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Dowker Island: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 45°24′10″N 73°53′40″W / 45.40278°N 73.89444°W / 45.40278; -73.89444
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Dowker Island, then known as île Sainte-Geneviève, was granted to [[François-Marie Perrot]], the governor of [[Montreal]], by [[Jean Talon]], on 29 October 1672, along with the île Perrot. In 1897, the eponymous Leslie Rose Dowker, acquired the island. Older navigational charts and some maps have the island marked as "Lynch Island" while the northern point of land is labelled as "Dowker Point".
Dowker Island, then known as île Sainte-Geneviève, was granted to [[François-Marie Perrot]], the governor of [[Montreal]], by [[Jean Talon]], on 29 October 1672, along with the île Perrot. In 1897, the eponymous Leslie Rose Dowker, acquired the island. Older navigational charts and some maps have the island marked as "Lynch Island" while the northern point of land is labelled as "Dowker Point".



In the summer the island is easily accessible by small boat, and in winter on foot over the frozen lake. The water north of the island popular for [[ice fishing]].
In the summer the island is easily accessible by small boat, and in winter on foot over the frozen lake. The water north of the island popular for [[ice fishing]].

Revision as of 18:51, 30 March 2014

Dowker Island
File:=
Geography
LocationSaint Lawrence River
Coordinates45°24′10″N 73°53′40″W / 45.40278°N 73.89444°W / 45.40278; -73.89444
ArchipelagoHochelaga Archipelago
Area1 km2 (0.39 sq mi)
Length1 km (0.6 mi)
Width1 km (0.6 mi)
Administration

Dowker Island is part of the Hochelaga Archipelago in Lake Saint Louis, Quebec, between the Island of Montreal and the Île Perrot. Although near the towns of Baie-d'Urfé and Beaconsfield, it is administratively part of l'Île-Perrot.

The flat, wooded, and uninhabited island is about a kilometer in length and breadth.

Dowker Island, then known as île Sainte-Geneviève, was granted to François-Marie Perrot, the governor of Montreal, by Jean Talon, on 29 October 1672, along with the île Perrot. In 1897, the eponymous Leslie Rose Dowker, acquired the island. Older navigational charts and some maps have the island marked as "Lynch Island" while the northern point of land is labelled as "Dowker Point".

In the summer the island is easily accessible by small boat, and in winter on foot over the frozen lake. The water north of the island popular for ice fishing.

Ruins on Dowker Island

The ruins of the house in the winter.

The ruins of a two-story house stand at the northern edge of Dowker Island. The house was built by Leslie Rose Dowker after he bought the island in 1887. He lived there until his death in 1945. The house burned down in 1960. Additionally there is an older ruined structure in the middle of the island.

References