Angliers, Quebec

Angliers is a former village municipality in northwestern Quebec, Canada, in the Témiscamingue Regional County Municipality. It is one of the two sectors in the municipality of Laverlochère-Angliers.

History
The first settlers arrived in 1911, but the village developed from 1924 onwards, after the Pouvoir-des-Quinze hydro-electric power station was built in 1922. It was named after Angliers, Vienne, in France, the ancestral birthplace of Lomer Gouin, premier of Quebec from 1905 to 1920. The forestry industry and log driving contributed greatly to its development.

On May 24, 1945, it was incorporated as the Village Municipality of Angliers with its territory taken from the Township Municipality of Guérin and the Municipality of Saint-Eugène-de-Guigues.

It amalgamated with the Municipality of Laverlochère on January 1, 2018, to form the Municipality of Laverlochère-Angliers.

Demographics
Mother tongue (2016):
 * English as first language: 6.7%
 * French as first language: 93.3%
 * English and French as first language: 0%
 * Other as first language: 0%

Local government
List of former mayors:
 * Conrad Coulombe (1945–1947)
 * J.P. Vachon (1947–1948)
 * Alex Bérubé (1948–1953)
 * Henri Falardeau (1953–1955)
 * Georges Bellehumeur (May 1955–November 1955)
 * Ubald Dusseault (1955–1957, 1959–1961)
 * Léo Lanthier (1957–1959)
 * Horace McDougal (1961–1963)
 * Louis Beaulieu (1963–1965)
 * Tony Peluso (1965–1967)
 * Fernand Coulombe (1967–1971)
 * Denis Arpin (1971–1983)
 * Paul Coulombe (1983–2009)
 * Lyna Pine (2009–2017)