba in Canadian Forces aircraft, arranged by the Canadian government and Fidel Castro.
*On December 27, the remaining three members of the FLQ cell responsible for Laporte's murder are arrested.
Famous quote: Michel Chartrand (an FLQ supporter) said: "We are going to win because there are more boys ready to shoot members of Parliament than there are policemen."
By 1977, Bill 101 was passed, which meant that Quebec's official language would be French - not English and French, as was previously the case. English businesses or instituations, such as McGill University, could do business in English but their outside dealings, including their signage, must be in French.
I thought this was a great step for the French in Quebec, but I was American, not French Canadian. A year later, I left Montreal for Toronto; one year after going to Toronto, I and returned to the US.
* * *
I have visited Montreal dozens of times since.
Carol Roach and I met at the Faubourg mall on St. Catherine Street West, near Concordia University, one of several student hubs in Montreal. (Condordia was once two separate universities, Sir George Williams and Loyola, but they combined in the 1970s to form Concordia.)

Carol Roach. Photo:K. E. Oleski
Carol and I enjoyed cups of lovely coffee, while talking about things Montreal, Gather and everything else under the sun. It is so nice to meet people in the flesh that you've been talking with online for a long time. So much to catch up!
And to continue our tour of Downtown Montreal and the West End, we begin at the site of former Expo 67, located on islands off of Montreal proper.

Former American pavilion at Expo 67. Now the Biosphere. Photo: J. Oleski

La Ronde, the amusement park that was on the Expo 67 site. People still go to La Ronde. Photo: J. Oleski

The Clock tower along the St. Lawrence River in Montreal. Photo: J. Oleski

The Hotel Nelson and old Hotel de Ville in Old Montreal (Vieux Montreal), seen here from the waterfront. Old Montreal has many restaurants, churches, bars, shops and markets. Photo: J. Oleski

The view of Old Montreal and the waterfront area. Photo: J. Oleski

Locks in the waterfront area. In recent decades, the Waterfront has been significantly redeveloped. Photo: J. Oleski

Locks. Photo: J. Oleski

Moshe Safdie's Habitat, a modular apartment development for Expo 67. Photo: J. Oleski
The unique vision that began as Safdie's McGill thesis was originally built in Montreal for Expo 67. A similar project in London has been built.
Originally, these now luxury condos were designed as modular affordable housing. We went on a tour of these unique apartments at Expo, where we saw many design innovations, such as a blue/orange complementary color scheme in the interior design, which was novel at the time.

The Bonsecours Market in Old Montreal (Vieux Montreal). Photo: J. Oleski

The Bonsecours Church, back view, as seen from the port. Photo: J. Oleski
First established in 1657 by Marguerite Bourgeoys, the Bonsecours Church is also known as the Sailor's Church. Mark Twain once remarked of Montreal, 'that there are so many churches in Montreal that one could not throw a brick without hitting a church window.'
Ah, yes, that is what makes Montreal so lovely.

The five-storey Montreal City Hall (Hôtel de Ville) in Old Montreal (Vieux Montreal), was built between 1872 and 1878 and is an example of Second Empire architectural style. The Hotel de Ville is located at 275 Rue Notre Dame Est (Notre Dame Street East) facing place Jacques Cartier. Photo: J. Oleski

Champ de Mars Metro station in Old Montreal (Vieux Montreal), near the Hotel de Ville. Photo: K. Oleski

Street performer along the waterfront. My husband is on the right, helping the performer mount the unicycle. Photo: K. Oleski
Turning West, we are at Crescent Street, outside the Sir Winston Churchill Pub, where many college students and tourists go. What St. Denis street is to the East end (bars, restaurants), Crescent Street is to the West End.

Crescent Street, looking south toward Rene Levesque Boulevard. Photo: K.E.Oleski

The Sir Winston Churchill pub and cafe on Crescent Street. They have happy hour. This drinking establishment is the oldest on Crescent Street, now in its 40th year. Crescent Street draws residents and tourists from all over the West End. You can see that Montrealers do not miss a chance for a sunny afternoon at the Sir Winston Churchill.
Years ago, I drank a bit too much Molson (underage) and danced with friends at the pub next door (it was The Boiler Room, a wild cousin of this genteel, gentllemanly pub) while the sound system piped Janis's Bobby McGee before she met her tragic early death. Photo: K.E. Oleski

Stopping for a sandwich, we are at Nickel's Restaurant on Cote St. Catherine Street, on our trek Westward. Nickels is a chain that Celine Dion owns. You can get excellent smoke meat sandwiches here, as well as Montreal's famous poutin, which is french fries with brown gravy. When in Montreal, be sure to taste the local food. Photo: K.E.Oleski
Continuing our tour, we jut sharply to the West and North, to St. Joseph's Oratory, in Westmount.

St. Joseph's Oratory. Photo courtesy of K. Oleski, Sony CyberShot.
In earlier decades, St. Joseph's is famous for its pilgrimmages of people too crippled to walk these stairs so they crawl. Brother Andre, whose chapel is in the rear of the Oratory, is famous for curing these infirm individuals. Crutches line Brother Andre's chapel. The Oratory has a rare carillon bell that is still in use.
Returning east, we drive along Mount Royal to see the view from the Summit.

Night view of Montreal from the Summit of Mount Royal. The round building in front is the Medical School at McGill, where my parents taught. This is one of two most famous shots from the Summit, the other one being the Olympic Stadium, to the east and far to the left of this photo. This is looking directly south from Mountain, to Downtown. Wikipedia.
In the recent 2006 census, Montreal proper had 1,620,693 inhabitants, with 3,635,571 living in the Metropolitan area. This includes French, English, Italian, Greek, Portuguese and Jewish populations. Montreal is mainly comprised of European, Arab, Black, Latin American and Asian ethnic groups, among others.
There are many things to do in Montreal, but this is true especially in the summer, when the Montreal International Jazz Festival comes to town. I've never been, regrettably, but this is someething I plan for the future.
The Cirque du Soleil is headquartered in Montreal. 
The Cirque du Soleil is headquartered in Montreal. Photographed by Stu Seeker, courtesy of Wikipedia.
Back downtown, we see that what once was Ogilvy's Department store, now is a collection of boutiques, as shown in this composite reflection.

I shot the camera directly into the store window to capture the mannikins and the images of Ste. Catherine Street as reflected in the store window, symbolically representing flux within stasis - our styles and perceptions are in flux but the structures within our lives are in stasis. Photo: K.E.Oleski, Nikon Coolpix.
On our last night, we lit sparklers in Carre St. Louis (Saint Louis Square) on Prince Arthur East and Rue Laval Est, near where we were staying.

Notice the full moon at top right of the photo. In years gone by, poets and would be poets would daydream about Rimbaud and Baudelaire in this artistic neighborhood. Photo, courtesy of K. Oleski, Sony CyberShot.
And now you have now seen some of Montreal, with its 400-year history of cultures that clash and blend in a unique melange that is so appealing to the tourist, a city unique in its offering, a bounty for all who come to see her beauty.
* * *
Every year for the last several years, we stay at Martha's Bed and Breakfast every year, a charming Bed and Breakfast on Rue Laval Est.
In years gone by, Martha Pearson sang opera, as a dramatic soprano.

Now, Martha still sings and also sells her paintings at exhibits. Photo: K.E.Oleski

Painting by Martha Pearson. Photo: K.E.Oleski

Painting by Martha Pearson. Photo: K.E.Oleski

Martha Pearson, proprietor of Relais Montreal Hospitalite. Photo: J. Oleski
Martha's Bed and Breakfast: Breakfast is French Toast, Eggs or Muffins, with juice, coffee, toast, jam.
Visitors from around the world line Martha's dining room table in this B & B that she and daughter Chantal run.
This last visit we chatted amiably with a man and his wife, who were from Lyon. We stay in one of the two basement apartments; a Swedish couple rented the other basement apartment.
Montreal is a place to get away, to see people and places you're not likely to see elsewhere in North America.
* * *
To stay with Martha, here is her site.
Relais Montreal Hospitalite
3977 Avenue Laval
Montreal, PQ
H2W 2H9 Canada
Phone 514- 287-9635/800-363-9635
Fax: 514-287-1007
$$.
Credit cards accepted. Free on-street parking. Close to public transportation, shopping, retail, banks, the mountain, easily accessible to the highway and the countryside. English spoken nearly everywhere. Consumer prices are equivalent to city prices in the US, except for alcohol and tobacco products, which are much higher, due to the sin tax.
Email: Pearson@videotron.ca
And then, after a wonderful trip, it was time to return home.

When you are in line at the border, you will see this International marker. Make sure you have your passport with you and be prepared to wait. We were in line for nearly an hour to enter the United States. Photo: J. Oleski
* * *
Lodging: There are numerous hotels you can find online in Montreal.
For Tourist Information about Montreal:
Tourisme Montreal
1555 Rue Peel, Bureau 600
Montreal, PQ
H3A 3L8 Canada
Phone: 514-844-5400/800-464-7777
Fax:514-844-5757
http://www.tourisme-montreal.org
Email:info@tourisme-montreal.org
Copyright (c) Kathryn Esplin-Oleski, 2007
Part 1 HERE


Comments: 183
Please read and rate my entry:
A Scandalous Overture
So I'm off to give comments and help as many as I can but know that I've enjoyed reading your article as much as the others have. Thanks, friend! :o)
I am thinking of avenues for publishing...
I do have a question though, not related to the essay. How do you make your photos so big. I have tried with no luck on my photo essay's?
Click on this book cover
Voting ends September 18th.
Thank you so much for taking the time to share your wonderful photos and thoughts about Montreal, its past and its present!
Bonnie
Despite my extensive background in the city, I learned things from your essay and appreciated the photos greatly. I've drank Sangria on the balcony of Sir Winston Churchill Pub, eaten early in the morning at Ben's delicatessen after closing out some bar (although official closing time was 3:00 a.m. it was common in some bars to have "last call" at 3:00 a.m. and then you could stay until you finished what you ordered, often several drinks). I can remember being out all night at the bar going for a quick breakfast at some place like Ben's and then going straight to work. I've been on rides in La Ronde, at baseball games in the beautiful (from a distance) and crumbling (close up) Stade Olympique known in English as "the Big O" or "the Big Owe" because of how long it took to pay for the damned thing. I attended Expo 67 and miss riding on the best subway system in North America if not the world. I remember seeing the soldiers on the street in 1970, which really scared me as I was only 11 years old at the time.
However, one small thing I think you got wrong. Its not "merde aux Anglais" but "maudit Anglais" (which is pronounced exactly as you wrote it phonetically in English), and it means "damned English".
Your knowledge of and passion for Montreal is very impressive though. I thank you and I salute you.
I will check that French reference. Somehow I think we are both right.
were simply gorgeous!! The narratives made
me feel as though I was there again!! There
is no other place in the world I would rather
be than Montreal!! It's the tops!
Thank You
Just Me
Barbie
Crisse de chalisse de tabernak de cave! From a YouTube Video:
French Canadian Teaches Swears
I once polled corporate groups for six months and asked where they would ideally choose to live and work in North America. Three standouts, well away from the pack. [in no order] Montreal, Boston and San Francisco. Having lived in all three [well, Montreal every weekend for a year and a half] I think it's because they're all basically 3-4 story cities. (A little high-rise but in one area). They're small and human size. All great walking cities.
Yes, smallish big cities, great to walk in and great cultural centers, all a result of their own unique histories.
You probably could've made it a ten parter with all you know, I'm sure you have enough pictures and must've struggled to decide which to eliminate to make it manageable.
Well done.
Emmett
A very beautiful and informed essay. This and the Part 1 would make a very good traveler's companion to the city. It's personal, succinct, and timely. Certainly, a publishable document.
fz
10
(bad translation of the TV show, COPS.) Bad boys, bad boys, whatcha going do when they come for you.:
Frank, thank you.