Stéphane T.

At the monthly luncheon of a Montreal-North retirees’ association, I had bought, from the hands of its author, the book "Montréal-Nord raconte 100 ans, 1915-2015 ". It included a bookmark announcing an activity of the Montreal North History and Genealogy Society taking place the following Monday at the Charleroi Library. It was a conference entitled "Let us tell you about Montreal-North."

I went to the library on that day and attended the event with a group of roughly seventy-five citizens. This is where I met Stéphane.

Author of this conference, he is an historian by training. Stéphane completed his baccalaureate at UQAM. He is a storyteller, as well as lecturer, columnist, guide and facilitator in History. Much of the audience was made up of white haired folks who had lived through a significant portion of the centenary of the municipality. At the back of the room, a group of youths was also present at the initiative of the local Centre Jeunesse-emploi.

I quickly realized that Stéphane was well known to the senior part of the public and that he could not pass them any inaccuracies on the local events of the past 50 years. He could, however, afford some familiarity with them and switch between gruffly and humorous attitudes tinged with irony and bonhomie. The conference took place smoothly with many verbal exchanges with participants, who overall, were captivated and attentive. Stéphane even managed to maintain the interest of the younger crowd.

His lecture began with the first visits of the French to the Island of Montreal in the sixteenth century. He presented the outline of the Sault-au-Récollet village and parish history, from the French regime until the partition of a section of its territory called "Bas-du-Sault” (Lower Falls) which became the City of Montreal-North. For those who do not know, the Rivière des prairies allowed to move further upstream around the Island than the St-Lawrence River did. The Sault-au-Récollet historic village core is located at the foot of the rapids, where canoers where stopped by the current. Since the parish’s houses, mostly occupied by farmers, were scattered along what is now the Boulevard Gouin, a greater number of buildings from the French regime remain in this area of the Island than in Old Montreal. In the historic center of Montreal, the proximity of the buildings has meant that many of them were destroyed by large fires or were victims of real estate development and road construction.

Stéphane is a native of Montreal-North. He attended primary school at St-Vincent-Marie Strambi. He grew up in a family of four children. Their home was located near the Forest Shopping center, the first of the municipality, built in 1957. However, he spent his teenage years on the other side of the river, in St-Vincent-de-Paul, a neighborhood where his father, a contractor, owned land. He has been living for several years in the Plateau Mont-Royal, but maintains ties with the neighborhoods where he grew-up. He collaborates to the activities of various historical societies in the north of Montreal, in Laval and the North Shore. His activities range from storytelling evenings to guided tours of heritage buildings. Some of you may have heard him during activities organized by Cité Historia or private groups.

If he held some jobs as facilitator and mediator in cultural institutions, such as the Chateau Dufresne Museum for example, he quickly realized that he was not meant to operate in a rigid framework. If I understood correctly, the gruff side he showed at times during his talk was not entirely faked. He can sometimes be bad-tempered or, at best, hard-headed. Being self-employed for many years now, he has a preference for activities requiring direct contact with the public and some acting skills.

For eight years, he has co-produced a radio program entitled "Dans les griffes du loup” (In the claws of the wolf) at CISM 89.3 FM. The show focused on history and folklore. At one time, he recruited, with the help of social workers, some street youths to speak or hold roles in skits for the show.

Stéphane addresses audiences of all ages. He regularly does animation for school groups. The difficult negotiations between government employees and the Liberal government, which is determined to impose its austerity program, leaves him in a difficult position this fall as school visits are suspended for the time being.

Until the situation is clarified, you can track his activities on his website. This fall, he is hosting a series of storytelling nights at the ancestral Brignon-dit-Lapierre house, a historic residence on Gouin Boulevard, just east of the Pie-IX Bridge. Some evenings, he will even be the storyteller himself.

Don’t hesitate to go. It will surely not be boring!

Two sides of Stéphane

Vincent G.

Up-date, January 5th 2016

As some of you may have deducted it while reading the final article of the 2015 edition of Quartiersnord.photos about Ahmed B., it is possible that the shut-down of Cité Historia is only temporary. The museum could resume operations after a consolidation of its finances and restructuring. Vincent Garneau recently told me he has received a notice of a temporary lay-up. He and his colleagues would be glad if such was the outcome.

Furthermore, the founding of the Société d’Histoire d’Ahuntsic-Cartierville (SHAC) has no direct relation to the situation at Cité Historia. A group, of which Vincent is part, has voluntarily worked since spring 2015 towards its establishment motivated by the conviction that such a body was necessary.

Original text, July 21st 2015

As some of you may have deducted it while reading the final article of the 2015 edition of Quartiersnord.photos about Ahmed B., it is possible that the shut-down of Cité Historia is only temporary. The museum could resume operations after a consolidation of its finances and restructuring. Vincent Garneau recently told me he has received a notice of a temporary lay-up. He and his colleagues would be glad if such was the outcome.

Furthermore, the founding of the Société d’Histoire d’Ahuntsic-Cartierville (SHAC) has no direct relation to the situation at Cité Historia. A group, of which Vincent is part, has voluntarily worked since spring 2015 towards its establishment motivated by the conviction that such a body was necessary.

On a sunny day, I knocked on the door of Cité Historia, an organization that has the status of recognized museum, asking if any member of the staff lived in the area and would be willing to answer some questions and to be portrayed in photo. It was Vincent, historical development director, who volunteered a few days later.

Native Montrealer who lived and Hochelaga, and, among other parts, in Pointe-aux-Trembles, it is through a summer job at Cité Historia in 2008 that Vincent became acquainted with the borough of Ahunstic. He was initially a welcome agent while he completed his MA in history at UQAM. Little by little, he held various jobs in Cité Historia, including Project Manager for the renewal of the exhibition at the maison du Pressoir. Although the preparation of the new exhibition was prepared by a consulting firm, Vincent and his colleagues acted to have their say in the development of content.

His personal field of study is the record of the historical changes stemming from citizen action. He bore a strong interest to the 60’s and the role of the citizen’s action committees in the neighborhoods of the East and South-west of Montreal at the time.

Not knowing Ahuntsic-Cartierville on his arrival, he has since learned to appreciate this neighborhood that many people of the central districts associate to the suburbs. He stressed in particular the presence of three types of territorial organizations here: the persistence of the village cores of Sault-au-Récollet and Bordeaux, the neighborhoods typical of the city with a higher population density that appeared before 1950 and more recent developments that are structured around the car and actually have more to do with Laval than with the Plateau. He also expressed disappointment that a place like the Nature-park of the Ile-de-la-Visitation is associated on some tourist maps to the Greater Montreal rather than the city itself. Cité Historia’s premises: the maison du Pressoir, which houses the exhibition rooms, and the maison du Meunier, before which he is photographed, are located at the entrance of this important park.

Today, Vincent, who lives in the Ahuntsic district has great reasons to enjoy this environment. He met his girlfriend here and they are now parents of a child only a few months old.

In my notes, I see that told me Cité Historia has projects related to the living memory. If you meet him at work, he will surely be willing to tell you more.

 

Vincent G. in front of the maison du Meunier