Trois-Rivières, St. Louis, Ward—Quartier, Quebec (1871–1901)
Trois-Rivières, St. Louis, Ward—Quartier was a census subdivision in Quebec, recorded in 4 censuses between 1871 and 1901.
Historical lineage
Descendant places
- merged into Trois Rivières, C in 1911
Population trajectory across census years
| Census year | Population | Page |
|---|---|---|
| 1871 | 2,260 | View 1871 detail → |
| 1881 | 2,404 | View 1881 detail → |
| 1891 | 2,139 | View 1891 detail → |
| 1901 | 4,116 | View 1901 detail → |
Cross-year identity established by spatial polygon overlap (SAME_AS chains across the Canadian Census Subdivision boundary files).
People with Dictionary of Canadian Biography entries
The Dictionary of Canadian Biography includes biographies of 9 people connected to this place across the 1851–1921 period, listed below by birth year. Each name links to that person's DCB entry; the connection tag indicates whether the documented event was a birth, death, or burial at this place.
| Name | Lifespan | Connection |
|---|---|---|
| William Sheppard | 1784–1867 | died here |
| Thomas Cooke | 1792–1870 | died here |
| Antoine Polette | 1807–1887 | died here |
| George Baptist | 1808–1875 | died here |
| Robert Middleton | 1810–1874 | died here |
| Louis-François Laflèche | 1818–1898 | died here |
| Louis-Charles Boucher de Niverville | 1825–1869 | died here |
| Luc Desilets | 1831–1888 | died here |
| Joseph Barnard | 1872–1939 | born here |
Identifiers
- Persistent place ID:
PLACE_QC198003— assigned to this enduring entity by chaining year-scoped TCP UIDs through spatial overlap - Wikidata: not yet grounded.
Sources
Census tabulations from the 1851–1921 Census of Canada series, transcribed and georeferenced by the Canadian Peoples / TCP project. Each year's detail page (linked above) cites the specific source table.