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Lairet River

Coordinates: 46°49′26″N 71°14′20″W / 46.82389°N 71.23889°W / 46.82389; -71.23889
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Lairet River
Map
Location
CountryCanada
ProvinceQuebec
RegionCapitale-Nationale
Regional County MunicipalityQuebec City (sector "Limoilou")
Physical characteristics
SourceLairet Canal
 • locationQuebec (city) (sector "Limoilou")
 • coordinates46°49′31″N 71°14′26″W / 46.82528°N 71.24056°W / 46.82528; -71.24056
MouthRivière Saint-Charles
 • location
Quebec (city) (sector "Limoilou")
 • coordinates
46°49′26″N 71°14′20″W / 46.82389°N 71.23889°W / 46.82389; -71.23889
 • elevation
10 m
Length0.3 km (0.19 mi)

The Lairet River is a tributary of the Saint-Charles River, crossing Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. Over two kilometers long, it took its source in the vicinity of Charlesbourg and flowed in meanders in Limoilou. It has been completely channeled since the 1960s,[1] except for a segment refitted in 2008.

Geography

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Last tributary of the North shore of Saint-Charles river before it flows into the Saint-Laurent river, the Lairet river was once several tens of kilometers long. It originally took its source north of seigniory Saint-Ignace, west of trait-carré de Charlesbourg. It then headed southeast towards Limoilou where it widened and consisted of small meanders.

History

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The river in 1886.

On 14 September 1535, the river was seen for the first time by French explorer Jacques Cartier. Cartier and his crew overwinter at the confluence of the Lairet River and the Saint-Charles River, near the village St. Lawrence Iroquoians of Stadaconé. In New France, the name of the river appeared for the first time on a document in 1626 (designated "Rivière de Lairet" in 1637 and "Rivière de Larray" in 1685). The Jesuits also used the name "Jacques-Cartier river" in 1651, probably in connection with the Jacques-Cartier fort, a Jesuit residence built at the mouth of the river from 1625. Jean-Baptiste Larue used the toponym "Rivière à la Rez" in 1821.[2] Until XXth, the course of the river retains its natural state and crosses agricultural land.

The industrialization of Limoilou reveals several industries and institutions near the Lairet river in the first half of XXth Century. In this urbanized segment, the river gradually becomes an open sewer. In addition, the winding course is an obstacle in the construction of grid lines streets. The pipeline is requested by different owners. On 15 March 1960, the member for Québec-Est, Armand Maltais, announced the start of work on pipeline from the river. This work will take place in three phases (1960, 1965 and 1967).[3] Finally, the river is channeled to its mouth with the Saint-Charles River passing under the Cartier-Brébeuf National Historic Site. This work then became part of the concreting of the banks of the Saint-Charles river, which was completed in the 1970s.

The river in 2016.

Parts of the pipeline collapsed in the 2000s in Cartier-Brébeuf Park.[4] During these same years, Quebec City undertook the demolition of the concrete walls of the Saint-Charles river as well as the renaturalization of the banks[5] In parallel with this work, the Lairet river pipeline is removed over a length of approximately 300 meters (980 ft),[2] at its confluence with the Saint-Charles river. However, the majority of the course of the river is still underground. The Saint-François d'Assise hospital, originally built on the banks of the river, is nowadays struggling with water infiltration.[6]

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References

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  1. ^ [1][dead link]
  2. ^ a b Commission de toponymie du Québec
  3. ^ "Chronique d'une rivière disparue (8 et fin) : Canalisation de la Lairet – Mon Limoilou". blogue.monlimoilou.com. Archived from the original on 20 August 2016. Retrieved 14 January 2022.
  4. ^ News – Canada.ca
  5. ^ Québec Urbain, Parc Cartier-Brébeuf - La rivière Lairet à Découverte, 2008."Online presentation". 15 April 2010.
  6. ^ Article from La Presse and from the newspaper Le Sun.