Baie-Johan-Beetz Explained

Baie-Johan-Beetz
Settlement Type:Municipality
Pushpin Map:Côte-Nord Region Quebec
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Côte-Nord region of Quebec
Coordinates:50.2833°N -110°W
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name:Canada
Subdivision Type1:Province
Subdivision Name1:Quebec
Subdivision Type2:Region
Subdivision Name2:Côte-Nord
Subdivision Type3:RCM
Subdivision Name3:Minganie
Established Title:Settled
Established Title1:Constituted
Established Date1:1 January 1966
Named For:Johan Beetz
Leader Title:Mayor
Leader Name:Martin Côté
Leader Title1:Federal riding
Leader Name1:Manicouagan
Leader Title2:Prov. riding
Leader Name2:Duplessis
Area Total Km2:532.06
Area Land Km2:327.46
Elevation M:10
Population Total:84
Population As Of:2021
Population Density Km2:0.3
Population Blank1 Title:Pop (2016-21)
Population Blank1: 2.3%
Population Blank2 Title:Dwellings
Population Blank2:58
Timezone:Within the AST legislated time zone boundary but observes EST[1]
Utc Offset:-5
Timezone Dst:EDT
Utc Offset Dst:-4
Postal Code Type:Postal code(s)
Postal Code:G0G 1B0
Area Codes:418 and 581
Blank Name:Highways

Baie-Johan-Beetz is a municipality located near the mouth of the Piashti River on the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, in the Côte-Nord region, Minganie RCM, Quebec, Canada.

History

In 1854, Joseph Tanguay, originally from Berthier, settled at the Little Watshishou River. Tanguay and his sons fished mostly for salmon on the Piashti, Corneille, Petite Watshishou, Watshishou and Quetachou rivers.[2]

In 1862 Tanguay moved to Baie Piashti. Other early settlers came from the Magdalen Islands. The place was originally identified as "Piastre Bay", from the Innu expression piashite-pets, meaning "there where the water passes over/on top", or possibly originating from the word piashtibé, meaning "dry bay" or "where the water rises", which is a reference to the local bay that during low tide runs dry.[3]

In 1897, Johan Beetz (1874-1949), a Belgium aristocrat, with training in natural sciences and medicine, immigrate there, and on 27 September 1898, married Adéla Tanguay (1884-1954), daughter of Sébastien Tanguay, fisherman, and Marie-Louise (Henriette) Arseneault,[4] 11 children were born of this union.Beetz built a Second Empire-inspired rural residence that residents today call le château (the castle), he hunted, fished, and trapped with the local villagers, and raised foxes for their fur.[5] He was a naturalis and ornithologist, and made numerous studies and hand drawings. He also invented a mummification process for preserving animal bodies. The many activities of Johan Beetz brought considerable impetus to the socio-economic development of the locality and that of the North Shore.[6]

The family lived in Piastre Baie until 1922, when they moved to Ville Saint-Laurent.

Toponymy

The bay's name was spelled in a variety of ways, including Piashti Bay, Pillage Bay, Baie-de-Pillage, Piastibe, Piashte Bay, and Piestebé. Perhaps for this reason, its residents expressed a desire to change the village's name to Baie-Johan-Beetz in 1910.

The Piastre Baie was renamed in 1914, but the name was not officially adopted until 1965 when the place was incorporated.[3]

Watshishou migratory bird sanctuary

Located approximately 40 kilometers west of Natashquan, this 10,673 hectare refuge extends over a little more than 23 kilometers along the coast of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, in the municipality of Baie-Johan-Beetz, and partly in Aguanish and the Mingan Archipelago National Park reserve.

The Wastishou Migratory Bird Sanctuary[7] includes Pontbriand,[8] Jalobert[9] and Pashashibou bays, all islands, islets and emerging rocks in the area, as well as the offshore waters over a distance of several kilometers from the coast. In fact, the waters cover almost 90% of the refuge's surface area. Vegetation is limited to a few species of moss and lichens, because the terrestrial part of the refuge is mainly made up of rocky outcrops.[10] [11]

Birds

The common eider is the most abundant, the double-crested cormorant is the second most commonly found species, the third most numerous species within this sanctuary is the herring gull.

Bird species present in smaller numbers also benefit from this sanctuary:

Demographics

Language

Canada Census Mother Tongue – Baie-Johan-Beetz, Quebec
CensusTotal
YearResponsesCountTrendPop % CountTrendPop %CountTrendPop %CountTrendPop %
80 11.1%100.00%0 0.0%0.00%0 0.0%0.00%0 0.0%0.00%
90 5.6%100.00%0 0.0%0.00%0 0.0%0.00%0 0.0%0.00%
85 5.9%100.00%0 0.0%0.00%0 0.0%0.00%0 0.0%0.00%
80 n/a100.00%0n/a0.00%0n/a0.00%0n/a0.00%

Cultural heritage

The Johan-Beetz House, a Second Empire-inspired rural residence built in 1899, dominates the landscape of a rocky promontory jutting into the Gulf of St. Lawrence, at the mouth of the Piashti River. Listed in the Quebec Cultural Heritage directory, this property is classified as a heritage building. The protection applies to the exterior and interior of the building, and not to the land.[12]

Wooden sidewalks, in 1987, a study by Ministry of Transport Quebec mentioned:

…there are more than 600 m of continuous wooden sidewalks along the existing road in Baie-Johan-Beetz. The dismantling of the wooden sidewalks would constitute a loss for local heritage.[13]

In 2020, a municipal regulation recommends rebuilding these picturesque elements that are an integral part of the landscape.

… Not so long ago, the entire village of Baie-Johan-Beetz was crisscrossed by a network of wooden sidewalks. Much of this network has disappeared over time but a few remain. It is important to restore and highlight these wooden sidewalks.[14]

Transport

For the best part of the 20th century, depending on the ice conditions, the Clarke Steamship Co. Ltd. ships,[15] [16] departing from Montreal and Quebec, regularly stopped at Johan Beetz. From the locality to reach the interior of the region, two canoe routes are available to travelers. One follows the Piashti River to Lake Bellanger,[17] and gives access to the western part. The second road follows the Watshishou River to a point two and a half miles north of Véronique Lake.[18] Both rivers contain numerous rapids and falls, and there are eleven portages between the Gulf and Bellanger Lake and 21 portages before reaching Prudent Lake. Several large lakes, particularly in the northern half of the region, are suitable for seaplane landings.[19]

In 1996, Quebec Route 138 (The Whale Route) was extended to Havre-Saint-Pierre, thus connecting the village of Baie-Johan-Beetz to the Quebec road network.[20] [3]

The city is served by the Baie-Johan-Beetz Seaplane Base (SPB) .

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Time zones and daylight saving time . Gouvernement of Canada . 17 June 2024 . 25 October 2022 . Canada, Time Zones and Daylight Saving Time usually have been regulated by provincial and territorial governments.
  2. Web site: Heritage cultural of Quebec . Johan Beetz, biography . Quebec Gouvernement . Ministry of Culture and Communications of Quebec . 29 June 2024 . fr . 2024 . Beetz studied at the Catholic University of Louvain, where he received training in natural sciences, chemistry and human and veterinary medicine..
  3. Web site: Baie-Johan-Beetz . Quebec Gouvernement . Commission de Toponymie Quebec . 15 June 2024 . fr . 12 May 1968 . In 1996, the extension of Route 138 made it possible to connect this municipality to that of Havre-Saint-Pierre, and in doing so, to break its isolation..
  4. Web site: Beetz Johan, Cultural Heritage . Quebec Gouvernement . Library and National Archives of Quebec . 20 June 2024 . fr . 2013 . His knowledge of medicine makes Beetz the village doctor. He offered free care and advice to residents and it was probably thanks to his prophylactic recommendations that Piastre Baie was spared the Spanish flu..
  5. Web site: Paul Hinse . Fox breeding in Quebec . John William Hopkins, The experiences of Johan Beetz . 20 June 2024 . 15 of 40 . fr . 1 May 2012 . Beetz created a fox park considerable value valued at $300,000 in 1913.
  6. Web site: Christine Lebel . Johan Beetz (1874-1949), biography . 20 June 2024 . fr . 4 January 2020 . Director of the provincial vulpiculture service, he received the title of Doctor of Veterinary Medicine in 1936 Agricultural Science of the University of Montreal. He was also a co-founder of the Society Zoologique de Québec..
  7. Web site: Watshishou - Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas of Canada - map . IBA Birdlife . Cartographic production by Bird Studies Canada . 2 July 2024 . March 2017 . The IBA Program is an international conservation initiative coordinated by Bird Life International.
  8. Web site: Pontbriand River - toponymy . Quebec Gouvernement . Commission de Toponymy Quebec . 1 July 2024 . fr . 13 June 1997 . It receives the waters of Lake Caron and flows into Pontbriand Bay, hence its name..
  9. Web site: Jalobert Bay - toponymy . Quebec Gouvernement . Commission de Toponymy Quebec . 1 July 2024 . fr . 5 December 1968 . Its name recalls the memory of Macé Jalobert, brother-in-law of Jacques Cartier, who accompanied the latter during his voyage of 1535-1536, as pilot and captain of the Petite Hermine..
  10. Web site: Watshishou migratory bird sanctuary . Gouvernement of Canada . Environment and natural resources . 1 July 2024 . 3 April 2024 . Double-crested cormorant, great black-backed gull, ring-billed gull, common tern, arctic tern, black guillemot, common loon, American black duck, red-breasted merganser, white-winged scoter, surf scoter, black scoter, semipalmated sandpiper and ruddy turnstone.
  11. Web site: Migratory bird sanctuaries across Canada - Quebec . Gouvernement of Canada . Environment and natural resources . 1 July 2024 . 3 April 2024 . The Watshishou Migratory Bird Sanctuary, located in Minganie, on the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, was established in 1925 to protect seabird colonies in this important nesting area..
  12. Web site: Ministry of Culture and Communications of Quebec . Johan Beetz House, heritage real estate . Heritage directory cultural of Quebec . 18 June 2024 . 2006 . Other name, Château Johan-Beetz.
  13. Web site: Yves Bédard, biologist . Environmental impact study, extension of Route 138, Baie-Johan-Beetz section to the Watshishou River . Quebec Gouvernement . Quebec Ministry of Transport . 22 June 2024 . 17 of 50 . fr . 1987 . The sidewalks demonstrate a special adaptation of residents living in the austere environment of their part of the country.
  14. Web site: Municipality of Johan-Beetz, Regulations 2020-12-07-07 . Urban plan . 22 June 2024 . 9 of 10 . fr . 7 December 2021 . Representing a characteristic specific to small communities on the North Shore, it is important to restore and highlight these wooden sidewalks..
  15. Web site: The Clarke Steamship Co Ltd . 17 May 2024 . 41 of 74 . 7 June 2014 . The North Shore service now sailed from Quebec every Tuesday at 9 am, serving no fewer than thirty locales, consisting of pulpwood ports, native villages, trading posts and fishing settlements,.
  16. Web site: Kevin Griffin . St. Lawrence saga: The Clarke Steamship story . 23 June 2024 . 2013 . The Clarke Steamship Company, whose ships plied the Gulf of St Lawrence for the best part of the 20th century.
  17. Web site: Bellanger Lake, toponymy . Quebec Gouvernement . Commission de Toponymy Quebec . 23 June 2024 . fr . 5 December 1968 . The Innu know this lake under the name Pepaukamau, “lake with several straits.
  18. Web site: Veronique Lake, toponymy . Quebec Gouvernement . Commission de Toponymy Quebec . 23 June 2024 . fr . 5 December 1968 . This lake, approximately 7 km long, is located approximately 70 km east of Havre-Saint-Pierre..
  19. Web site: Gérald E. Cooper . Preliminary report on the Johan Beetz region (Eastern Half) cantons of Drucourt and Johan Beetz, Saguenay county . Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources - Government of Quebec . 23 June 2024 . 4 of 12 . fr . 1952 . Village on the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, located 440 miles downstream from the city of Quebec.
  20. Web site: Jean Dumont, archaeologist . Raymond Goulet, geomorphologist . Extension of Route 138 between Johan-Beetz Bay and the Pashashibou River . Gouvernement of Quebec . Ministry of Transport and Sustainable Mobility, Directorate of the Transport . 97 . fr . June 1986 . Preliminary studies for the realization of the project construction of route 138 between Johan-Beetz Bay and the Pashashibou River, electoral district of Duplessis..