In the Pink – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Québec
Copper Coloured Flowers – Botanical Garden, Montré…
Hodge Podge – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Québec
Purple Pods – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Québec
Urn Plant – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Québec
Red Guzmania – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Québec
Neoregelia "Spirit of '76" – Botanical Garden, Mon…
"Lobster Claws" – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Québ…
Orange Bromeliad – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Qué…
"Flaming Sword" – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Québ…
In Tip-Top Shape – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Qué…
Neoregelia "Nancy Victoria" – Botanical Garden, Mo…
Pink Cactus Flowers – Botanical Garden, Montréal,…
Ruffled Head Gear – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Qu…
Turk’s cap cactus – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Qu…
"Bald Old Man" Cactus – Botanical Garden, Montréal…
"Don't Touch Me; Don't Leave Me!" – Botanical Gard…
"Silver Cluster" Cactus – Botanical Garden, Montré…
Queen Sago – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Québec
Astrophytum ornatum – Botanical Garden, Montréal,…
"Crown" Cactus – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Québe…
The Cactus Room – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Québ…
"Donald’s Crown" – Botanical Garden, Montréal, Qué…
"Citius, Altius, Fortius" – Pie-IX Metro Station,…
Parking for Park Avenue Peacocks – Park Avenue abo…
Imperial Boots – Rue de Bleury below Sherbrooke St…
The Caron Building – Rue de Bleury above Avenue du…
Parking Lot Attendants – Rue de Bleury above Avenu…
Smoke Gets in Your Eye – Avenue du Président-Kenne…
Place de la Cathédrale – 600 de Maisonneuve West,…
House of Jazz – Aylmer Street at Avenue du Préside…
Pyramid Selling – Avenue du Président-Kennedy at A…
Pink Reflections – Avenue du Président-Kennedy loo…
Le Caveau was Here – Victoria Street at Avenue du…
Urban Totem – McCord Museum, Victoria Street below…
The "Urban Forest" – McCord Museum, Sherbrooke Str…
Number 752 – Sherbrooke Street West, Montréal, Qué…
James "Snidely Whiplash" McGill – McGill Universit…
Across from McGill University – Sherbrooke Street…
All Shapes and Sizes – McGill University, Montréal…
Theological College – McGill University, Montréal,…
Milton and Aylmer Streets – Montréal, Québec
The Word Book Shop – Milton Street, Montréal, Québ…
The Corner of Milton and Hutchison Streets – Montr…
The Nose Have It – Montréal, Québec
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Jackie Robinson – Pie-IX Metro Station, Montréal, Québec


Jack Roosevelt "Jackie" Robinson (January 31, 1919 – October 24, 1972) was the first African American to play in Major League Baseball since the 1880’s. The example of Jackie Robinson’s character and unquestionable talent challenged the traditional basis of segregation, which then marked many other aspects of American life, and contributed significantly to the Civil Rights Movement.
Following honourable service in World War II, Robinson played for the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro League before the Brooklyn Dodgers signed him. He spent the 1946 season with the Montreal Royals of the International League, the Dodgers’ premier farm team..
During that year, Robinson lived in a French Canadian working class neighbourhood with his wife, Rachel. In a 1987 editorial for the New York Times on the 40th annivesary of his milestone, Rachel Robinson reflected on their time on de Gaspé Street after a difficult experience enduring discrimination in spring training in Florida. "We left the South bruised, stimulated, and more contemplative than we arrived. A more resilient pair. Had it not been for the fact that we broke in in Montreal, I doubt seriously we could have made the grade so rapidly," Jackie Robinson himself said in a 1964 CBC interview. "The fans there were just fantastic and my wife and I have nothing but the greatest memories. Our totally opposite experience in Montreal later that year provided us with an excellent springboard into the majors … Montreal and then Brooklyn became special havens where we gradually regained our sense of ourselves and our dignity."
Jackie Robinson died in 1972. This statue by Jules Lasalle was dedicated on May 16, 1987 by the Montreal Expos baseball club in the presence of his widow.
Following honourable service in World War II, Robinson played for the Kansas City Monarchs of the Negro League before the Brooklyn Dodgers signed him. He spent the 1946 season with the Montreal Royals of the International League, the Dodgers’ premier farm team..
During that year, Robinson lived in a French Canadian working class neighbourhood with his wife, Rachel. In a 1987 editorial for the New York Times on the 40th annivesary of his milestone, Rachel Robinson reflected on their time on de Gaspé Street after a difficult experience enduring discrimination in spring training in Florida. "We left the South bruised, stimulated, and more contemplative than we arrived. A more resilient pair. Had it not been for the fact that we broke in in Montreal, I doubt seriously we could have made the grade so rapidly," Jackie Robinson himself said in a 1964 CBC interview. "The fans there were just fantastic and my wife and I have nothing but the greatest memories. Our totally opposite experience in Montreal later that year provided us with an excellent springboard into the majors … Montreal and then Brooklyn became special havens where we gradually regained our sense of ourselves and our dignity."
Jackie Robinson died in 1972. This statue by Jules Lasalle was dedicated on May 16, 1987 by the Montreal Expos baseball club in the presence of his widow.
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