Tuesday, October 13, 2009
Monday, October 12, 2009
Hallway to kitchen
Friday, October 9, 2009
Grandma's bedroom
Cupboard in the bedroom; the woodwork (now painted over) is quite nice, elegant |
That open door in the adjoining room is the entrance from the stairs |
Looking from the bedroom to the dining room |
Window in my grandmother`s bedroom |
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
Auntie Mable's Room
This was my Auntie Mable's bedroom, where my parents slept when we lived here from 1952 to 1954. The room is in the front of the flat, facing onto Girouard Avenue. She seemed to have "modern" furniture, compared to the rest of the flat, but maybe it wasn't all that "modern"... I remember sitting in this room on my father's lap, spelling "c.a.t." and "d.o.g." and looking at cartoons cut from the Saturday Evening Post.
Tuesday, October 6, 2009
Monday, October 5, 2009
Living room & dining room
Sunday, October 4, 2009
In dining room & view
Here's the view from the window in the first photograph. It's a courtyard between the two buildings where there used to be a tree, and then just a bit farther away from the building you have the lane between Girouard and the street to the west. Many of the properties on Girouard have been renovated... alas, 2226 Girouard is not one of them; it's present state gives some idea of what it was like back in the fifties, without furniture.
Saturday, October 3, 2009
Friday, October 2, 2009
Thursday, October 1, 2009
Girouard Avenue: The Living Room
You realize that this used to be a really nice flat. The word "flat" is British, so it is ironic in largely French-speaking Quebec that we use this word. I don't believe that these units are referred to as "flats" elsewhere in North America. A flat is a self-contained unit with its own front door to the street, unlike an apartment that has a front door leading to a hallway of other people's front doors, and a lobby and door to the street. My grandmother's flat was surprisingly large, around 1000 square feet, and has a very nicely laid out floor plan. Living room in the front, large eat-in kitchen in the rear, large dining room in the middle, and a foyer and door to where stairs lead to her second floor flat. It is a very liveable living space.
Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
How Girouard Avenue Got Its Name
Stephen Morrissey outside of 2226 Girouard Avenue, his grandmother`s home from around 1925 to 1966; photo from 1994. |
Désiré Girouard, after whom Girouard Avenue was named, was known to his friends as Jérémie. He combined an outstanding career in law and politics with important contributions to historical studies of the island of Montreal. His family had been in Canada for over a hundred years by the time he was born in St Timothée in 1836. The family was descended from Antoine Girouard, a native of Mont Lucon, Bourbonnais, France, who became secretary to Governor De Ramezay in 1720 in Montreal. Girouard studied law at McGill University where he won the first prize for three consecutive years. He joined the law firm of his former principal and was soon associated with the most important lawyers of his time. Always a scholar and researcher, he published several treatises on commercial law and was considered an expert in his field. But he was a history buff as well and contributed to several journals of his time, one of which, La Revue Critique, he conducted. He also lectured at l'Institut Canadien Français.
Girouard's political start is rather interesting. He ran for Parliament in 1872 in Jacques Cartier riding, but was defeated by an obscure Liberal, R.Laflamme. He was again defeated in Beauharnois in 1874, but finally won Jacques Cartier by 2 votes in 1876 on appeal to the courts. Afterwards his real majority was found to be 200. Girouard is best known politically for the spirited stance which he took against his own party's decision to execute Louis Riel. He with 16 other French Conservative members, formed a group of rebel parlementariens rebels known as the "Bolters" and his letter defending Riel's plea of insanity was widely circulated.
As a result of long and patient research in the archives of the young country, Girouard began a series of essays dealing with early history of the Lake St Louis area and the Indian wars. In 1883, at the World's Fair in Chicago, his compilation of these essays was given to the public in a book entitled Lake St Louis, Old and New, Illustrated and Cavelier de Lasalle. For his effort he was awarded the Confederation Medal. He published several other historical works in English and French.
Girouard was appointed to the Bench as a Judge of the Supreme Court in 1895. He was married three times; all three wives were English speaking. He was the father of six sons and four daughters. One of his sons also Désiré, became a lawyer and assisted his father in his literary endeavors. Edouard Percy Cranville, another son, attended Royal Military College in Kingston and became a distinguished soldier and railway engineer. He worked for the Canadian Pacific and British railway companies before joining Kitchener in several Africa campaigns. Edouard Girouard built many railways in South Africa and was awarded a D.S.O. while working in Egypt in 1896. He also was an author, but his topic was railway history. For two years, Maj. General Girouard was Governor of northern Nigeria, but finished his career during World War I as Director General of munitions in Britain. Désiré Girouard Sr. died in 1912, and Girouard Avenue was named for him in that year. The avenue was formerly called Plateau, Toronto and Chapleau.