Quebec City St-Patrick Parade
The Québec City St-Patrick's Day Parade is the main event celebrating Saint Patrick's Day in Quebec City, Quebec, Canada. The event returned in 2010 after 84 years' absence.
History
Origins (1837–1926)
Canada's first-known celebration of St. Patrick's Day was held in Québec City in 1765 in the Sun Tavern on St. John Street. It was hosted by Protestant landlord Miles Prentice, a former soldier, and by the former Provost-Marshal in General Wolfe's army.Québec City's first parade was held in 1837, four years after the opening of the Irish community's first church, St. Patrick's, on rue McMahon. The parade attracted a large number of people and quickly became a major annual event in Québec City. In 1916, the parade was suspended due to World War I, resuming in 1921. In 1928, two years after the last parade, the Québec Chronicle Telegraph acknowledged with regret that the festivity had begun its passage into history. However, the Cadets of St. Patrick's High School held modest parades until the 1940s.