Kegashka
Kegaska, is a locality in the Côte-Nord region of eastern Quebec, Canada, and part of the municipality of Côte-Nord-du-Golfe-du-Saint-Laurent. Kegaska is the easternmost point in the Côte-Nord region of Quebec, Canada to be reachable by road without passing through Newfoundland and Labrador. In the 2011 Canadian census, the locality had a population of 138. Quebec Route 138 reached the community on September 26, 2013, with the inauguration of a bridge across the Natashquan River.
It is an unconstituted locality within the municipality of Côte-Nord-du-Golfe-du-Saint-Laurent.
Geography
Kegaska village is located about 60 km east of the town of Natashquan, [Quebec (township)|Natashquan] and 47 km west of the town of La Romaine. Kegaska is built on a point of land between two bays. Located opposite of the village, the Black Isle is connected to the mainland by a bridge. This island has an old lighthouse used for navigation.Natashquan River forms the western boundary of the municipality of Côte-Nord-du-Golfe-du-Saint-Laurent. Between that river and the village of Kegaska, we find there :
- several small rivers that empty into the Gulf of St. Lawrence: de l'Étang, Long, Clay, Sam, Kegaska and Belley;
- the "Pointe du Vieux Poste", Cape Tiennot, Mistanekau beach, Ehkuahiniu rocks, Kegaska Harbour, Muddy Cove and Kippin islands.
- Kegaska Bay, Mount Hatsheuiat Tshehkahkau, le Havre Mistassini, the Pepihtnahu bay and the tip Musquaro ;
- a series of islands up to 4 km away from the mainland: Island Black, Green Tshinahat, Parsons, Kakatshihipinukut, Uhatshistsh, Ketshinukuteuat, Tshiahkuehihat, Menahkunakat and islands kahakaut;
- the area waterfowl gathering of part-Chicoutai Kégaska.
Kegaska village is the current eastern end of an over-1400 km segment of route 138 which starts south of Montreal at the Quebec-New York State border. The road reached the village on September 26, 2013, following the inauguration of a bridge across the Natashquan River. It is currently not possible to drive beyond Kegaska by road; the between Kegaska and Old Fort is accessible by a weekly coastal ferry which runs from Rimouski and stops in Kegaska, by snowmobile, or a 2400 km land detour via Quebec Route 389 and the Trans-Labrador Highway.
Toponymy
Its name derives from the Innu word quegasca, first recorded on Franquelin's map of 1685. This place name is also used to refer to a river, a lake, an island, a haven, a tip, a bay and a canton.History
In 1831, Kegaska was the site of a Hudson's Bay Company trading post, but the actual settlement was formed in 1852 when Acadian settlers came from the Magdalen Islands. They abandoned the place in 1871-1873 to settle at Betchewun and were replaced by Newfoundland fishermen, almost all of Irish origin. They in turn left around 1887-1888, leaving the place completely deserted by 1890. Yet in 1898, a few families relocated from Perth, Ontario, whose descendants now populate the area.At the end of the 19th century, predominantly English-speaking settlers came from the Anticosti Island to settle in Kegaska.
Victor-Alphonse Huard wrote this description in 1897 of the region:
At Kégashka begins a long trail of islands, which continues to near the entrance to the Strait of Belle Isle. There are large, but most are only islands that crowd in several rows along the coast and sometimes up to twelve or fifteen miles offshore. Listed on the map this dust accumulated islands to the north coast, it looks like the scum of the Gulf that the fury of the winds from the southwest would have rejected his rivage.
In 1976, Le Brion, a cargo ship from Magdalen Islands wrecked on a shoal near Kegaska. The remains of the wreck are still visible from the village.