
Last modified: 2022-02-12 by rob raeside
Keywords: châteauguay | quebec | fleur-de-lys | maple leaf | windmill | crown | 
Links: FOTW homepage |
search | 
disclaimer and copyright | 
write us | 
mirrors
![[Châteauguay flag]](../images/c/ca-cgy.gif) image by Village of Wendake
contributed by Marc Pasquin, 21 February 2007
image by Village of Wendake
contributed by Marc Pasquin, 21 February 2007In a picture of the St-Patrick parade in
Montreal you can see a white flag with arms behind the
Châteauguay banner. Looking at the official 
city website
it seem to be the same arms.
Marc Pasquin, 9 April 2007
The City of Châteauguay (45,648 inhabitants in 2010; 3,537 ha) is located 
  south-west of Montreal.
Châteauguay was granted on 29 September 1673 by 
  the Count of Frontenac, Governor of New France, to Charles Le Moyne 
  (1626-1685), already lord of Longueil. In 1683, the lord built a fortified 
  manor ("chasteau"; old form of "château", "a castle") on the St. Bernard 
  Island, then the heart of the domain; the manor was inhabited by two families 
  and six other people. According to the historian Léon Laberge, the name of 
  Châteauguay is of French origin - there is a municipality called Châteauguay 
  in Auvergne.
From 1685 onwards, the mainland neighbouring the St. 
  Bernard Island was settled. The subsequent development of the domain has to be 
  credited to the Order of the Sisters of Charity, founded in 1737 by St. 
  Marguerite d'Youville (1701-1771), better known as the Grey Nuns of Montreal. 
  The nuns purchased Châteauguay in 1765 and owned it until 1854, when the 
  feudal system was abolished. They founded a college and a bakery, and promoted 
  the cultivation of the fertile domain. The masoned tower standing on the 
  island belonged to a wind mill built in 1686-1690, one of the oldest in North 
  America. The Battle of the Châteauguay [river] was fought on 26  October 
  1813 on the banks of river Châteauguay, in a strategic place located 50 km 
  south-west of Montreal and closed to the American border. Colonel 
  Charles-Michel de Salaberry led a troop of 300 soldiers who repelled the 
  American troops attempting to invade Lower-Canada. During the Patriot's 
  insurrection (1836-1838), Narcisse Cardinal and Joseph Duquette took all the 
  ammunition from the general store owned in Châteauguay by John McDonald and 
  captured as many loyalists as they could; betrayed by the Iroquois, the two 
  patriots were hanged in Montreal.
Châteauguay emerged as an urban 
  center in the early 20th century. In 1912, the part of the village known as 
  "basin" formed Châteauguay-Ville; in the 1960s, the Parish of St. Joachim de 
  Châteauguay formed the City of Châteauguay-Centre. The two communities merged 
  in 1975 to form the today's City of Châteauguay.
-
  
  http://ville.chateauguay.qc.ca/historique - Municipal website
  Châteauguay's local hero is Kim Saint-Pierre (b. 1978), member of the Canadian 
  women’s hockey team (goaltender) since 1998. She participated in three Olympic 
  Games and is a three-time Olympic gold medalist (2002, 2006, 2010). She 
  competed in nine World Championships and won gold five times.
  http://www.kimstpierre.com - Official 
  website
  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HUJ1-IfZ2dM - KSP interviewed (French)
  
  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hpbgUNeAN3E - KSP interview (English)
  
The arms of Châteauguay are "Argent a chevron gules charged with a maple 
  leaf surrounded by two cinquefoils all of the first in base a windmill proper 
  terraced vert a chief azure wavy argent charged with a garb of wheat or a 
  fleur-de-lis argent and a steering wheel of the same. The shield surmounted by 
  a mural crown or. Under the shield, a scroll or inscribed with the motto in 
  letters sable "UNITA FORTIOR". The chevrons are a symbol of protection, 
  recalling that Châteauguay emerged as a fortified outpost. The cinquefoils 
  come from the arms of Charles Le Moyne ("Azure three cinquefoils or 2 + 1 a 
  chief gules a crescent or surrounded by two stars of the same") and from 
  English arms. The windmill represents the St. Bernard Island. The chief wavy 
  represents rivers Châteauguay and St. Lawrence, as well as Lake St. Louis. The 
  wings of the mill form a cross recalling Marguerite d'Youville and a cross 
  erected on a road, involved in historical events in 1838. The wheat garb and 
  the steering wheel represent the resources of the land and movement, 
  respectively. The maple leaf, the fleur-de-lis and the mural crown represent 
  the three hierarchical levels of government. The motto, meaning "Stronger 
  Through Unity", recalls that today's Châteauguay was formed by the merging of 
  three former municipalities.
-
  
  http://ville.chateauguay.qc.ca/armoiries - Municipal website
  Ivan Sache, 29 July 2012
![[Port of Quebec]](../images/c/ca-qccgy-pol.gif) image located by
Dave Fowler, 30 January 2022
 image located by
Dave Fowler, 30 January 2022
based on image located by Dave Fowler, 30 January 2022
Flag is the service patch on white.
Dave Fowler, 30 January 2022