Jeanne-Mance Street


Jeanne Mance Street is a north-south street in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, located east of Park Avenue. It was named in 1914 in honour of Jeanne Mance, the founder of the Hôtel-Dieu de Montréal, which is also located along this street.
Jeanne Mance Street spans nearly the entire island of Montreal, but in several discontinuous portions. It starts in the south at Viger Avenue and continues north to Pine Avenue but does not connect to it as it is a dead end. It resumes north of Jeanne-Mance Park, from Mount Royal Avenue to Van Horne Avenue. Another section goes from Beaubien Street up to the Canadian Pacific tracks. It then continues in several discontinuous stretches along the same axis and ends slightly north of Gouin Boulevard.
Complexe Desjardins, the Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal, Montreal, arts interculturels and UQAM's President Kennedy building are all located along this street.

Protected Houses

Between De Maisonneuve Boulevard and Sherbrooke Street, on the west side, a series of Victorian-style houses with culturally significant façades were saved from demolition:
John Date House, 2022-2024 Jeanne Mance Street
John L. Jensen House, 2028-2030 Jeanne Mance Street
William Cairns House, 2032-2034 Jeanne Mance Street
Thomas Fraser House, 2040 Jeanne Mance Street
John T. Haggar House, 2044-2046 Jeanne Mance Street
Andreas C. F. Finzel House, 2050 Jeanne Mance Street
Janvier-Arthur Vaillancourt House, 2054-2056 Jeanne Mance Street
Janvier-Arthur Vaillancourt House, 2058-2064 Jeanne Mance Street
Janvier-Arthur Vaillancourt House, 2066-2068 Jeanne Mance Street
Walter Marriage House, 2070-2072 Jeanne Mance Street
Charles Sheppard House, 2074-2076 Jeanne Mance Street
Charles Sheppard House, 2078 Jeanne Mance Street
Charles Sheppard House, 2080A-2080B Jeanne Mance Street
Charles Sheppard House, 2082 Jeanne Mance Street
Victoria J. Prentice House, 2086-2088 Jeanne Mance Street
Daniel Kneen House, 2090-2092 Jeanne Mance Street