Saint-Édouard-de-Fabre

Saint-Édouard-de-Fabre is a parish municipality in western Quebec, Canada, in the Témiscamingue Regional County Municipality.

It is named after Édouard-Charles Fabre.

In addition to the main namesake population centre, the municipality also includes the hamlet of Fabre-Station and the community of Pointe-Martel.

History
In the 17th century, a fur trading post was established on the eastern shore of Lake Temiskaming, 18 km south of Ville-Marie. It was an important French-Canadian post, operating for almost two centuries.

In 1870, the first settler arrived there and cleared the first land for agriculture in the Témiscamingue region. At the end of that century, mining prospectors arrived and discovered copper, cobalt, nickel, and silver deposits, resulting in a brief mining boom (that ended in 1904 when larger deposits were found in Cobalt, Ontario).

In 1899, the parish of Saint-Édouard was founded, named after Édouard-Charles Fabre. In 1904, the Township Municipality of Fabre was established, which was dissolved in 1912, when it was divided into the Parish Municipalities of Saint-Édouard-de-Fabre and Saint-Placide.

Demographics
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Saint-Édouard-de-Fabre had a population of $671$ living in $287$ of its $320$ total private dwellings, a change of NaN% from its 2016 population of $628$. With a land area of 190.29 km2, it had a population density of in 2021.

Mother tongue (2021):
 * English as first language: 2.2%
 * French as first language: 97.0%
 * English and French as first language: 0%
 * Other as first language: 1.5%

Local government
List of former mayors:


 * Serge Marcil (...–2009?)
 * Réjean Drouin (2009?–2011)
 * Claudine Laforge Clouâtre (2011–2013)
 * Mario Drouin (2013–present)