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Lawrenceville, Quebec

Lawrenceville
Village municipality
Skyline of Lawrenceville
Location within Le Val-Saint-François RCM
Location within Le Val-Saint-François RCM
Lawrenceville is located in Southern Quebec
Lawrenceville
Lawrenceville
Location in southern Quebec
Coordinates: 45°25′N 72°21′W / 45.42°N 72.35°W / 45.42; -72.35Coordinates: 45°25′N 72°21′W / 45.42°N 72.35°W / 45.42; -72.35
Country  Canada
Province  Quebec
Region Estrie
RCM Le Val-Saint-François
Constituted April 27, 1905
Government
 • Mayor Michel Carbonneau
 • Federal riding Shefford
 • Prov. riding Orford
Area
 • Total 17.20 km2 (6.64 sq mi)
 • Land 17.32 km2 (6.69 sq mi)
  There is an apparent
contradiction between two
authoritative sources
Population (2011)
 • Total 652
 • Density 37.7/km2 (98/sq mi)
 • Pop 2006-2011 Increase 1.6%
 • Dwellings 285
Time zone EST (UTC−5)
 • Summer (DST) EDT (UTC−4)
Postal code(s) J0E 1W0
Area code(s) 450 and 579
Highways Route 243
Census profile 2442045
MAMROT info 42045
Toponymie info 34934

Lawrenceville is a Village municipality in the Le Val-Saint-François Regional County Municipality in the Estrie region of Quebec, Canada.

It is situated west of Sherbrooke, near the Black River. Around 650 Lawrence villagers are counted in an area of 17 square kilometers.

The name of the village honors Mr. Henry Lawrence, son of Isaac Lawrence who originally came from Canaan, Connecticut, and moved to Shefford Township in 1794 settling his family near Lake Waterloo between Fulford and Waterloo. In 1800 the township of Stukely was created, and Henry and his brother Erastus became Samuel Willard's associates and both moved to South Stukely in 1804. Erastus died 8 years later. In 1836 Henry Lawrence moved to the northern part of Stukely and built a sawmill and flourmill on an island which became part of Lawrenceville. Although, the village of Lawrenceville was not constituted until 1905 by detachment of the municipality from the township of North-Stukely. Only remains of the building can still be found on Henry's Island, two dwellings still exist: dating from the 19th century, that is the Island Park House of Victorian style and another house, with a double-slope roof. Henry died in 1864, surviving his first wife Polly Day, daughter of Pelatiah and Hannah (Curtis) Day, and remarried to Elizabeth Lewis, daughter of the precursor of Waterloo, Captain Ezekiel Lewis and his wife Abigail Gibbs.

Mother tongue (2011)


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