Trout River (Chateauguay River tributary)


Trout River is a tributary of Châteauguay River, flowing in:
This valley is mainly served in Quebec by the route 138 which passes on the west side of the river, then on the northwest side going towards the mouth. In New York State, the nearby route is Constable Street and State Highway 30.
The river surface is generally frozen from mid-December to the end of March. Safe circulation on the ice is generally done from the end of December to the beginning of March. The water level of the river varies with the seasons and the precipitation.

Geography

This river originates in various rivers including the Little Trout River in the Adirondack Mountains located in upstate New York, United States.
Trout River, also called Rivière à la Truite in French, is a non-navigable and non-buoyant river: it has only of drainage basin that flows between the townships of Elgin and Godmanchester in front of lots granted by the Crown prior to June 1, 1884.
This private basin is owned by local residents. The property extends to the river bed to the center : which gives the right to fish and use the bottom in front of the properties. But private rights to the river must also respect those of others: because it is a kind of common property. There would be a legal right of way on private waterways so that people cannot be prevented from crossing the water. It is a municipal watercourse, it is under the control of the Quebec Municipal Code and the municipality which can make regulations.
Trout River has two dams: the St-Onge Dam located in the hamlet of Trout River in Elgin near the Canada–US border. The other dam is the Hooker Dam, which is located between the hamlet of Kensington in Godmanchester and the path of the second concession to Elgin. The Trout River flows into the Châteauguay River just south of the town of Huntingdon. The municipality of Huntingdon set up a Route 138 rest stop at the confluence of the two rivers.
From its source in Adirondack Park, the Trout River descends on, with a drop of, according to the following segments:
Trout river course on the American side
  • north to Moody Road, then northwest to the north limit of Adirondack Park;
  • towards the north-west, forming a large curve towards the north-east, crossing the Brainardsville Road and the Donohue Road, then turns west by cutting the Burke City Road, until at highway 11;
  • north-west until close to Constable Street, where the course of the river goes north by crossing the Town Line Road, then branches west towards the end of the segment, to Constable Street Bridge;
  • northwest, first crossing County Highway 22, forming a few loops, then bending northeast to intersect State Highway 30, to the release of the Little Trout River (New York) ;
  • northerly, forming a large S and passing on the west side of Trout River State Forest, as well as more or less along State Highway 30 and crossing Stebbin Road and curving west at the end of the segment, up to the Canada-US border;
Trout river course on the Canadian side
  • towards the north by forming a big S in agricultural area and by forming a loop towards the east at the end of the segment and another towards the west, to the bottom of a loop, opposite a small hamlet ;
  • towards the northeast by winding in two zones, passing on the north side of the hamlet Kelvingrove, by collecting the Pringle stream, until its confluence.
The Trout River flows on the west bank of the Châteauguay River, south of the village center of Hemmingford. From there, the current descends the course of the Château river for to the south shore of lac Saint-Louis, at Châteauguay, south-west of Montreal.

Toponymy

In Franklin County, this river is designated "Trout River", just like in Canada.
The Commission de toponymie du Québec formalized the name on September 22, 1976.