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      • Verdun is one of the province's oldest municipalities. It was founded in 1671 by Zacharie Dupuis, one of the first landholders on the Island of Montréal.
      www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/verdun
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  2. In the early part of the 20th century, Verdun had a majority English-speaking population and until 1954 — when the 80,000 residents made Verdun the third largest city in Quebec— the anglophone and francophone populations were roughly equal. [28] It is now about two-thirds French-speaking.

  3. Jan 30, 2007 · History. Verdun is one of the province's oldest municipalities. It was founded in 1671 by Zacharie Dupuis, one of the first landholders on the Island of Montréal. He named Verdun after his native village of Saverdun in France.

  4. Verdun was originally founded back in 1671, making it one of the country’s oldest settlements, and they were indeed their own entity until joining Montréal shortly after the turn of the most ...

  5. faculty.marianopolis.edu › Verdun-QuebecHistoryVerdun - Quebec History

    Verdun was first known as Côte de Gentilly, and it was given its present name later, probably by La Salle, in honour of the historic Verdun in France. In 1830 it was named La Rivière-St. Pierre, but an Act changing the name again to Verdun was passed in 1876.

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    • Name. In 1671 the Lords of the Island of Montreal known as the Sulpician Order granted control of the area to Major Zacharie Dupuis who named it after Saverdun, the name of his home village in France.
    • History. Archeological research has revealed evidence that Aboriginal people were present in Verdun nearly 4,000 years ago!
    • Early Settlement. One of the first Verdun settlements was the Côte-de-Verdun which used to be known as the Côte-des-Argoulets - which means "Sharpshooter's Coast".
    • First Municipality. In 1874 local land owners met in a farmhouse named Le Pavillion where they founded the village of Riviere-Saint-Pierre. The next year it became the known as the municipality of Verdun.
  6. Called Côte des Argoulets in the 17th century, the Verdun territory was a place of strategic fortification. Delimited by the old Saint-Pierre River and the Lachine Rapids, this place owes its name to Zacharie Dupuis, owner of the fief of Verdun, named in memory of his native village in France, Saverdun. 11.

  7. Sep 29, 2014 · The Verdun I saw in April 1913 was an out-of-the-way provincial city of little importance outside of its situation as the nucleus of a great fortress. There were two cities—an old one, la ville...