St. Patrick's Day? This Quebec town celebrates St. Patrick's month - Action News
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St. Patrick's Day? This Quebec town celebrates St. Patrick's month

It's never too early to start celebrating St. Patrick's Day in Richmond, Que., where banquets, poetry and a parade draw thousands of visitors.

Eastern Townships town of 3,000 triples its population on parade day, thanks to visitors

The Richmonds St. Patricks Day parade, seen here in 2017, will include more than 200 horses this year. ( Richmond St. Patrick's Society/richmondstpats.org)

You'd be forgiven for thinking that St. Patrick's Day is only meant to be celebrated on March 17after all, the word "day" is in the title.

However, residents of Richmond,in Quebec's Eastern Townships, have a different take on it.

Richmond'scelebrations stretch over three weekends, which includebanquets, music, poetry and the highlight of the month:The parade.

"In Quebec, I think there's about five parades and we're the second biggest one," saidErika Lockwood, president of the Richmond St. Patrick's Society, inan interview onCBC'sAll in a Weekend.

The event has been known to temporarily triplethe town's population of 3,000, asvisitors pour in from across the region.

"I think local businesses, when they started participating in it, it grew and it grew," said Lockwood, who also runs a local pub.

Organizers hire marching bands from the town, and bring in animals from the country.

"We have over 200 horses that are also included in our parade," she said.

Richmonds parade has grown from the early years into an event that draws thousands of people. ( Richmond St. Patrick's Society/richmondstpats.org)

Lockwood said organizers even get a bit of help from "leprechauns" a group of revellers who sneakout in the wee hours before the parade, to paint a green line on the streets along the parade route.

She said the celebrations takemonths of planning, usually starting in October.

"Winter's long for everyone in Quebec. It's like the first spring party. It wakes everyone up and everyone looks forward to it and there's a lot of energy. It's a great atmosphere," she said.

200 years of Irish residents

While the parade is in its 141styear, the town's Irish roots date back more than 200 years, according to the book Irish Settlement and National Identity in the Lower St. Francis Valley, written by Peter Southam, a retired history professor from University of Sherbrooke.

The book is published by the Richmond St. Patrick's Society.

Lockwood saidmost people in Richmond tend to claim some Irish ancestry particularly when March rolls around.

A crowd gathers for the Richmond St. Patricks Day parade in 1908. This year marks the 141st edition of the parade. ( Richmond St. Patrick's Society/richmondstpats.org)

But even for those without an Irish branch to the family tree, it's an occasion to celebrate and bring everyone in the bilingual community together, said Lockwood.

For example, oneevent, a Green Bingo, brings together seniors from both anglophone andfrancophoneseniors' homes.

According to StatisticsCanada, about 2,200 people list French as their mother tongue in the city, while 745 list English.

With files from CBC Montreal's All in a Weekend