Jonathan Cohen's photos with the keyword: Old Montréal
Souvenirs with Owls – Notre-Dame Street near Bonse…
La Cour Municipale – Gosford Street viewed from No…
Gyring and Gimbling in the Wabe – Place de la Dauv…
26 Aug 2015 |
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Place de La Dauversière is a landscaped space for rest and relaxation that opened in 1997. Located across the street from Montréal’s city hall, it is named for Jérôme Le Royer de La Dauversière (1597–1659), founder of the Société de Notre-Dame, which in turn was an instrument in the founding of Montréal. It occupies the site of the house of the merchant Jacques Lemoine Despins, built during the 1750s. Place de La Dauversière recalls the memory of Jérôme le Royer de la Dauversière, one of the founders of Montréal. The current oasis replaced a concrete and asphalt multilevel parking facility.
Jacob Wurtele House – Place Jacques-Cartier, Montr…
26 Aug 2015 |
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This stone house was built in 1804 on the site of a wooden structure that was torn down to create space for it. The stone mason was Nicolas Morin and Charles-Simon Delorme was responsible for the woodwork. The new building originally had two storeys. Its first owner was Jacob Wurtele, an innkeeper of German origin. Since Wurtele already had another establishment on the Place Royale, it is possible that he leased his new house to tenants. However, it seems that by 1810 he was receiving guests in this new building and was living in it himself. Wurtele died the following year. He left all his property to his widow, Sarah Bruner. She remarried twice: the first time to William Joshua Andrews and then to Moses Knapp. Sarah Bruner died in 1819. In 1822, The house was seized by the sheriff and sold as a result of a lawsuit undertaken against Moses Knapp by the children of Wurtele and Bruner.
Thomas Del Vecchio, another innkeeper, bought the house. He added a third floor to the building in 1825. Del Vecchio died in 1826 and his heirs continued to own the hotel until 1912, although the name of the establishment changed several times. A fourth floor – made of brick – was added to the building around 1900 and wooden stables were built in the back yard. Around 1910, the building was sold to Pacific Vandelac whose family operated a hotel and tavern on the premises for some 50 years. During the 1920’s the stables were converted into market stalls.
In 1961 the city of Montreal expropriated the property with the intention of turning it into an underground parking garage. Thankfully, the renewed interest in Old Montreal as an historical site led to the preservation and restoration of the building before it could be demolished. The fourth floor was removed, as were the wooden market stalls. It now houses a Ben & Jerry’s Ice Cream shop.
$10 Friends – Place Jacques-Cartier, Montréal, Qué…
21 Aug 2015 |
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The Caricaturist is Out – Place Jacques-Cartier, M…
Inuk-shock – St-Paul Street at Place Jacques-Carti…
21 Aug 2015 |
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An inuksuk is a man-made stone landmark or cairn used by the Inuit, Inupiat, Kalaallit, Yupik, and other peoples of the Arctic region of North America. The word inuksuk means "something which acts for or performs the function of a person." These structures are found from Alaska to Greenland. This region, above the Arctic Circle, is dominated by the tundra biome and has areas with few natural landmarks.
The inuksuk may have been used for navigation, as a point of reference, a marker for travel routes, fishing places, camps, hunting grounds, places of veneration, drift fences used in hunting or to mark a food cache. Historically, the most common type of inuksuk is a single stone positioned in an upright manner. There is some debate as to whether the appearance of human- or cross-shaped cairns developed in the Inuit culture before the arrival of European missionaries and explorers. The size of some inuksuit suggest that the construction was often a communal effort.
I found this plastic inuksuk in a tourist souvenir shop in Old Montreal. The statue was made in China.
Snow Globes – St-Paul Street at Place Jacques-Cart…
Do Not Feed the Tourists – St-Paul Street at Place…
21 Aug 2015 |
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