Murdochville shows how a town can live on after being abandoned by industry - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 11:47 AM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Murdochville shows how a town can live on after being abandoned by industry

Murdochville, where Gasp Copper Mines Ltd. was the main employer, had a population of 5,000 in 1974. When the mine closed in 1999, the province resisted calls to bulldoze the town. Now, with a year-round population of less than 700, the town lives off tourism, especially in the winter months.

Despite its small population, the town has golf, skiing and swimming facilities that draw tourists

Murdochville in the Gasp Peninsula is celebrating its 65th anniversary. Once dependent on mining, it now has become reliant on tourism, especially during the winter months. (Town of Murdochville)

Inaugurated in 1953, Murdochville began as a company town in Quebec's Gasp region, built to house workers and their families drawn to the area by the town's copper mine.

Now celebrating its 65th anniversary, the town lives off tourism, offering low-cost accommodation and recreational facilities for both summer and winter activities.

Gasp Copper Mines Ltd. wound down and finally closed its mining operations in the town in 1999.

During its operation, Murdochville experienced three miners strikes between 1957 and 1978.

The seven-month strike in 1957 was a significant event for organized labour in the province, galvanizing opposition to Quebec's then anti-union premier Maurice Duplessis, and drawing support from intellectuals, including a law professor from Montreal named Pierre Elliott Trudeau.

Pierre Trudeau supports miners in the 1957 Murdochville strike

67 years ago
Duration 1:03
Copper miners at Murdochville get vocal support from Pierre Trudeau.

After the mine closed, its well-paid, unionized jobs were replaced by call-centre jobs, then wind-energy projects, with windmills now visible on the surrounding peaks.

Tourism isnow the mainstay of the community. Despite its small population of just below 700 people, the town boasts a golf course, a swimming pool, a recreational centrewith an arenaand a ski hill.

Murdochville, just under 100 kilometres west of Gasp town, had a population of 5,000 at its height in 1974.

Mayor Dlisca Ritchie-Roussy said in a telephone interview that winter sports have been a boon for the town's economy, with peoplebuying country houses in the area to take advantage of skiing and snowmobiling.

"There is no traffic here," said Ritchie-Roussy, who came to the town 47 years ago as a school teacher and who has been mayor since 2004.

"It is a very pleasant place," she said.

Residents of Murdochville believe the lakes, rivers and mountains that surround the community could become an important economic driver for the town. (Marika Wheeler/CBC)

Some called for bulldozing

The people still living in Murdochville were divided after mining operations ceased, with some calling for efforts to diversify the local economy, while others proposed bulldozing the townand compensatingresidents.

Gasp Copper Mines was a subsidiary of Noranda Mines Inc., whose then-CEO James Murdoch gave the town its name.

Copper deposits were first discovered in the region by the Miller brothers, of Gasp, in 1921. But it wasn't until after the Second World War that Noranda decided to develop the site.