Sherbrooke, Quebec
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Sherbrooke (2001 population 75,916, post-merger population 141,200) is a city in south-eastern Quebec, Canada. It is the only major city in the Eastern Townships. Although originally settled in the early 19th century by anglophones, it is today a primarily francophone city.
Located at the confluence of the Saint-François River (St. Francis River in English) and Magog River, the city is in the centre of an important agricultural region with many dairy farms. There is also some industry in the region. An important business is the manufacture of hockey sticks: more hockey sticks are made in Sherbrooke than anywhere else in the world.
The area of Sherbrooke was first settled in 1793 by American Loyalists, including Gilbert Hyatt, a farmer from Schenectady, New York, who built a flour mill in 1802. In 1818 the village of "Hyatt's Mills" received its current name, being named after Governor General Lord Sherbrooke at the time of his retirement and return to England.
The city grew considerably on January 1, 2002, by the mergers of the cities of Sherbrooke, Ascot, Bromptonville, Deauville, Fleurimont, Lennoxville, Rock Forest, and Saint-Élie-d'Orford.
The merged city is composed of six boroughs:
- Brompton (formerly Bromptonville)
- Fleurimont (formerly East of Sherbrooke and Fleurimont)
- Lennoxville (formerly Lennoxville)
- Mont-Bellevue (formerly West/South/Center of Sherbrooke and Ascot)
- Rock-Forest-Saint-Élie-Deauville (formerly Rock Forest, Saint-Élie and Deauville)
- Jacques-Cartier (formerly North of Sherbrooke)
The city is the site of the Université de Sherbrooke and Bishop's University. Bishop's is the province's only English-language university located outside the island of Montreal.
Contents |
Media
Newspapers
Daily newspapers are La Tribune and The Record.
Television
- Channel 7: CHLT, TVA
- Channel 9: CKSH, SRC
- Channel 11: CKMI-2, Global
- Channel 24: CIVS, Télé-Québec
- Channel 30: CFKS, TQS
- Channel 50: CBMT-03, CBC
Radio
- 630 AM - CHLT, French news-talk
- 900 AM - CKTS, English news-talk
- 88.1 FM - CFPP, French religious programming
- 88.3 FM - CFAK, Université de Sherbrooke campus radio
- 88.9 FM - CJMQ, English Community Radio, based at Bishop's University
- 89.7 FM - CBM-1, CBC Radio Two
- 90.7 FM - CBFX-2, Espace musique
- 91.7 FM - CBMB, CBC Radio One
- 93.7 FM - CFGE, Rythme FM contemporary hit radio
- 95.5 FM - CFLX, Francophone Community Radio
- 100.3 FM - CIRA-1, Radio Ville-Marie religious programming
- 101.1 FM - CBF-10, La Première Chaîne
- 102.7 FM - CITE-FM-1, Radio Rock-Détente adult contemporary
- 104.5 FM - CIGR, active rock
- 106.1 FM - CIMO, Radio Énergie contemporary hit radio
Demographics
(Former city of Sherbrooke)
Racial make-up
- White: 146,065 or 97.6%
- Hispanic: 1,045 or 0.7%
- Black (people): 880 or 0.6%
- mixed race: 505 or 0.3%
- (based on single responses)
- (Hispanics can be of any race)
Religious make-up
- Roman Catholic: 87.1%
- Protestant: 2.8%
- Muslim: 1.1%
- Non religious: 7.3%
Famous natives or residents
- Jean Charest, federal cabinet minister, Deputy Prime Minister and Progressive Conservative Party leader; Quebec Liberal Party leader and Premier of Quebec
- Northrop Frye, literary critic
- Garou, singer
- Yousuf Karsh, photographer
- Sylvia Tremblay, body builder
Joseph-Armand Bombardier hailed from the Sherbrooke area. John Bassett and Conrad Black started their careers as media barons as owner and co-owner, respectively, of the Sherbrooke Record.
External links
| Image:Flag of Quebec.svg | Quebec |
|---|---|
| Regions | Abitibi-Témiscamingue - Bas-Saint-Laurent - Capitale-Nationale - Centre-du-Québec - Chaudière-Appalaches - Côte-Nord - Estrie - Gaspésie–Îles-de-la-Madeleine - Lanaudière - Laurentides - Laval - Mauricie - Montérégie - Montréal - Nord-du-Québec - Outaouais - Saguenay–Lac-Saint-Jean |
| List of Quebec Regional County Municipalities | |
| Territories | Basse-Côte-Nord - Jamésie - Kativik |
| Separated cities | Gatineau - Lévis - Notre-Dame-des-Anges - Rouyn-Noranda - Saguenay - Saint-Augustin - Shawinigan - Sherbrooke - Trois-Rivières - |
| Agglomeration areas | La Tuque - Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine - Longueuil - Montreal - Quebec City |