Mont-Saint-Hilaire


Mont-Saint-Hilaire is a suburb of Montreal on the South Shore of southeastern Quebec, Canada, on the Richelieu River in the Regional County Municipality of La Vallée-du-Richelieu. The population as of the Canada 2021 Census was 18,859. The city is named after the Mont Saint-Hilaire.
A significant deposit of the semi-precious mineral sodalite is located near Mont-Saint-Hilaire.

History

Jean-Baptiste Hertel de Rouville was granted the seignory of the region in 1694. By 1745 a mountain village had been formed with the first chapel being built in 1798 near the Richelieu River. Nearly twenty years later, in 1822, a ferry operating between Beloeil and Mont-Saint-Hilaire came into service. A bridge, enabling Beloeil and St. Hilaire to be connected by rail, was built in 1848 by the St. Lawrence and Atlantic Railway.
The Campbell family, which owned the mountain after the Rouvilles, sold the mountain to an English officer, Brigadier-General Andrew Gault, who owned it for 45 years. Gault then bequeathed the mountain to McGill University before his death in 1958.

Demographics

In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Mont-Saint-Hilaire had a population of living in of its total private dwellings, a change of from its 2016 population of. With a land area of, it had a population density of in 2021.
Population trend:
CensusPopulationChange
202118,859 1.5%
201618,585 2.1%
201118,200 15.8%
200615,720 10.2%
200114,270 9.2%
199613,064 6.5%
199112,267 15.9%
198610,588 5.2%
198110,066 30.9%
19767,688 33.5%
19715,758N/A

Mother tongue language
LanguagePopulationPct
French only17,02591.5%
English only5653.0%
Both English and French2601.4%
Other languages6653.6%

Attractions

[file:Saint-Hilaire (QC)-Hotel-de-Ville-2022-02-05.jpg|thumb|left|Museum of Fine Arts in February 2022]

Infrastructure

Mont-Saint-Hilaire is served by the Mont-Saint-Hilaire commuter rail station on the Réseau de transport métropolitain's Mont-Saint-Hilaire line. Local bus service is provided by the RTM's Vallée du Richelieu sector.
In 1864, Canada's worst rail disaster occurred here when a passenger train passed a red signal and fell off an open swing bridge into the Richelieu River, killing around 99 people.

Education

The town is home to 4 primary schools: Au-fil-de-l'eau, de l'Aquarelle and de la Pommeraie and Paul-Émile-Borduas. There are also 2 secondary schools, including Ozias-Leduc, with 1,480 students and Collège Saint-Hilaire, a private high school that receives students from the region.
The South Shore Protestant Regional School Board previously served the municipality.

Notable people