Fort Douville (French Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Fort Douville" in French language version.

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corridorcanada.ca

  • « Les francophones aux origines de Toronto, un patrimoine discret », sur CorridorCanada, (consulté le ) : « En 1720, le jeune Alexandre Daigneau Douville, issu d’une famille de commerçants de fourrures, érige un modeste fort à l’endroit connu aujourd’hui sous le nom de pointe Baby (en référence à James Baby qui s’y établit en 1815), sur la rivière Humber, à environ cinq kilomètres des rives du lac Ontario. Les quelques Français qui y résident s’unissent « à la manière du pays » à des femmes autochtones. Mais le volume de fourrures est peu élevé et les Français abandonnent ce fort dix ans plus tard. », p. 93-94

google.ca

books.google.ca

  • (en) Ron Brown, From Queenston to Kingston: The Hidden Heritage of Lake Ontario's Shoreline, Dundurn Press, , 93-94 p. (ISBN 9781770705326, lire en ligne) :

    « Le Magasin Royale, a log fort that had been situated at Baby Point, farther up the Humber River, was built in 1720 under the orders of the then French governor of Canada, the Marquis Philippe Rigaud de Vaudreuil. Little more than a log cabin, it is considered by archeologists to the first non-aboriginal building in the Toronto area. The strategic significance of the route, the expansion of the French fur trade, and the increasing competition from the English on the south shore of the lake led the French to build a larger trading post, known as Fort Toronto, near its mouth, as a replacement for Le Magasin Royale. Constructed by Chevalier de Portneuf between 1830 and 1740, Fort Toronto was in turn replaced by an even larger fort, Fort Rouille, located on what are today's CNE grounds, a site marked by an historic monument and plaque. After 1750, when the French had destroyed all their Lake Ontario fortification, the ruins of the earlier Fort Toronto were resurrected by fur trader Jean Bonaventure Rousseau, and run by his son Jean Baptiste Rousseau, or "St. John," as Lieutenant Governor Simcoe called him. »