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Matthew Farfan
As of January
2002, the independent municipality of Bromptonville (formerly Brompton
Falls) became Brompton, District #1 of the City of Sherbrooke. Bromptonville
has joined other area towns as "boroughs" of Greater Sherbrooke.
Lennoxville, Rock Forest, Fleurimont, Deauville, Saint-Élie-d'Orford,
Stoke, and Ascot have all gone the same way. That old names, like
Bromptonville, are disappearing from the map is a fact that some
people deeply regret. This is especially true of "old-timers"
in the area, many of whom still remember the early days of these
communities.
In honour of the hundredth anniversary of the name "Bromptonville,"
which takes place in 2003, the images on this page have been provided
to us by local resident Mario Hains.
According
to Hains, Hains' great grandfather, Onésime Lambert, purchased
"half of Brompton" in 1890, including all of the buildings
and store of the Cyrus Clarke Mill (built 1853). The mill (left,
c.1870) was a massive enterprise employing many of Brompton's labourers.
Left: Clarke Mill, c.1870. (Photo: Courtesy of Mario
Hains)

Right: Onésime Lambert House, c.1900. (Photo:
Courtesy of Mario Hains)
After
he bought it, Onésime Lambert transformed the Clarke store
into his home (right), and extensively remodeled it in the Victorian
style. According to Hains, the house was soon nicknamed La Villa
des Hirondelles ("the house of the swallows"), because
of all the birds that used to nest in its many cornices and bays.

"Wood Heaven"
(left) was a luxurious mansion built by Onésime Lambert and
Edmund Tobin in 1907. Tobin, the son of Irish immigrants, was a
prominent local businessman and a Member of the House of Commons
under Sir Wilfrid Laurier. He and his family lived at Wood Heaven
until the house was destroyed by fire in 1932. The mansion had 27
rooms, eight fireplaces, and three stairways -- a veritable "royal
residence."
Left: Wood Heaven.
(Photo: Courtesy of Mario Hains)
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