Saguenay was formed on February 18, 2002, by
amalgamating the cities of
Chicoutimi,
Jonquière,
La Baie and
Laterrière, along with the municipalities of Lac-Kénogami and Shipshaw and part of the township of
Tremblay.
Chicoutimi First Nations people, including
Innus have inhabited the Saguenay Fjord area for thousands of years prior to the first Europeans arriving. What was ultimately to become the centre of the borough of Chicoutimi was first settled in 1676 as a
French trading post in the
fur trade. At that time, the Saguenay and
Chicoutimi rivers had been used for centuries by the
Innu. The name
Chicoutimi means 'the end of the deepwater' in the Montagnais. Chicoutimi trading post was in operation until 1782. The city of Chicoutimi was officially incorporated as a municipality in 1845 by Peter McLeod, a
Métis timber contractor, who had built a sawmill there in 1842. It was designated in 1855 as the seat of Chicoutimi County and in 1878 as the seat of the
Roman Catholic Diocese of Chicoutimi. With the arrival of the
Canadian National Railway in 1893, the local
pulp and paper industries expanded, particularly in mechanical pulp production. The Chicoutimi Pulp Co. was founded in 1896 and backed by
French-Canadian investors. By 1910 the Chicoutimi Pulp Mill became the biggest producer of mechanical pulp in Canada. The economic decline of the
Great Depression led the city's economy to shift administration and commerce and commercial. The
Conservatoire de musique de Saguenay was founded in Chicoutimi in 1967, and the
Université du Québec à Chicoutimi was founded in 1969. The city played host to the Quebec Summer Games in 1972. In the municipal amalgamations of 1976, Chicoutimi annexed the neighbouring towns of Chicoutimi-Nord and Rivière-du-Moulin. In a later round of
amalgamations in 2002, the cities of Chicoutimi,
Jonquière,
La Baie, Lac-Kénogami,
Laterrière, Shipshaw and part of
Tremblay merged to form the new city of Saguenay. When the city of Saguenay was constituted on February 18, 2002, by municipal amalgamation, the borough of Jonquière was created from the former city of Jonquière, the former municipality of Shipshaw, and the former municipality of Lac-Kénogami. The former city of Jonquière had a population of 54,842 in the
Canada 2001 Census, the last census in which Jonquière was counted as a separate city. The Rivière aux Sables runs through the centre of Jonquière. Significant damage to the city's buildings was caused by the 1996
Saguenay flood. ==Geography==