
An ongoing, and dangerous, problem: bicyclists using the pedestrian paths.

An ongoing, and dangerous, problem: bicyclists using the pedestrian paths.

It never ceases to amaze me seeing the different modes of transportation that use the park’s bicycle paths. (I also recall seeing automobiles!).

Early morning by the park’s lagoon.

Early morning in Westmount Park.

Japanese tree lilac outside the Westmount Public Library.

Victoria Hall decked with the Fleurdelisé on a rainy Fête de la Saint-Jean-Baptiste.

Original hardware on an old garage door at Ingleside Lane.

Corner of Metcalfe Ave. and St. Catherine Street.

Building collapse, Metcalfe & St. Catherine Streets. The building was undergoing renovations to create condominiums.
During the course of browsing digital archive images of Westmount, I keep coming across this picture of a beautiful old fountain next to the park’s current wading pond in the early 1900s.

The research I have done points to a drinking fountain donated to the City of Westmount by the NWCTU to celebrate Queen Victoria’s jubilee in 1898.
“National Woman’s Christian Temperance Union, the members were urged to erect drinking fountains in their towns so that men could get a drink of water without entering saloons and staying for stronger drinks. Often the drinking fountains that were erected offered a place for horses to drink, another place for dogs, and of course, a place for humans to drink.”
Thinking this would be a wonderful historic addition to the park, if restored to its former glory, I contacted City Hall and enquired about its whereabouts.
The City of Westmount Archives and Records Management office kindly did the research, and provided a fascinating insight into this matter.
Apparently, in the 1960s a major redevelopment occurred in the park. During that period, the fountain was removed.
Interestingly, the City’s Archives has a document, with the following photographs, dated 1987, that shows the fountain disassembled, 100 kilometers north of Montreal, in Saint-Gabriel-de-Brandon. How the fountain ended up there is a question – one can speculate that it was given to a City employee who moved it to a country property.
Wouldn’t it be wonderful if this fountain could be repatriated and reinstalled in the park?