Montreal District

(Redirected from District of Montréal)

Montreal District was colonial district in New France and British North America with its capital in Montreal. A descendant of the district exists today as the judicial district of Montreal. Western parts transferred to Upper Canada, later as Canada West and are now in Ontario where as the northeast became Labrador and now within Newfoundland and Labrador.

Montreal District
Former District in the British Province of Quebec and New France
Montreal District was the westernmost of three districts
Montreal District was the westernmost of three districts
Established~1642 (as French district)
1760 (as British district only)
Dissolved1760 (as French district)
1791 (as British district only)

History

edit

The district was created as a district of Canada, New France.

When the British conquered Canada in 1760, the district of Montreal remained the same as that under the former French regime (see Pays d'en Haut).[1] Under British administration, it was one of three division of the former Province of Quebec from 1763 to 1791. Reapportioned in 1763, it included much of modern-day Quebec, Labrador and most of southern Ontario. The meetings of the District were called the Court of Quarter Sessions of the Peace.

In 1788 western sections Montreal District became:

These four were then organized as the Province of Upper Canada in 1791 and all dissolved in 1849 when they were replaced with counties.

In 1791 Montreal District was dissolved into 27 new districts in the new province of Lower Canada. Labrador was part of British Quebec after 1774 and part of Lower Canada until 1809 to become part of the Newfoundland Colony in name but not until a border dispute was settled in 1927.

Other districts

edit

Besides Montreal, the British Province of Quebec had two other districts:

References

edit
  1. ^ a b c Gerald E. Hart (1888). The Fall of New France, 1755-1760. G.P. Putnam's Sons. p. 150.
  2. ^ a b Donald Fyson (2012-09-20). "The Court Structure of Quebec and Lower Canada, 1764 to 1860". Archived from the original on 2014-05-13. Retrieved 2013-06-06.