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Chambly, Quebec (Canada)

La Vallée-du-Richelieu RCM, Montérégie

Last modified: 2022-04-09 by rob raeside
Keywords: chambly | quebec |
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[Chambly flag] image located by Ivan Sache, 15 August 2011


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City flag

The municipality of Chambly (24,996 inhabitants in 2011; 25.11 sq. km) is located in southwestern Quebec, 25 km south-east of Montreal. Chambly was named for Captain Jacques de Chambly (d. 1687), commander of a garrison of the Carignan-Salières Regiment. In 1665, the King of France commissioned Chambly to build a wooden fortress at the foot of the rapids of river Richelieu. Chambly was subsequently appointed governor of Acadia (1673-1677), Grenada (1679-1680) and Martinique (1680-1687). Expected to stop the Iroquois raids, Fort Saint-Louis, mostly known as Fort Chambly, became the center of a European settlement. Burned down in 1702, the fort was subsequently rebuilt with stones in 1709-1711. Fort Chambly was taken in September 1760 during the English conquest of New France; expelled by the Americans in October 1775, the English took over the fort again in June 1776 and kept it until the end of the War of 1812. Decommissioned and abandoned in 1851, Fort Chambly was restored by Joseph-Octave Dion (1838-1916), who lived for 35 years in the fort. After Dion's death, Fort Chambly was transferred to Parks Canada. In 1920, the place was registered as the Fort Chambly National Historic Site of Canada. The Chambly Canal, built in 1843 to bypass the rapids of river Richelieu, is another National Historic Site of Canada.

On 18 October 1995, the Towns ("Ville") of Chambly and Fort-Chambly merged to form the City ("Cité") of Chambly, renamed Town ("ville") of Chambly on 19 November 1980.

http://www.ville.chambly.qc.ca - Municipal website
http://www.pc.gc.ca/eng/lhn-nhs/qc/fortchambly/index.aspx - Fort Chambly website
http://www.pc.gc.ca/eng/lhn-nhs/qc/chambly/index.aspx - Chambly Canal website

The flag of Chambly is white with the municipal coat of arms in the middle and the writing "Ville de Chambly", in black letters, below the arms. On 27 October 2010, the flag of Chambly was handed over by the Mayor of Chambly to Captain Philippe Chagnon. The captain brought the flag to the Kandahar Camp of the Canadian Peace-Keeping Force in Afghanistan, where it was flown from November 2010 to June 2011. After the safe completion of his mission in Afghanistan, Chagnon brought back the flag to Chambly, where it was officially handled back to the Mayor on 9 August 2011, during the celebration of the Peace Keepers' National Day.

http://monteregieweb.com/main+fr+01_300+Le_drapeau_de_Chambly_de_retour_au_bercail.html?JournalID=25&ArticleID=714994 - "Journal de Chambly", 12 August 2011 (article)
http://actualite.monteregieweb.com/Web/actualite/2011/8/11/714994/Images/HRes/546470.jpg (photo)
http://monteregieweb.com/main+fr+01_300+Le_capitaine_Philippe_Chagnon_apporte_le_drapeau_de_Chambly_en_Afghanistan.html?ArticleID=669354&JournalID=25 - "Journal de Chambly", 2 November 2010 (article)
http://actualite.monteregieweb.com/Web/actualite/2011/2/17/669354/Images/HRes/507957.jpg (photo)

Ivan Sache, 15 August 2011


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[Chambly logo] image located by Dave Fowler, 8 March 2022