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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
    • S'abonner

    Légal

    • Conditions d'utilisation
    • Conditions d'adhésion
    • Politique de confidentialité
    Suivez-nous
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    The Main Media Inc. 2026

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      Catégories
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      • Au-delà de Montréal

        Voyages, aventures et regards sur le monde.

      • Design

        Le meilleur du design montréalais.

      • Manger & boire

        La bonne bouffe.

      • Histoire

        Histoires, leçons et contexte.

      • Infolettre

        Notre infolettre hebdomadaire.

      • Voir toutes les articles originales
      Explorez Montréal
      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
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      How Montreal Built Its Own Irish Pub Culture
      History Lesson
      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      How Montreal Built Its Own Irish Pub Culture

      The shamrock has been on Montreal's coat of arms since 1832, and the pub culture that followed has been here just as long.

      What Happened to Montreal's Red Light District?
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      What Happened to Montreal's Red Light District?

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      The House That Haitian Montreal Built
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      The Main

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      The Woman Who Taught a City How to Play the Piano
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      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      The Woman Who Taught a City How to Play the Piano

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      How a Railway Porter Built Montreal's Most Storied Jazz Club
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      How a Railway Porter Built Montreal's Most Storied Jazz Club

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      Version Anglaise
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      How Montreal Built Its Own Irish Pub Culture
      History Lesson
      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      How Montreal Built Its Own Irish Pub Culture

      The shamrock has been on Montreal's coat of arms since 1832, and the pub culture that followed has been here just as long.

      What Happened to Montreal's Red Light District?
      History Lesson
      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      What Happened to Montreal's Red Light District?

      Jazz legends, burlesque queens, and organized crime made it one of the most alive corners in North America. Then Montreal decided it had a reputation to protect.

      The House That Haitian Montreal Built
      History Lesson
      Version Anglaise
      The Main

      The House That Haitian Montreal Built

      The story of La Maison d'Haïti: Its welcome and advocacy for Montreal's growing Haitian community since 1972.

      The Woman Who Taught a City How to Play the Piano
      History Lesson
      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      The Woman Who Taught a City How to Play the Piano

      In so many ways, Montreal jazz exists because Daisy Peterson Sweeney both masters and generations of kids in Little Burgundy.

      How a Railway Porter Built Montreal's Most Storied Jazz Club
      History Lesson
      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      How a Railway Porter Built Montreal's Most Storied Jazz Club

      The story of Rufus Rockhead, the Jamaican-born railway porter who built Montreal's most legendary jazz club—and spent decades defending it.

      What Montreal's 1976 Olympics left behind, 50 years later
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      Version Anglaise
      J.P. Karwacki

      What Montreal's 1976 Olympics Left Behind, 50 Years Later

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      The Hidden Politics of Montreal's 19th-century Ice Palaces

      Built from 500-pound blocks of ice pulled from the St. Lawrence, the Neo-Gothic castles dazzled international crowds while reinforcing who really held power.

      Par Kaitlyn DiBartolo30 janvier 2026 - Read time: 4 min
      The hidden politics of Montreal's 19th-century ice palaces
      A composite of Montreal's winter carnival in 1884. | Photograph: Wm. Notman & Son (1882-1919) & Eugène L'Africain (1859-1892) / McCord Stewart Museum
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      The Hidden Politics of Montreal's 19th-century Ice Palaces

      Built from 500-pound blocks of ice pulled from the St. Lawrence, the Neo-Gothic castles dazzled international crowds while reinforcing who really held power.

      Par Kaitlyn DiBartolo30 janvier 2026 - Read time: 4 min
      The hidden politics of Montreal's 19th-century ice palaces
      A composite of Montreal's winter carnival in 1884. | Photograph: Wm. Notman & Son (1882-1919) & Eugène L'Africain (1859-1892) / McCord Stewart Museum

      In the 1880s, before skyscrapers defined Montreal’s skyline, the city built some of its tallest structures out of ice. The first of its kind was erected in Dominion Square, what Montrealers now know as Place Du Canada. These frozen monuments were feats of engineering, as well as carefully staged symbols of how the city wanted to be seen. 

      Ice palace, Dominion Square, Montreal, QC, 1885. | Photograph: Wm. Notman & Son (1882-1919) / McCord Stewart Museum
      Ice Palace, Dominion Square, Montreal, QC, 1887. | Photograph: Wm. Notman & Son (1882-1919) / McCord Stewasrt Museum

      These ice palaces were designed by architect Alexander Cowper Hutchinson, a stonemason who also designed the Redpath Museum and Montreal’s City Hall building. Hutchinson extended his expertise to an entirely different medium and transformed blocks of 500 pound ice from the St. Lawrence River into Neo-Gothic castles.  Measuring approximately 160 feet long and 120 feet wide, the ice palaces were among the main winter carnival attractions.  

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      Montreal’s public spaces are good, but are they good enough?

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      The Neon Sign at Le Rouge Goes Dark Tonight After Two Decades

      The neon sign at Le Rouge goes dark tonight after two decades

      In the 1880s, before skyscrapers defined Montreal’s skyline, the city built some of its tallest structures out of ice. The first of its kind was erected in Dominion Square, what Montrealers now know as Place Du Canada. These frozen monuments were feats of engineering, as well as carefully staged symbols of how the city wanted to be seen. 

      Ice palace, Dominion Square, Montreal, QC, 1885. | Photograph: Wm. Notman & Son (1882-1919) / McCord Stewart Museum
      Ice Palace, Dominion Square, Montreal, QC, 1887. | Photograph: Wm. Notman & Son (1882-1919) / McCord Stewasrt Museum

      These ice palaces were designed by architect Alexander Cowper Hutchinson, a stonemason who also designed the Redpath Museum and Montreal’s City Hall building. Hutchinson extended his expertise to an entirely different medium and transformed blocks of 500 pound ice from the St. Lawrence River into Neo-Gothic castles.  Measuring approximately 160 feet long and 120 feet wide, the ice palaces were among the main winter carnival attractions.  

      Free account required

      Pour ceux qui ont Montréal à cœur

      Créez un compte gratuit pour lire cet article et accéder à 3 articles par mois, ainsi qu'à notre Bulletin hebdomadaire.

      Indépendant. Local. Soutenu par ses lecteurs.

      ou

      Déjà membre? Se connecter

      Advertisement

      Advertisement

      Advertisement

      Advertisement

      Montreal’s public spaces are good, but are they good enough?

      Previous

      Montreal’s Public Spaces Are Good, but Are They Good Enough?

      Next

      The Neon Sign at Le Rouge Goes Dark Tonight After Two Decades

      The neon sign at Le Rouge goes dark tonight after two decades

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