Rapides du Cheval Blanc


There are three locations in Quebec, Canada with the name "Rapides du Cheval Blanc". This article is on the rapids between the north side of the Island of Montreal, and the south side of Sainte-Dorothée, Laval.
The Rapides du Cheval Blanc, or White Horse Rapids, flow between the Island of Montreal, Pierrefonds-Roxboro and Sainte-Dorothée, Laval on the Rivière des Prairies in Quebec. The name also refers to a protected woods, a public city park adjacent to the rapids, and to a fault line underneath the area. The rapids are visible at the public park. The name "Rapides du Cheval Blanc" is applied to a large area.

History

The name Whitehorse or Cheval Blanc comes from several legends, one of which is 18th-century legend of a white horse that would emerge from the Rivière des Prairies, and terrorize villagers and ravage crops. Another legend says a horse was pulling a cart on a ferry across the river to Île Bizard when the cable connecting the ferry to the shore broke and it drifted downstream. At the height of the rapids, the horse escaped. Another legend is that of a white horse that carried the materials for the construction of the Church of Sault-au-Récollet jumped aboard a boat in the middle of the rapids.
The land being next to the Rivière des Prairies is subject to spring flooding and has flooded many times in the past.

Ownership of the River

The river is owned by both the Federal and Provincial governments. The Federal government, Fisheries and Oceans Canada polices the water, the Provincial polices the earth, the bottom of the river and the north and south shorelines. Floating buoys are placed in the river during the summer to aid boat navigation.
The river cleanliness is usually good according to the RSMA water testing that is done weekly during warm weather. Rapides du Cheval Blanc is numbered RDP-180.
The river temperature can be found on the RSMA water quality report, it peaks at 25 degrees Celsius in the months of July and August.

Ownership of the Land

The original owners of the land were of course the Aboriginal peoples and the Algonquin people. Explorers from France named the land New France and the parish of Sainte-
Geneviève was founded in 1741. Treaty of Paris ceded Canada and most of New France to Britain after the Seven Years' War. In 1775-1776 the Island of Montreal was under attack from America, Fort Senneville was destroyed in 1776. Treaty of Paris ended the American Revolutionary War. The nation of Canada formed July 1, 1867.
Historical maps show boundary lines of the farmers fields using the Seigneurial system with names associated to the land. From East to West the names on the Henry Whitmer Hopkins map are
Aerial photographs of 1947 show that the Cheval Blanc land was agricultural at that time.
When the Deux-Montagnes railway was built through the land during the years 1912-18, many fields were cut off from their original parcel of farmland, resulting in triangle shaped properties.
Presently on the undeveloped lots or properties, the Habitant-farmers boundary lines still exist and are visible as 3 feet wide by 3 feet tall stone walls, also many of the farmers apple trees can still be found in the woods.
Residential development began to replace the farmland in 1953.
The location in the river was officially named in 1968 by the Gouvernement du Québec and Natural Resources Canada.
On June 26, 1968 the road, Sources Boulevard was voted to be extended north, past the train tracks. In doing so, building could then take place on the land adjacent to the rapids.
The land was being considered as a place for a million dollar apartment building in 1972.
A petition of George Boutellier that had over a thousand names was presented to then Mayor Eddie Lalande in an attempt to protect the land from development in 1972, but it was ignored.
The land was being considered as a "Promenade" park as early as 1974.
According to the Gouvernement du Québec and Natural Resources Canada the public park was created in 1997 on the site of a former sewage treatment plant. The sewage plant was on Lot 67 and Lot 62.
The current nature park, a further expansion of the 1997 park, was finally created in 2009.
of different color in the rock and the orange color is in a straight line.
On December 2015 the sum of $3,431,280 was paid by Réal Ménard the Montreal Executive Committee member responsible for green spaces, to the owner of Lot 1 171 908 on behalf of the city of Montreal. The land located at 1 171 908 was originally designated unbuildable floodplain valued at $1.00, then rezoned, then valued at $452,600 in 2014-2016.
On August 8, 2019 a grand park of montreal plan was announced that includes Rapides du Cheval Blanc.

Problem areas

A significant portion of the land that is close to 5th Avenue North that was purchased Dec. 2015 has construction debris, such as red brick, on the property. After sunset, in the months of June and July firefly's can be seen in this area, from the bicycle path that is west of 5th Avenue North.
North of the street "Rue du Sureau", east of the Canada Post mailbox's, cement and rebar debris can be seen on the side of the road.

Wildlife

Wild animals that can be found on the land near the rapids are rabbits, squirrels, snakes, chipmunks, turtles, cardinals, seagulls, sandpipers, herons, ducks, geese, chickadees and finches.

Development

The railway acted as a barrier to traffic, prevented the easy commercial development of the land. The land was also a designated flood-zone, it often floods in the spring. The river water was badly polluted in the past so this discouraged development.
The city of Montreal has given Cheval Blanc the designation of RDP 180 and tests the water quality during the summer. Land developers are currently trying to make money building on the "new" riverfront property. In the past, landfill was added to the land to raise the lands height relative to the river height, so buildings could be built.
Residents and environment groups have asked for preservation of the land. Condominium development is planned for a section of land on the far eastern part of Rapides du Cheval Blanc woods, across from Roxboro island. The traffic from the Condo's is to be connected to 5th Avenue North street.
The land developers received permission from the Quebec Environment Department for a derogation that de-zoned the Pierrefonds land as unbuildable flood plain.
The streets "Rue du Sureau", "Rue du Celtis", "Rue de L Achillee", and "Rue de L Armoise" were constructed in 2009 for the new buildings just west of the street Rue Riviera. East of Rue Riveria is a northern extension of "Boulevard des Sources" and "Rue Debours" which were constructed in 2004.
The former Mayor of Pierrefonds-Roxboro, Mme Monique Worth had in October 2004 bought a property at 5200 Sources Blvd. in the newly developed Cheval Blanc land for $180,538 and sold it April 4, 2005, for $235,000 for a profit of $54,000.