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Jeanne-Mance Park

Jeanne Mance Park
French: parc Jeanne-Mance
Jeanne mance park.jpg
Jeanne Mance Park in the foreground, with Mount Royal in the background.
Jeanne-Mance Park is located in Montreal
Jeanne-Mance Park
Location of Jeanne Mance Park in Montreal
Location Le Plateau-Mont-Royal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Coordinates 45°30′57″N 73°35′03″W / 45.5158°N 73.5842°W / 45.5158; -73.5842Coordinates: 45°30′57″N 73°35′03″W / 45.5158°N 73.5842°W / 45.5158; -73.5842
Operated by City of Montreal

Jeanne Mance Park is an urban park in Montreal's Plateau Mont-Royal borough and is located along Park Avenue, opposite Mount Royal, and just south of Mount Royal Avenue. It is named after the co-founder of Montreal, Jeanne Mance.

The park was previously known as Fletcher's Field/Champ de Fletcher, ("Fletcher" being the name of a farmer near the property).

This great common in the heart of the city was part of the public domain and it was used as a military parade ground, as was Logan's Farm (which is now part of La Fontaine Park). During the Great War, troops were trained on Fletcher's Field. The lacrosse and football clubs as well as the Royal Mount Royal Golf Club also used Fletcher's Field, the name by which it was called for well over a hundred years.

The history of this park began at the end of the 19th century with the planning of Mount Royal Park and the city's acquisition of land on Mount Royal, which ran from the summit of the mountain to Esplanade Avenue, between Pine Avenue and Mount Royal Avenue.

In 1878, Montreal's Crystal Palace was relocated to Fletcher's Field. The structure was destroyed by fire in July 1896.

In 1879, Fletcher's Field was identified by the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain as a notable source of Hyoscyamus niger, a psychoactive plant.

In 1910, during the Montreal Eucharistic Congress (Congrès eucharistique de Montréal), there was a campaign for the park to recognize the founder of the Hôtel-Dieu de Montréal, which had been relocated from Old Montreal to its present site. The name of the park was unofficially known as Jeanne Mance Park until 1990, when the city of Montreal made the name change official.


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