, in 1940. Parc des Laurentides was created in 1895 as a forest reserve and as a recreational area for the public. In 1981, two large parcels were split off to become
Jacques-Cartier National Park in the south and the
Grands-Jardins National Park in the east, while the remaining territory was established as a wildlife reserve. The
Jesuit trail, the first road to cross the sector, was cleared in 1676 and linked Quebec to
lac Saint-Jean in three days via
Saint-Charles Lake, the valley of the
Jacques-Cartier River to
Jacques-Cartier Lake, the
Pikauba River, the
rivière aux Écorces and the
Métabetchouane River. The first more or less passable road, the "road of Quebec" allows from 1881 to connect
Hébertville to Lac Saint-Jean in Quebec in 40 hours. A branch to
Chicoutimi was built in 1882. The reserve was created in 1895 under the name of "Parc des Laurentides". In 1944 and 1945, survey work enabled the current road to be put in place, the
route 175, inaugurated in 1948. The park being of limited access, there were barriers at the three entrances to the road to check the comings and goings. These barriers will be removed in 1977. At the center of the route, there is a rest area called
L'Étape, located on the shores of
Jacques-Cartier Lake, and the
Provincial Police. After a fire, they will be demolished in 2005. In 2009, there is an old chapel, several chalets, a reconstructed franchise restaurant, the Patrouille Secours post (a special unit of the
Transports Québec specializing in the extrication of vehicles involved in accidents in the wildlife reserve), an ambulance vehicle and a CTAQ barracks. In July 1952, a
Pinetree Line radar station was established at
Mont Apica, in the center of the reserve, as part of the establishment of a line of defense of North America against bombers from the Soviet Union. The radar station was officially closed in 1993. In 1981, the reserve was cut from two portions of its territory at its southern border and its eastern border to allow the creation, respectively, of
Jacques-Cartier National Park and
Grands-Jardins National Park. The traditional practice of moose hunting among Native communities is the cause of disputes between the
Hurons-Wendat and the
Montagnais of
Mashteuiatsh. == Geography ==