Rouyn-Noranda ( 2016 population 42,334 ) is a city on Osisko Lake in the Abitibi-Témiscamingue area of Quebec, Canada. The city of Rouyn-Noranda is a coextensive with a territory equivalent to a regional county municipality ( TE ) and census division ( CD ) of Quebec of the lapp name. Their geographic code is 86 .
history [edit ]
City Hall.
Reading: Rouyn-Noranda – Wikipedia
The city of Rouyn ( named for Jean-Baptiste Rouyn, a captain in the Régiment Royal Roussillon of Louis-Joseph de Montcalm ) [ 7 ] appeared after copper was discovered in 1917. Noranda ( a contraction of “ North Canada ” ) was created late around the Horne mine and foundry. Both were officially constituted as cities in 1926, then merged in 1986 .
Rouyn Noranda seen from space. Since 1966, Rouyn and Noranda constitute the capital of the Abitibi-Témiscamingue region. It is besides the seat of Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue ( UQAT ) since 1983. The population tends to increase or decrease dramatically depending on the economic situation. The city ‘s population dropped by 5 per penny between the 1996 and 2001 census, before increasing slenderly by 0.8 per cent for the 2006 census. This more close parallels the demographic patterns of Northern Ontario than those of Quebec during this period. Rouyn-Noranda besides has other cultural affiliations with Northern Ontario, being the only municipality in Quebec that holds a membership in the Francophone Association of Municipalities of Ontario. The Roman Catholic Diocese of Rouyn-Noranda was established on February 9, 1974, by Pope Paul VI, with Mgr. Jean-Guy Hamelin as its first bishop. It is depart of the Metropolitan Province of Gatineau. Mgr. Dorylas Moreau was appointed as bishop on November 30, 2001, replacing Mgr. Hamelin. On September 15, 2003, a decree moved the cathedral from Saint-Michel-Archange Church to Saint-Joseph Church .
Communities [edit ]
The Horne foundry seen from Chadbourne hill. As character of the 2000–2006 municipal reorganization in Quebec, on January 1, 2002 the municipalities ( including unorganized territories ) of the early Rouyn-Noranda Regional County Municipality amalgamated into the fresh City of Rouyn-Noranda. These were : Arntfield, Bellecombe, Beaudry, Cadillac, Cléricy, Cloutier, D’Alembert, Destor, Évain, Lac-Montanier, Lac-Surimau, McWatters, Mont-Brun, Montbeillard, Rapides-des-Cèdres, Rollet, and the former Rouyn-Noranda .
Demographics [edit ]
population [edit ]
Canada census – Rouyn-Noranda community profile | |||
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2016 | 2011 | 2006 | |
Population: | 42,334 (+3.2% from 2011) | 41,012 (+2.7% from 2006) | 39,924 (+0.8% from 2001) |
Land area: | 6,010.50 km2 (2,320.67 sq mi) | 6,010.50 km2 (2,320.67 sq mi) | 5,991.06 km2 (2,313.16 sq mi) |
Population density: | 7.0/km2 (18/sq mi) | 6.8/km2 (18/sq mi) | 6.7/km2 (17/sq mi) |
Median age: | 41.9 (M: 40.8, F: 43.2) | 41.6 (M: 40.7, F: 42.5) | 40.7 (M: 40.2, F: 41.2) |
Total private dwellings: | 18,851 | 19,224 | 18,921 |
Median household income: | $62,994 | $54,132 | $44,223 |
References: 2016[8] 2011[9] 2006[10] earlier[11] |
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[12][6] |
speech [edit ]
The city has around 96 % french speakers .
Canada Census Mother Tongue – Rouyn-Noranda, Quebec[12] | ||||||||||||||||||
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Census | Total | french | english | French & English | other | |||||||||||||
Year | Responses | Count | Trend | Pop % | Count | Trend | Pop % | Count | Trend | Pop % | Count | Trend | Pop % | |||||
2016 | 42,085 | 40,355 | 4.1% | 95.89% | 810 | 3.1% | 1.92% | 290 | 18.4% | 0.69% | 535 | 21.5% | 1.27% | |||||
2011 | 40,200 | 38,700 | 1.9% | 96.27% | 835 | 15.2% | 2.08% | 245 | 0.0% | 0.61% | 420 | 11.6% | 1.04% | |||||
2006 | 39,435 | 37,990 | 41.8% | 96.34% | 725 | 2.0% | 1.84% | 245 | 40.0% | 0.62% | 475 | 111.1% | 1.20% | |||||
2001 | 27,930 | 26,790 | 0.1% | 95.92% | 740 | 28.2% | 2.65% | 175 | 39.7% | 0.63% | 225 | 33.8% | 0.80% | |||||
1996 | 28,490 | 26,830 | n/a | 94.17% | 1,030 | n/a | 3.62% | 290 | n/a | 1.02% | 340 | n/a | 1.19% |
Politics [edit ]
federally, Rouyn-Noranda is separate of the Abitibi—Témiscamingue riding. The MP is Sébastien Lemire of the Bloc Québécois.
Read more: Willem Dafoe
provincially, Rouyn-Noranda is part of the Rouyn-Noranda–Témiscamingue ride. The MNA is Émilise Lessard-Therrien of Québec solidaire. The city ‘s mayor is Diane Dallaire. Rouyn-Noranda is besides a territory equivalent to a regional county municipality ( TE ) and census division ( CD ) of Quebec, coextensive with the city of Rouyn-Noranda. Its geographic code is 86. Rouyn-Noranda is the seat of the judicial zone of the like name. [ 13 ]
Sports [edit ]
The Rouyn-Noranda Huskies have played in the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League since the Saint-Hyacinthe Laser relocated to the township in 1996. Rouyn-Noranda has produced a large number of NHLers for its size including early NHL stars Pierre Turgeon, Stephane Matteau, Sylvain Turgeon, Dale Tallon, Pit Martin, Jacques Laperrière, Jacques Cloutier, Dave Keon and Kent Douglas, the last two both members of the 1967 Stanley Cup Champion Toronto Maple Leafs. Former NHL players Réjean Houle, Éric Desjardins and the Bordeleau Brothers ( Christian, Jean Paul and Paulin ) besides hail from the city. Rouyn-Noranda native Marc-André Cliche played in his first NHL game in 2010. Their most cutthroat rivals are the Val-d’Or Foreurs, which constitute the “ Battle of the 117 ” since both cities are connected by Route 117 .
economy [edit ]
The unemployment rate of the region was 6.6 % in 2016. [ 14 ] Propair has its headquarters on the property of Rouyn-Noranda Airport. [ 15 ] Glencore Copper Canada presently operates the Horne smelter. The smelter is the universe ‘s largest processor of electronic quarrel containing copper and cute metals. It opened in 1927 at the site of the Horne copper mine. The mine was closed in 1976, but the smelter remained in production. [ 16 ] Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue is based in Rouyn-Noranda, with campuses elsewhere .
culture [edit ]
Downtown Rouyn-Noranda . A street corner in Downtown Rouyn-Noranda. Since 1982, the city has been host to the International Cinema Festival of Abitibi-Témiscamingue and since 2003, the host of the Emerging Music Festival in Abitibi-Témiscamingue. luminary cultural figures from Rouyn-Noranda include singer-songwriter Richard Desjardins, actors Paule Baillargeon, Anne Dorval and Bruce Greenwood, and science fiction writer Éric Gauthier. Rouyn-Noranda is known as “ La Capitale Nationale du Cuivre ” ( or the National Copper Capital ) for its extensive copper deposits and mining/smelting activities .
fare [edit ]
The city is served by the Rouyn-Noranda Airport and has a humble populace passage system of four bus routes serving the urban area. The chief highways through the city are the north–south Route 101 and the east–west route 117, which is part of the Trans-Canada Highway system .
Media [edit ]
about all media in Rouyn-Noranda and the nearby city of Val-d’Or serves both cities. Although the cities are far enough apart that radio and television receiver stations in the sphere serve the cities from break transmitters, about every broadcast place in either city has a rebroadcaster in the early city. The only nominal exceptions are the cities ‘ separate NRJ stations, although at present even these stations share the majority of their broadcast schedule .
See besides [edit ]
Attractions [edit ]
St. George Russian Orthodox Church of Rouyn [edit ]
St. George Russian Orthodox Church of Rouyn is a russian Orthodox Church, with traditional architecture. It was erected between 1955 and 1957 by the Russian community, at the time about twenty families. A guide tour explains the celebration of Mass and the history of immigrant communities and their role in local history. This classifiable church paints a graphic mental picture of the lives of the people who suffered through the First and Second World Wars and ultimately came to live in Canada .
References and notes [edit ]
Sources [edit ]
- Gourd, Benoit-Beaudry. “Rouyn-Noranda”, in The Canadian Encyclopedia, Volume 3. Edmonton: Hurtig Publishing, 1988.
promote recitation [edit ]
- Rodrigue, Patrick. “Rouyn-Noranda, la Mecque du rock ‘n’ roll” & “Un Musée du rock ‘n’ roll pourrait naître à Rouyn-Noranda”, Abitibi-Express, vol. 1, no 44 (31 mai 2011), p. 4. N.B.: Paired ill. articles, each individually titled and separately accessible also on the newspaper’s Internet site, describing Rouyn-Noranda as one of the two contrasting poles, the other being Montréal, of popular music in Québec.
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