Menu

Search Canada travel guides

La Trinité-des-Monts, Quebec CanadaVisit La Trinité-des-Monts, Quebec for 1937 parish-colony history, rue Principale services, forest roads and quiet Bas-Saint-Laurent hill travel./quebec/la-trinite-des-monts/quebec/la-trinite-des-montscommunity

La Trinité-des-Monts, Quebec: History, Things to Do and Travel Guide

La Trinité-des-Monts is a very small parish municipality in eastern Quebec, in the inland Rimouski-Neigette part of Bas-Saint-Laurent. Forest roads, low mountains, parish settlement and long rural distances define the visit.

This is inland Bas-Saint-Laurent rather than a St. Lawrence waterfront stop. The community gives travellers a quieter view of how settlement moved into the wooded high country behind Rimouski.

How La Trinité-des-Monts Started

The municipal history page places the first organized colonization markers in 1937. In July of that year, pioneer families including Beaulieu, Boucher, Dubé, Fournier, Gagnon, Gagné, Leblond, Proulx, Rioux and Skelling arrived in the colony. Dame Emilia Gagné is identified as the first woman to settle there on August 15, 1937.

The first local institutions came quickly. In autumn 1937, the rang du Cenellier had the first school, first church and first sawmill. Abbé Jean-Albert Lamontagne arrived later that October, and the first baby in the parish was born in November.

The history page also emphasizes mutual aid. House construction, clearing land and women’s work were organized through shared labour, which helps explain how such a small inland settlement became a functioning parish community.

What La Trinité-des-Monts Is Like Today

La Trinité-des-Monts recorded 233 residents in the 2021 census. It remains a parish municipality with a small village centre, scattered rural homes and a wide forest-and-hill setting.

The official site describes a practical community life rather than a tourism strip. The citizens page lists a library at the municipal office, a community internet access centre, a collective kitchen at the Centre des Loisirs, the Écho municipal, local enterprises, family policy, gardens, recreation, transport collectif and municipal notices.

For travellers, that means the place is best read through its scale. La Trinité-des-Monts is a calm inland stop where community facilities, forest roads and mountain views matter more than a list of staffed attractions.

Things to Do and Places Nearby

Begin with the village centre around rue Principale and the municipal office area. The library, Centre des Loisirs and community facilities give the stop a concrete local anchor, especially if you are trying to understand the place rather than simply pass through.

The surrounding roads are the main landscape experience. Drive in daylight, watch for farm clearings, wooded hills and seasonal road conditions, and connect the stop with a broader Rimouski-Neigette inland loop only after checking fuel and weather. Fall colours and quiet photography are the strongest reasons to include the municipality in a regional drive.

Quick Facts

Travel Notes

A car is required. Services are limited, so fill up and check food plans before leaving larger centres near Rimouski. Winter and spring thaw can make secondary roads slower, while fog, rain and early darkness matter in the hills. Use the municipal site for notices before planning around a facility or local event.

Sources