Calixa-Lavallee, Quebec (Canada) (original) (raw)

Calixa Lavallée was the name of the composer of "O Canada", represented by the Treble Clef, and words "Ô Canada" in the base of the shield
Dean McGee, 14 August 2006

The Municipality of the Parish of Calixa-Lavall�e (533 inhabitants in 2008; 3,242 ha) is located in Mont�r�gie, on the south bank of river St. Lawrence.

Calixa-Lavall�e was originally known as the Municipality of the Parish of Sainte-Th�odosie, founded on 1 August 1878 by secession from the Parish of Sainte-Fran�ois-Xavier-de-Verch�res. The municipality was renamed Sainte-Th�odosie-Calixa-Lavall�e in 1946, shortened to Calixa-Lavall�e on 7 September 1974. The municipality is named for the musician Calixa Lavall�e (1842-1891), born in the eighth generation of a family that had settled in Sainte-Hyacinthe around 1850. Lavall�e composed a song, "O Canada", which was performed for the first time on 24 June 1880 in Quebec and proclaimed the national anthem of Canada one century later, on 1 July 1980. Playing the piano, violin, organ and cornet, Lavall�e performed and taught in New Orleans, Mexico, South America, Boston and Paris; during his stay in France in 1873-1875, he composed studies for the piano, including "Papillon" (Butterfly), which was added to the class program of the Paris Conservatoire.
- http://www.calixa-lavallee.ca/historique.htm - Municipal website

The arms of Calixa-Lavall�e include three distinctive elements:
- a treble clef representing musing, recalling that Calixa Lavall�e was born there. The words "O CANADA" recalls that Lavall�e wrote the national anthem.
- an old house, recalling that Calixa-Lavall�e has kept one of the biggest numbers of old houses in Quebec (dated from 1756 to the early 19th century);
- three grain stakes, recalling that agriculture covers 99% of the municipal territory.
-http://www.calixa-lavallee.ca/armoiries.htm - Municipal website

Ivan Sache, 28 July 2012

Calixa Lavall�e was the composer of the music for �O Canada�. Sir Adolphe-Basile Routhier composed the text (lyrics).
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O_Canada
�velyne Sunatori, 21 April 2021