Transplants help keep Quebec City’s small anglophone community vibrant
QUEBEC — Within the ramparts of Quebec City, a library and cultural centre for the city’s English-speaking minority housed in a former jail is run by a soft-spoken spectacled man from rural New Brunswick named Barry McCullough.
About two kilometres away, in an apartment overlooking the Plains of Abraham, Halifax native Shirley Nadeau puts together the English-language Chronicle-Telegraph, which has been published uninterrupted since 1764 and bills itself as the oldest newspaper in North America.
A short drive west of Nadeau’s home newsroom, the non-profit organization offering services and advocating for the region’s 15,000 English-speakers is managed by Brigitte Wellens, originally from Montreal.
Quebec City’s anglophone community — making up about 2 per cent of the capital’s metropolitan area — is historic and close-knit. But unlike Montreal, where hundreds of thousands of English-speakers have maintained a critical mass, Quebec City anglophones face a precarious future.