Saint Lawrence River
The
Saint Lawrence River (
French:
fleuve Saint-Laurent) is a large west-to-east flowing
river in the middle latitudes of
North America, connecting the
Great Lakes with the
Atlantic Ocean. It is called
Kaniatarowanenneh ("big waterway") in
Mohawk. It traverses the
Canadian province of
Quebec and forms part of the border between the
state of
New York in the
United States and the province of
Ontario in
Canada.
The Saint Lawrence River is born at the outflow of
Lake Ontario at
Kingston, Ontario. From there, it passes
Brockville,
Cornwall,
Montreal,
Trois-Rivières, and
Quebec City before draining into the
Gulf of Saint Lawrence, the largest
estuary in the world. It runs 3,058 kilometers (1,900 miles) from the furthest headwater to the mouth (1,197 km or 744 miles from the outflow of Lake Ontario). The furthest headwater is the North River,
Mesabi Range,
Minnesota. Its drainage area, which includes the
Great Lakes and hence the world's largest system of fresh water lakes, has a size of 1.03 million km². The average discharge at the mouth is 10,400 m³/s.
The river includes
Lake Saint-Louis south of Montreal,
Lac Saint-François at
Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Quebec and
Lac Saint-Pierre east of Montreal. It surrounds such islands as the
Thousand Islands near Kingston, the
Island of Montreal,
Île Jésus (
Laval),
Île d'Orléans near Quebec City, and
Anticosti Island north of the
Gaspé.
Lake Champlain and the
Ottawa,
Richelieu, and
Saguenay rivers drain into the St. Lawrence.
The first European to navigate the St. Lawrence was
Jacques Cartier, who on
9 June 1534 first sighted the river and also claimed
New France for
Francis I. Until the early 1600s, the French used the name
Rivière du Canada to designate the Saint Lawrence upstream to Montreal and the Ottawa River after Montreal. The Saint Lawrence River served as the main route for exploration of the North American interior from Europe.
The St. Lawrence was formerly continuously navigable only as far as Montreal due to the
Lachine Rapids. The
Lachine Canal was the first to allow ships to pass the rapids; the
Saint Lawrence Seaway, an extensive system of canals and locks, now permits ocean-going vessels to pass all the way to
Lake Superior.
In the late 1970's, the river was the subject of a successful environmental campaign (called "Save the River"),originally responding to planned development by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.The campaign was organised, among others, by
Abbie Hoffman, who at the time was on the run under thepseudonym of Barry Freed.
 |
Saint Lawrence River along the New York-Ontario border |
A note on translation: Occasionally, the French name
fleuve Saint-Laurent is wrongly translated as Saint Lawrence Seaway, on the idea that it uses the word
fleuve, not
rivière. However, the word
fleuve means a large river, which runs to the ocean or sea. There is no word in English that distinguishes this type of a river from others, and thus is appropriately translated by
river. The seaway is a system of artificial canals, and is called in French
la voie maritime du Saint-Laurent.
The source of the
North River in the
Mesabi Range in
Minnesota is considered to be the source of the Saint Lawrence River. Because it crosses so many lakes, the water system frequently changes its name. From source to mouth, the names are:
*
North River*
Saint Louis River*
Lake Superior*
Saint Marys River*
Lake Huron*
Saint Clair River*
Lake Saint Clair*
Detroit River*
Lake Erie*
Niagara River*
Lake Ontario* Saint Lawrence River
See
List of crossings of the Saint Lawrence RiverThe St-Lawrence River is at the heart of many Québec novels (
Anne Hébert's
Kamouraska,
Réjean Ducharme's
L'avalée des avalés), poems (in works of
Pierre Morency,
Bernard Pozier), and songs (
Leonard Cohen's
Suzanne, Michel Rivard's
L'oubli). The river has also been portrayed in paintings, notably by the
Group of Seven. In addition, the river is the namesake of
Saint-Laurent Herald at the
Canadian Heraldic Authority.
*
Boldt Castle *
Grindstone Island *
Jorstadt Castle*
Wellesley Island*
List of New York rivers*
List of crossings of the Saint Lawrence River*
Regional Geography of the St. Lawrence River*
St. Lawrence Parks Commission (Ontario)*
Great Lakes St. Lawrence Seaway System*
Safe Passage: Aids to Navigation on the St. Lawrence — Historical essay, illustrated with drawings and photographs
*
Annotated Bibliography on St. Lawrence County and Northern New York region.*
"Save the River"*
Fishing the St. Lawrence River