The Main

Répertoire culturel de Montréal

Aidez-nous à nous améliorer ! Partagez vos idées sur la façon dont nous pouvons améliorer votre expérience.

Laisser un commentaire

Pour les partenariats et collaborations :

partnerships@themain.com

Contenu

  • Articles
  • Gastronomie
  • Arts et culture
  • Leçon d'histoire
  • Bulletin
  • Événements

Guides

  • Tous les guides
  • Meilleurs restaurants
  • Meilleurs cafés
  • Meilleurs bars
  • Meilleurs brunchs
  • Meilleures boulangeries

Explorer Montréal

  • Parcourir le répertoire
  • Restaurants
  • Bars
  • Cafés
  • Librairies

À propos

  • À propos de nous
  • S'abonner
  • Boutique
  • Publicité
  • Proposer un sujet
  • Flux RSS

Légal

  • Conditions d'utilisation
  • Conditions d'adhésion
  • Politique de confidentialité
Suivez-nous
InstagramTwitterTiktokLinkedin

The Main Media Inc. 2026

✦ Built By Field Office
    The Main

    Répertoire culturel de Montréal

    Aidez-nous à nous améliorer ! Partagez vos idées sur la façon dont nous pouvons améliorer votre expérience.

    Laisser un commentaire

    Pour les partenariats et collaborations :

    partnerships@themain.com

    Contenu

    • Articles
    • Gastronomie
    • Arts et culture
    • Leçon d'histoire
    • Bulletin
    • Événements

    Guides

    • Tous les guides
    • Meilleurs restaurants
    • Meilleurs cafés
    • Meilleurs bars
    • Meilleurs brunchs
    • Meilleures boulangeries

    Explorer Montréal

    • Parcourir le répertoire
    • Restaurants
    • Bars
    • Cafés
    • Librairies

    À propos

    • À propos de nous
    • S'abonner
    • Boutique
    • Publicité
    • Proposer un sujet
    • Flux RSS

    Légal

    • Conditions d'utilisation
    • Conditions d'adhésion
    • Politique de confidentialité
    Suivez-nous
    InstagramTwitterTiktokLinkedin

    The Main Media Inc. 2026

    ✦ Built By Field Office
      --°C|mercredi 8 avril 2026|
      Abonnez-vous aujourd'hui pour obtenir 3 articles gratuits par mois.ROYALMOUNT Veut Être Votre Destination Culinaire Pendant Un Mois Entier50 % de réduction sur vos 5 premières courses avec Lyft
      InstagramTwitterTiktokLinkedin
      |
      Publicité
      Le logo de The Main
      Arts et cultureManger & boireHistoireGuides
      Explorez
      Guides populaires
      • Les meilleurs restaurants à Montréal
      • Meilleurs nouveaux restaurants
      • Meilleurs cafés
      • Boutiques uniques
      • Restaurants romantiques
      • Meilleures librairies
      • Voir tous les guides
      Quartier
      • Downtown
      • Le Plateau-Mont-Royal
      • Mile End
      • Mile-Ex
      • Saint-Henri
      • Voir tout
      Type d'entreprise
      • Restaurant
      • Café
      • Boutique / Store
      • Bar
      • Bakery
      • Voir tout
      Près du métro
      • Peel
      • Mont-Royal
      • Place-Saint-Henri
      • Place-d'Armes
      • Jarry
      • Voir tout
      Plus
      Catégories
      • Au-delà de Montréal

        Voyages, aventures et regards sur le monde.

      • Design

        Le meilleur du design montréalais.

      • Histoire

        Histoires, leçons et contexte.

      • Infolettre

        Notre infolettre hebdomadaire.

      • Météo
      • Voir toutes les articles originales
      Boutique
      Inscription
      Inscription
      --°C|mercredi 8 avril 2026|
      Abonnez-vous aujourd'hui pour obtenir 3 articles gratuits par mois.ROYALMOUNT Veut Être Votre Destination Culinaire Pendant Un Mois Entier50 % de réduction sur vos 5 premières courses avec Lyft
      InstagramTwitterTiktokLinkedin
      |
      Publicité
      Le logo de The Main
      Arts et cultureManger & boireHistoireGuides
      Explorez
      Guides populaires
      • Les meilleurs restaurants à Montréal
      • Meilleurs nouveaux restaurants
      • Meilleurs cafés
      • Boutiques uniques
      • Restaurants romantiques
      • Meilleures librairies
      • Voir tous les guides
      Quartier
      • Downtown
      • Le Plateau-Mont-Royal
      • Mile End
      • Mile-Ex
      • Saint-Henri
      • Voir tout
      Type d'entreprise
      • Restaurant
      • Café
      • Boutique / Store
      • Bar
      • Bakery
      • Voir tout
      Près du métro
      • Peel
      • Mont-Royal
      • Place-Saint-Henri
      • Place-d'Armes
      • Jarry
      • Voir tout
      Plus
      Catégories
      • Au-delà de Montréal

        Voyages, aventures et regards sur le monde.

      • Design

        Le meilleur du design montréalais.

      • Histoire

        Histoires, leçons et contexte.

      • Infolettre

        Notre infolettre hebdomadaire.

      • Météo
      • Voir toutes les articles originales
      Boutique
      Inscription
      Inscription
      SAT Fest 2026 Is Montreal's Must-See Immersive Cinema Experience
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      SAT Fest 2026 Is Montreal's Must-See Immersive Cinema Experience

      52 films from 14 countries over five nights in Montreal's only fulldome cinema: SAT Fest runs March 24 to 28, 2026 in the Satosphere.

      One Michelin Star Later, Hugue Dufour Is Coming Home
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      Ivy Lerner-Frank

      One Michelin Star Later, Hugue Dufour Is Coming Home

      The celebrated Quebec chef closes out his New York chapter with a collaboration at Molenne and a new restaurant in Baie-Saint-Paul on the horizon.

      Quebec's Hiring System is Broken, and She Wants to Fix It
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      Quebec's Hiring System is Broken, and She Wants to Fix It

      When a company Jesenka Golos worked for shut down, she stepped in to transform it. Seven years later, she leads companies and is rethinking how Quebec recruits.

      ROYALMOUNT Wants to Be Your Dining Destination for a Whole Month
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      ROYALMOUNT Wants to Be Your Dining Destination for a Whole Month

      ROYALMOUNT: Les Saveurs brings ticketed tastings, chef menus, and wine pairings to six Urban Park restaurants from February 22nd to March 22nd.

      Montréal en Lumière 2026: The only guide you need
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      Montréal en Lumière 2026: The Only Guide You Need

      Seven-course dinners meets all-night dancing: Here's how to navigate the 27th edition of the city's iconic winter festival from February 27 to March 7, 2026.

      Nordic-inspired yoga, DJ nights on ice, and lunchtime pilates
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      Nordic-inspired Yoga, DJ Nights on Ice, and Lunchtime Pilates

      ROYALMOUNT's January wellness lineup kicks off 2026 with unconventional pathways to that "new year, new you" promise.

      SAT Fest 2026 Is Montreal's Must-See Immersive Cinema Experience
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      SAT Fest 2026 Is Montreal's Must-See Immersive Cinema Experience

      52 films from 14 countries over five nights in Montreal's only fulldome cinema: SAT Fest runs March 24 to 28, 2026 in the Satosphere.

      One Michelin Star Later, Hugue Dufour Is Coming Home
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      Ivy Lerner-Frank

      One Michelin Star Later, Hugue Dufour Is Coming Home

      The celebrated Quebec chef closes out his New York chapter with a collaboration at Molenne and a new restaurant in Baie-Saint-Paul on the horizon.

      Quebec's Hiring System is Broken, and She Wants to Fix It
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      Quebec's Hiring System is Broken, and She Wants to Fix It

      When a company Jesenka Golos worked for shut down, she stepped in to transform it. Seven years later, she leads companies and is rethinking how Quebec recruits.

      ROYALMOUNT Wants to Be Your Dining Destination for a Whole Month
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      ROYALMOUNT Wants to Be Your Dining Destination for a Whole Month

      ROYALMOUNT: Les Saveurs brings ticketed tastings, chef menus, and wine pairings to six Urban Park restaurants from February 22nd to March 22nd.

      Montréal en Lumière 2026: The only guide you need
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      Montréal en Lumière 2026: The Only Guide You Need

      Seven-course dinners meets all-night dancing: Here's how to navigate the 27th edition of the city's iconic winter festival from February 27 to March 7, 2026.

      Nordic-inspired yoga, DJ nights on ice, and lunchtime pilates
      Sponsored
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      Nordic-inspired Yoga, DJ Nights on Ice, and Lunchtime Pilates

      ROYALMOUNT's January wellness lineup kicks off 2026 with unconventional pathways to that "new year, new you" promise.

      Plus de Sponsored

      Plus de Sponsored

      Sponsored

      The Queen E: At the Heart of Montreal's History

      From John Lennon & Yoko Ono bed-in for peace to the October Crisis, Montreal's most storied hotel has been at the centre of it all.

      ParThe Main

      8 avril 2026 · 6 min de lecture

      The Queen E: At the Heart of Montreal's History
      The Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth at sunset

      Découvrez les lieux mentionnés dans cette histoire

      Place Ville MarieRosélysNacarat

      When Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth softly opened on March 15, 1958, ahead of a splashier three-day gala the following April, it did so above a train station. The location’s a perfect metaphor for what this luxury hotel was always meant to be: a place in constant motion, connected to everything. 

      Built by the Canadian National Railway directly over Central Station, the 21-storey tower required 160 concrete pylons just to muffle the rumble of trains passing beneath it. At the time, the hotel was a marvel of hospitality engineering, numbering among the first hotels in North America to offer escalators, centralized air conditioning, and a direct-dial telephone in every room. Within three years of opening, it became the first property connected to what would grow into Montreal's Underground City, via an underground corridor linking it to Place Ville Marie.

      Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth in 1958.

      Born among controversy

      Even before the first guests checked in, the "Queen E" was already part of Montreal’s civic conversation. CN president Donald Gordon’s decision to name the hotel after Elizabeth II sparked passionate debate among Québécois nationalists who wanted it called Château Maisonneuve in honour of Montreal’s founder, Paul de Chomedey, a reflection of how deeply this building already mattered before it had welcomed a single guest.

      From day one, the hotel announced itself as unmistakably of the city. The three-day opening gala featured Guy Lombardo’s orchestra and Montreal singer Guylaine Guy performing on opening night. The interior, designed around a “New France” theme, featured carved wooden panels, stained glass murals, ceramic tiles, and bronze elevator doors, each commissioned from Quebec artists. Whatever you thought of the name, the building itself was evidently rooted.

      Clockwise from the lop left: The grand salon, a standard room, a 21st floor restaurant, and junior suite—all in 1958.

      Famous guests & Defining moments

      The parade of notable visitors began almost immediately: Fidel Castro became the first head of state to stay at the hotel in April 1959. Queen Elizabeth II arrived just two months later, the first of four visits she would make over the years. The decades that followed brought an extraordinary roll call: French Presidents Charles de Gaulle and Jacques Chirac, Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev, U.S. Presidents Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush, South African President Nelson Mandela, and cultural icon Joan Crawford all passed through its doors. During Expo 67, when Montreal briefly became the centre of the world, 50 of the 60 visiting heads of state took up residence in the hotel's suites.

      But the moment that would define the Queen E for generations came in the spring of 1969, and Montreal almost didn't get: John Lennon and Yoko Ono had planned their second "Bed-In for Peace" for New York, but Lennon's prior drug conviction kept him out of the United States. They tried the Bahamas next, spent one uncomfortable night in the heat, and looked north. Montreal got the call.

      They checked into Room 1742 on May 26th and held court for seven days, throwing flower petals into the air often enough that housekeeping had to vacuum the floors several times a day. On June 1st, with local recording engineer André Perry behind four microphones and a four-track recorder, Lennon recorded "Give Peace a Chance" with Tommy Smothers of the Smothers Brothers on guitar, and Allen Ginsberg and Petula Clark among those crowded into the suite. The song peaked at number 14 on the Billboard Hot 100 and became the defining anthem of the anti-Vietnam War movement.

      The room still carries that charge. Guests will tell you they feel a presence after staying there, saying there's a special vibration.

      The following year brought a different kind of history. In October 1970, with the FLQ having kidnapped two prominent politicians and Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau invoking the War Measures Act, Premier Robert Bourassa quietly moved provincial government operations into the Queen E, coordinating Quebec's response to the crisis from inside its walls—unknown to the public at the time.

      And in 1976, the hotel served as headquarters for the International Olympic Committee, welcoming international delegations as Montreal hosted the Summer Games.

      A party at Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth's Beaver Club (year unknown), closed in 2014.

      A table worth remembering

      No history of the Queen E is complete without the Beaver Club. Open from the hotel's first day in 1958 until its quiet closure in early 2014, it was considered one of the finest restaurants in the country for much of its run, earning a Mobil Five-Star rating, CAA Four Diamonds, and a Wine Spectator Award of Excellence. Its name nodded to Montreal's original Beaver Club, founded in the 18th century by fur traders and merchants who had wintered in the pays d'en haut. The restaurant fed queens, heads of state, and ordinary Montrealers alike for over five decades, setting a standard for grand hotel dining that the Queen E has carried forward.

      Today, that spirit lives on at Rosélys, the hotel’s signature restaurant, where French and Québec culinary traditions meet with a decidedly local sensibility.

      A waiter at the Beaver Club.

      The Queen E Today

      After a $140-million renovation completed in 2017, Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth emerged with 950 updated rooms, a food market, a spa, a cocktail terrasse overlooking Place Ville Marie, and nearly double the meeting space. The design by Sid Lee Architecture sought to honour the hotel’s mid-century character while opening it fully to the city.

      The John Lennon and Yoko Ono Suite remains bookable, and more alive than ever: in a collaboration with creative studio MASSIVart, the room has been transformed into a fully immersive, interactive experience complete with virtual reality, archival surprises tucked throughout, a guitar, a vintage telephone, and a living room recreated to match the original bed-in layout, bed beneath the window and all. The suite won a CODAaward for best hospitality project in 2020, and continues to draw guests from around the world who come not just to sleep in history, but to step inside it.

      Suite 1742, or the 'John Lennon and Yoko Ono Suite'.

      Situated at the heart of Montreal’s Nouveau Centre, the hotel serves as an anchor for the downtown core's ongoing transformation. Perched directly above Central Station with seamless access to the Underground City, it remains deeply woven into the city's daily rhythm.

      Now a member of Historic Hotels Worldwide, the property operates under a "for Montrealers, by Montrealers" philosophy. This ethos is found at Marché Artisans, an 8,000-square-foot epicurean market where local talent takes center stage. The experience continues at the aforementioned Rosélys, and the retro-modern bar channeling 1960s glamour Nacarat. Those looking to elevate an event can head up to Espace 21, a rooftop glass structure offering panoramic views and a boundary-pushing venue for up to 220 guests.

      Clockwise from top left: Marché Artisans, Nacarat, and Rosélys.

      More recently, the hotel has leaned into cultural moments with flair, positioning itself as a stage for the city’s cultural life: The Cabaret Céleste, a theatrical creation by Cirque Eloize, brought a star-themed cabaret experience to the hotel while the Barbie Dream Suite turned Suite 1700 into a pink pop-culture destination for a new generation of guests.

      "For over 60 years, Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth has stood at the intersection of culture, hospitality, and history in Montreal," says the hotel. "More than just a hotel, it is a landmark woven into the fabric of this city."

      The Main

      Advertisement

      Follow on Google
      Sponsored

      The Queen E: At the Heart of Montreal's History

      From John Lennon & Yoko Ono bed-in for peace to the October Crisis, Montreal's most storied hotel has been at the centre of it all.

      ParThe Main

      8 avril 2026 · 6 min de lecture

      The Queen E: At the Heart of Montreal's History
      The Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth at sunset

      Découvrez les lieux mentionnés dans cette histoire

      Place Ville MarieRosélysNacarat

      When Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth softly opened on March 15, 1958, ahead of a splashier three-day gala the following April, it did so above a train station. The location’s a perfect metaphor for what this luxury hotel was always meant to be: a place in constant motion, connected to everything. 

      Built by the Canadian National Railway directly over Central Station, the 21-storey tower required 160 concrete pylons just to muffle the rumble of trains passing beneath it. At the time, the hotel was a marvel of hospitality engineering, numbering among the first hotels in North America to offer escalators, centralized air conditioning, and a direct-dial telephone in every room. Within three years of opening, it became the first property connected to what would grow into Montreal's Underground City, via an underground corridor linking it to Place Ville Marie.

      Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth in 1958.

      Born among controversy

      Even before the first guests checked in, the "Queen E" was already part of Montreal’s civic conversation. CN president Donald Gordon’s decision to name the hotel after Elizabeth II sparked passionate debate among Québécois nationalists who wanted it called Château Maisonneuve in honour of Montreal’s founder, Paul de Chomedey, a reflection of how deeply this building already mattered before it had welcomed a single guest.

      From day one, the hotel announced itself as unmistakably of the city. The three-day opening gala featured Guy Lombardo’s orchestra and Montreal singer Guylaine Guy performing on opening night. The interior, designed around a “New France” theme, featured carved wooden panels, stained glass murals, ceramic tiles, and bronze elevator doors, each commissioned from Quebec artists. Whatever you thought of the name, the building itself was evidently rooted.

      Clockwise from the lop left: The grand salon, a standard room, a 21st floor restaurant, and junior suite—all in 1958.

      Famous guests & Defining moments

      The parade of notable visitors began almost immediately: Fidel Castro became the first head of state to stay at the hotel in April 1959. Queen Elizabeth II arrived just two months later, the first of four visits she would make over the years. The decades that followed brought an extraordinary roll call: French Presidents Charles de Gaulle and Jacques Chirac, Soviet Premier Mikhail Gorbachev, U.S. Presidents Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush, South African President Nelson Mandela, and cultural icon Joan Crawford all passed through its doors. During Expo 67, when Montreal briefly became the centre of the world, 50 of the 60 visiting heads of state took up residence in the hotel's suites.

      But the moment that would define the Queen E for generations came in the spring of 1969, and Montreal almost didn't get: John Lennon and Yoko Ono had planned their second "Bed-In for Peace" for New York, but Lennon's prior drug conviction kept him out of the United States. They tried the Bahamas next, spent one uncomfortable night in the heat, and looked north. Montreal got the call.

      They checked into Room 1742 on May 26th and held court for seven days, throwing flower petals into the air often enough that housekeeping had to vacuum the floors several times a day. On June 1st, with local recording engineer André Perry behind four microphones and a four-track recorder, Lennon recorded "Give Peace a Chance" with Tommy Smothers of the Smothers Brothers on guitar, and Allen Ginsberg and Petula Clark among those crowded into the suite. The song peaked at number 14 on the Billboard Hot 100 and became the defining anthem of the anti-Vietnam War movement.

      The room still carries that charge. Guests will tell you they feel a presence after staying there, saying there's a special vibration.

      The following year brought a different kind of history. In October 1970, with the FLQ having kidnapped two prominent politicians and Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau invoking the War Measures Act, Premier Robert Bourassa quietly moved provincial government operations into the Queen E, coordinating Quebec's response to the crisis from inside its walls—unknown to the public at the time.

      And in 1976, the hotel served as headquarters for the International Olympic Committee, welcoming international delegations as Montreal hosted the Summer Games.

      A party at Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth's Beaver Club (year unknown), closed in 2014.

      A table worth remembering

      No history of the Queen E is complete without the Beaver Club. Open from the hotel's first day in 1958 until its quiet closure in early 2014, it was considered one of the finest restaurants in the country for much of its run, earning a Mobil Five-Star rating, CAA Four Diamonds, and a Wine Spectator Award of Excellence. Its name nodded to Montreal's original Beaver Club, founded in the 18th century by fur traders and merchants who had wintered in the pays d'en haut. The restaurant fed queens, heads of state, and ordinary Montrealers alike for over five decades, setting a standard for grand hotel dining that the Queen E has carried forward.

      Today, that spirit lives on at Rosélys, the hotel’s signature restaurant, where French and Québec culinary traditions meet with a decidedly local sensibility.

      A waiter at the Beaver Club.

      The Queen E Today

      After a $140-million renovation completed in 2017, Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth emerged with 950 updated rooms, a food market, a spa, a cocktail terrasse overlooking Place Ville Marie, and nearly double the meeting space. The design by Sid Lee Architecture sought to honour the hotel’s mid-century character while opening it fully to the city.

      The John Lennon and Yoko Ono Suite remains bookable, and more alive than ever: in a collaboration with creative studio MASSIVart, the room has been transformed into a fully immersive, interactive experience complete with virtual reality, archival surprises tucked throughout, a guitar, a vintage telephone, and a living room recreated to match the original bed-in layout, bed beneath the window and all. The suite won a CODAaward for best hospitality project in 2020, and continues to draw guests from around the world who come not just to sleep in history, but to step inside it.

      Suite 1742, or the 'John Lennon and Yoko Ono Suite'.

      Situated at the heart of Montreal’s Nouveau Centre, the hotel serves as an anchor for the downtown core's ongoing transformation. Perched directly above Central Station with seamless access to the Underground City, it remains deeply woven into the city's daily rhythm.

      Now a member of Historic Hotels Worldwide, the property operates under a "for Montrealers, by Montrealers" philosophy. This ethos is found at Marché Artisans, an 8,000-square-foot epicurean market where local talent takes center stage. The experience continues at the aforementioned Rosélys, and the retro-modern bar channeling 1960s glamour Nacarat. Those looking to elevate an event can head up to Espace 21, a rooftop glass structure offering panoramic views and a boundary-pushing venue for up to 220 guests.

      Clockwise from top left: Marché Artisans, Nacarat, and Rosélys.

      More recently, the hotel has leaned into cultural moments with flair, positioning itself as a stage for the city’s cultural life: The Cabaret Céleste, a theatrical creation by Cirque Eloize, brought a star-themed cabaret experience to the hotel while the Barbie Dream Suite turned Suite 1700 into a pink pop-culture destination for a new generation of guests.

      "For over 60 years, Fairmont The Queen Elizabeth has stood at the intersection of culture, hospitality, and history in Montreal," says the hotel. "More than just a hotel, it is a landmark woven into the fabric of this city."

      The Main

      Advertisement

      Follow on Google

      Les derniers de The Main

      Arts & CultureAfter 40 Years on Bernard, Dragon Flowers Has a New AddressArts & CultureCrime 101 Goes Back to Basics and Executes Them BeautifullyArts & CultureWhat to do this weekend (04.09–04.12)Food & DrinkA New Pub Aims to Bring Finesse to the Plateau's Bar SceneArts & CultureAfter 20 Years of Recording Montreal, Breakglass Has a Label to Call Its Own
      A New Pub Aims to Bring Finesse to the Plateau's Bar Scene

      Previous

      A New Pub Aims to Bring Finesse to the Plateau's Bar Scene

      Next

      What to Do This Weekend (04.09–04.12)

      What to do this weekend (04.09–04.12)

      Les derniers de The Main

      Arts & CultureAfter 40 Years on Bernard, Dragon Flowers Has a New AddressArts & CultureCrime 101 Goes Back to Basics and Executes Them BeautifullyArts & CultureWhat to do this weekend (04.09–04.12)Food & DrinkA New Pub Aims to Bring Finesse to the Plateau's Bar SceneArts & CultureAfter 20 Years of Recording Montreal, Breakglass Has a Label to Call Its Own
      A New Pub Aims to Bring Finesse to the Plateau's Bar Scene

      Previous

      A New Pub Aims to Bring Finesse to the Plateau's Bar Scene

      Next

      What to Do This Weekend (04.09–04.12)

      What to do this weekend (04.09–04.12)