He was born
Joseph-Louis-Conrad Kirouac to Cyrille Kirouac, a wealthy merchant, and Philomène Luneau in,
Kingsey Falls, Quebec. Prior to taking
religious vows and becoming Brother Marie-Victorin, he was known as Conrad. Although Brother Victorin is on record as having suggested that
Montreal build its own
botanical gardens as early as 1919, the Garden was not authorized until 1929 when Montreal Mayor
Camillien Houde approved it, with construction beginning in 1931. Subsequent administrations, both municipal and provincial, opposed the Garden as a
boondoggle; however, Brother Victorin continued to champion its cause, promoting it at every opportunity, leading specimen-collection expeditions, recruiting
Henry Teuscher as its designer, and protecting it from being converted into a military flight school, even during the
Second World War. Brother Victorin is also known for his writings: his
Flore laurentienne is a botanical record of all species indigenous to southern Quebec, and was the first such record to be compiled. He also wrote the preface to an historical biography of another fifth cousin,
Zephirin Paquet. Sa famille, sa Vie, son Oeuvre. Essai de Monographie Familiale, par frère Alcas. Brother Victorin died in Montreal in a car accident in July 1944, and he was entombed at the
Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery in Montreal. A building at the
Université de Montréal, where he had taught botany, was subsequently named for him. ==Tribute==