Hull County, Quebec

Coordinates: 45°40′N 75°35′W / 45.667°N 75.583°W / 45.667; -75.583
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Hull County, formerly known as Wright County,

Outaouais
, one of roughly 12 historical regions of Québec.

The county is roughly rectangular, bound in the north by the Township of Portland in Papineau County (45 degrees N 41', 12 km), entirely in the east by the Township of Buckingham in Papineau County (75 degrees W 33', 22 km), on its northwestern corner by the Township of Wakefield in Gatineau, and on its west by the Township of Hull in Gatineau County. Across the entire length of its Ottawa River border is the Township of Gloucester in Carleton County, both part of Ottawa, in Ontario. The entire county is the same as the former Township of Templeton. The township-county comprised several communities, namely Templeton, Gatineau, and Pointe-Gatineau which have now been merged. In terms of topography, about two-thirds of the county in the north contain landscapes typical of the Canadian Shield, while the lower third is gentler valley terrain.

The historic Towns of Gatineau and Pointe-Gatineau were often thought of as being in neighbouring

Les Collines-de-l'Outaouais Regional County Municipality and the southern half was transferred into the Outaouais Urban Community (now the City of Gatineau
).

died here on July 22, 1950.

Name

Wright County took the name of Ottawa County on 3 April 1912.[2] On 17 March 1919, it was renamed Hull County.[3][4]

Note

The Townships are primarily a surveying unit introduced after the British conquest, and were designated to cover most of the unattributed territory in Quebec. They were given out (concessions) to "Leaders" who had the responsibility of finding "Associates" and to develop their Township. The usual size was about 10 miles (16 km) X 10 miles (16 km) - it varied slightly during surveying periods.[5]

The surveyors divided Townships into lines, and that in turn they divided into lots. A lot was generally 200 acres (0.81 km2).[6]

References

  1. ^ "Gazette officielle du Québec. Québec official gazette., 21 janvier 1897, jeudi 21 (no extra)". Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec. Retrieved 15 February 2024.
  2. ^ "2 George V, chapitre 9 - Loi amendant la loi concernant la représentation à l'Assemblée législative". Gazette officielle du Québec. 1912-04-16. Retrieved 2024-02-09.
  3. ^ "9 George V, chapitre 12 - Loi changeant le nom du comté d'Ottawa en celui de Hull et amendant en conséquence les Statuts refondus, 1909, le Code de procédure civile et certaines lois y relatives". Gazette officielle du Québec. 1919-03-29. Retrieved 2024-02-09.
  4. ^ Hormisdas Magnan (1925). Dictionnaire historique et géographique des paroisses, missions et municipalités de la province de Québec. Arthabaska: L'imprimerie d'Arthabaska inc., p.100
  5. ^ Annexe II- Historical background on Townships with List

Historic Townships

45°40′N 75°35′W / 45.667°N 75.583°W / 45.667; -75.583