George-Étienne Cartier Monument Explained

Monument Name:Sir George-Étienne Cartier Monument
Type:Historical Monument
Material:Bronze, Stanstead granite
Width:8.75m (28.71feet)
Height:30.78m (100.98feet)
Begin:1913
Complete:1919
Open:September 6, 1919

The Sir George-Étienne Cartier Monument is a monument by sculptor George William Hill (1862–1934), with depiction of George-Étienne Cartier, located in Mount Royal Park in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.

The monument, which is topped by a winged Goddess of Liberty, was inaugurated on September 6, 1919 in the heart of Fletcher's Field west side. In temperate months it is the site of free weekly drum circle festivals informally called Tam-Tams.[1]

On the front, or East side of the monument, George-Étienne Cartier is portrayed standing above four other figures, each one representing a Province that signed the Canadian Confederation of 1867.

On the North side of the monument, a woman with a young girl to her right and a young boy to her left is shown holding a sword in her left hand. The boy holds out his bonded wrists in a begging manner as the girl reads a book. This scene represents Legislation.

On the South side, in a similar scene to the North side, a woman sits in the middle of a young boy who is holding a globe and a young girl who is reading a book. This represents Cartier's important contributions in education.

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Notes and References

  1. News: Cartier returns. May 23, 2008. Montreal Gazette. 31 March 2010.