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Saint Catherine Street at Phillips Square, 1937 Former Capitol Theatre, 1925. Montreal's Place des Arts, the city's primary concert venue, [3] is located on Saint Catherine, Jeanne-Mance and Saint-Urbain streets. This is in the city's Quartier des Spectacles entertainment district.
Montreal Forum (French: Forum de Montréal) is a historic building located facing Cabot Square in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.Called "the most storied building in hockey history" by Sporting News, [7] it was an indoor arena which served as the home of the National Hockey League's Montreal Maroons from 1924 to 1938 and the Montreal Canadiens from 1926 to 1996.
The west end of Montreal's downtown had bars on Stanley Street and Drummond Street, with Shaughnessy Village west of Guy Street as a gay residential neighbourhood. [2] By the 1950s, Dominion Square (now Dorchester Square) was seen as an area where men could meet and cruise [citation needed] and the centrally located Dominion Square Tavern was known as a place where gays could meet (it still ...
Christ Church Cathedral (French: Cathédrale Christ Church) is an Anglican Gothic Revival cathedral in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, the seat of the Anglican Diocese of Montreal. It is located at 635 Saint Catherine Street West, between Avenue Union and Boulevard Robert-Bourassa.
427, Rue Saint-Vincent Montreal QC 45°30′26″N 73°33′13″W / 45.5073°N 73.5537°W / 45.5073; -73.5537 ( Maison et entrepôt Edward-William
Montreal has the second largest Italian population in Canada after Toronto. There are around 250,000 Montrealers of Italian ancestry living within its Metropolitan Area. Montreal's Little Italy, located on St. Lawrence Boulevard between Jean-Talon and St. Zotique, is home to Montreal's original Italian Canadian community. Although many Italians ...
The site had previously been occupied by terrace-type townhouses along Saint Catherine, Union and Alymer, [3] built with stones from the ruins of the 1849 Parliament Building, [4] including the former home of Dr. William Hales Hingston, [4] mayor of Montreal from 1875 to 1877, at the southwest corner.
St Jax is a Gothic Revival church built of grey limestone. Originally, it stood on open land and was given the nickname of St. Crickets in the Fields. This name arose when a British army regiment was garrisoned in Montreal at the time, owing to the American Civil War, and the officers took to playing cricket beside the newly built church.