Légaré Mill National Historic Site of Canada
Saint-Eustache, Quebec
General view
© Parks Canada Agency / Agence Parcs Canada, 1999.
Address :
232-236 Saint-Eustache Street, Saint-Eustache, Quebec
Recognition Statute:
Historic Sites and Monuments Act (R.S.C., 1985, c. H-4)
Designation Date:
2000-03-28
Dates:
-
1762 to 1763
(Construction)
-
1762 to 2002
(Significant)
Event, Person, Organization:
-
François Maisonneuve
(Builder)
Other Name(s):
-
Légaré Mill
(Designation Name)
Research Report Number:
1999-040
Plaque(s)
Existing plaque: 232-236 Saint-Eustache Street, Saint-Eustache, Quebec
Surrounded by the millers home, saw mill, mill-pond and dam, this water- powered mill built in 1762-1763 is an outstanding example of the grist mills that were central to seigneurial settlement and the development of a colonial agricultural economy. The mill has been constantly upgraded to meet changing demands. It was operated by the Légaré family throughout the 20th century. The buildings long history demonstrates the technological advances in flour milling, which was at one time a major manufacturing industry in Canada.
Description of Historic Place
Légaré Mill National Historic Site of Canada is a milling site situated between the sloping north bank of the Rivière du Chêne and the main street of the village of St. Eustache, Quebec. Located just opposite the town hall, the site has functioned continuously since the French Régime. Now part of a complex, the flour mill is surrounded by a saw mill, a miller’s house, a dam, and a mill pond, all of which are encompassed by the designation. Official recognition refers to lot 194 in the village of St. Eustache.
Heritage Value
Légaré Mill was designated a national historic site of Canada in 1999 because: it is an outstanding representative example of the proto-industrial 18th-century building type erected during the development of seigneuries and the colonial agricultural economy; it is a successful example of a continuously operating and evolving mill for over 240 years; and, it is an excellent example of a small, rural Canadian industrial complex integrated into a natural environment, which has remained largely intact in the midst of a modern urban centre. (Minutes)
The heritage value of Légaré Mill lies in the physical and functional continuity of the cohesiveness of the complex, in the utilitarian forms and diverse vernacular traditions of its buildings, and in the evidence of continuous technological evolution it contains. Légaré Mill was constructed in 1762-63 by François Maisonneuve on land granted to him by the Seigneur of Mille Isles on condition that he build a mill complex. Today that complex contains a flour mill (1762-63), a saw mill (1880), a miller’s house (1902-1903), a dam and a mill pond (1762-63). These resources reflect different time periods of vernacular construction and milling technology. The name of the site comes from the Légaré family who owned the mill during the 20th century.
Sources: Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada, Minute,1999; Commemorative Integrity Statement, 2004.
Character-Defining Elements
Key elements contributing to the heritage value of the site include: the setting of the complex on the edge of the historic village of St. Eustache, now the heart of modern St. Eustache, in Quebec; the completeness of the mill complex and its legibility as a cohesive functional grouping; its the juxtaposition of vernacular building traditions from different time periods; its portrayal of different technological time periods; the simple massing and T-shaped footprint of the combined grist and saw mill buildings; the grist mill with its rectangular massing, low elevation, and shallow gabled roof, wood siding, cut stone foundation and solid wall construction, simple interior layout and industrial finishes, remnants of different periods of technology (water wheel remains, interim conversions, the presence of turbines), and evidence of early vernacular French building traditions as seen in roof dormers, heavy walls with small window openings, and original living quarters within the building; the saw mill with its lighter rectangular massing under a more steeply pitched roof, its regular articulation of utilitarian apertures, its vertical wood siding and typical 19th-century wood frame construction; the rectangular, one-and-a-half storey massing of the miller’s house with its shallow mansard roof broken by window and door pediments, the balanced articulation of its façade, its vernacular early 20th century details such as carved window frames and roof brackets; its wood siding and shingled roof materials, the original wood finishes on the interior, the legibility of the original interior layout and functional use of space, and its siting at the edge of the street below the current street level; the integrity of the dike, particularly its footprint, elevation, construction materials and technology; the footprint and depth of the mill pond; archaeological evidence of earlier buildings and structures on the site, including an earlier saw mill on the south bank of the river; the spatial disposition of various components of the complex in relation to one another; the viewscapes from the complex across the Rivière du Chêne.