Hull's E.B. Eddy mill worth saving: historians - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 10:32 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

Hull's E.B. Eddy mill worth saving: historians

A group of history buffs was meeting in Gatineau, Que., Saturday to explore the city's old industrial buildings as well as to discuss plans to preserve one of the area's most prominent industrial sites.

A group of history buffs was meeting in Gatineau, Que., Saturday to explore the city's old industrial buildings as well as to discuss plans to preserve one of the area's most prominent industrial sites.

Outaouais Historical Society president Michel Prevost, pictured in front of the former E.B. Eddy mill, hopes to preserve the building, built in the 1880s, as an industrial museum. ((CBC))

The Outaouais Historical Society is trying to preserve the former E.B. Eddy mill as an industrial museum.The pulp and paper company built the mill, nestled on the banks of the Ottawa River, in the late 1880s.

Michel Prvost, president of the Outaouais Historical Society, was successful in getting the Quebec government to step in and protect the buildings from demolition.

But Prvost said it's hard to hold onto industrial buildings, as people are more eager to protect historical homes than old paper mills.

Prvost hopes the 50 people at the conference talk about ideas for the vacant E.B. Eddy building be it a museum or another use.

"We cannot study the history of the Outaouais or the national capital area without all the wood [and] the lumber industries," he told CBC News.

Prvost said there is no evidence left that Hull was once the biggest producer of matches in the world. He does not want to see the same happen to its lumber history.

But Lise Nol, an archivist from Montreal,said it's not only the bricks and mortar that should be preserved. Shealso wants to see the machines, tools and the manufacturing processes preserved.

"The tools and techniques of the work inside [should be] preserved also," she said.

The E.B. Eddy company was taken over by Domtar in 1998.

With reporting by CBC's Kate Porter