The Bon-Désir trading post After the
continental glacier withdrawal 8,000 years ago,
Indigenous Canadians spent the summer along the
Saint Lawrence River bank in the Bergeronnes territory. Archeological excavations found several layers of whale and seal skinning tools. From the 16th to 18th century,
First Nations and the
Basques hunted seals in Pipounapi cove whose meaning is "Here, it does not freeze." In 1653, the surrounding territory was conceded to Lord
Robert Giffard de Moncel by the governor of
New France. Remains of two ovens used to collect grease for lighting were found. The first one, with double burner, was built in the late 16th century. Jesuit Evangelist Pierre Laure settled there in 1721. The following year, a chapel and a house were erected. A plot about the fact that too many religious activities - there was a daily public prayer - left no time for First Nations to hunt, led to the abandonment of the mission in 1725. In 1730, the Barragory brothers erected a whaling station and built the second oven with triple burner. Due to the lack of profit, this station was abandoned in 1773. Seals hunting went on for some times. In 1847, 136 seals were killed there. On August 10, 1864, a landslide took off a large section of the
squatters road (now part of the Morillon hiking trail). On April 11, 1896, another landslide moved down 500 acres on a two miles length strip of farmland with a dozen houses. However, the name place is formed from the word "bank" and the radical "raa", widely used in Europe to denote heights. The name is probably a reference to the height of the bank. The first homes gathered around mills. A first one was built in Petites-Bergeronnes in 1844. A sawmill and a flour mill were erected in 1845 on the Beaulieu River, a tributary with the river-Bas-de-Soie, of the Bergeronnes river at the site that will become the heart of the parish. A third mill was built in 1846 at Bon-Désir. In 1856 a road costing $5,391.02 provides a link to
Tadoussac to the west and
Escoumins to the east. Until then, settlers had to carry their grain on their backs through the woods. The population reaches 200. In 1852 the first chapel, dedicated to
St. Zoe, served a little over thirty families living in the logging or agriculture. This chapel was destroyed in 1858 and rebuilt in 1869. The economic crisis of the 1930s led to the closing of wood mills. Having no land on which to fall back in expectation of better days, dozens of families left the village and accepted offers of the Ministry of Colonization to settle, around 1931, in
Sainte-Thérèse-de-Colombier. On December 29, 1999, the village and township were merged again to form the new Municipality of Les Bergeronnes. ==Climate==