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East Broughton, Quebec CanadaPlan an East Broughton visit with Appalachian mining history, slag-heap landscapes, parks, local events and practical Chaudière-Appalaches notes./quebec/east-broughton/quebec/east-broughtoncommunity

East Broughton, Quebec: History, Things to Do and Travel Guide

East Broughton is a municipality in Quebec’s Chaudière-Appalaches region, near the Beauce and Thetford area. Its public identity is unusually visual for a small community: Appalachian hills, former mining landscapes, Route 112 access, local parks, agriculture and municipal recreation.

The visit should start with the landform. East Broughton’s official site describes lunar-looking landscapes created by mining residue piles, making the industrial past visible from the roads.

How East Broughton Started

East Broughton’s name comes from its position in the old Broughton township, distinguishing it from West Broughton, now Saint-Pierre-de-Broughton. The community developed in an Appalachian setting where farms, roads and mineral extraction all shaped settlement.

The municipality’s own welcome material presents East Broughton as a community rich in history and turned toward the future. The visible slag heaps and industrial land remind visitors that mining was not an abstract background; it changed the landscape.

Local life also depended on rural roads, maple stands, dairy farms and services connecting the Beauce and Thetford sides of the region.

What East Broughton Is Like Today

East Broughton today is a small municipality with a mix of residential streets, municipal services, recreation facilities, local businesses, agricultural surroundings and industrial land.

The official site emphasizes panoramic country roads, maple groves, dairy farms, livestock operations and the dramatic residue heaps that mark the mining era. Its industrial park page also points to Route 112 access and a business-service role.

For travellers, East Broughton is most interesting as a small Appalachian community where the landscape still shows the relationship between extraction, agriculture and village life.

The contrast is close at hand: residential streets, public parks, farm roads and industrial views can all appear within a short local drive through the municipality.

Things to Do and Places Nearby

Start with a slow drive through the community and surrounding roads to see the Appalachian setting and residue-pile landscape. Use public roads and viewpoints; do not enter industrial or private land.

Parc L’Oasis is the main recreation stop listed by the municipality. The parks page mentions tennis, baseball, an outdoor rink, children’s play modules, swings, shuffleboard, exercise equipment and a BMX track.

Municipal recreation pages also point to Parc Le Broughtonnais, the intergenerational park, school-area facilities, soccer, hockey, camp day programming and family events such as Festi-Neige.

East Broughton fits best as a short Chaudière-Appalaches stop with parks, local roads and a visible mining landscape rather than a long attraction circuit.

Quick Facts

  • Province: Quebec
  • Region: Chaudière-Appalaches
  • Community type: municipality
  • Population: about 2,200 residents in the stored community profile
  • Main setting: Appalachian municipality near Route 112 and former mining landscapes
  • Good for: local history, parks, Appalachian scenery, route stops, family events and mining-landscape context
  • Key routes: Route 112 and local Chaudière-Appalaches roads

Travel Notes

East Broughton is easiest by car. Check municipal event listings, park conditions and winter roads before travelling, and keep to public areas when viewing mining-era landscapes.

Sources