Rue Sherbrooke
See also: Sherbrooke (homonymy)
The street Sherbrooke is a street which crosses half of the island of Montreal in the direction known as East-West, of the street Westminster in the western suburbs of Our-Lady-of-Grace (Arrondissement Coast-of-Snow-Our-Lady-of-Grace) until the extreme is island, where it joined the street Gouin and the Rue Notre-Dame. It has a length of about thirty Kilomètre S. With the downtown area of Montreal, the street Sherbrooke is located at the south of the most severe slope of the Royal Mont.
It also indicates by the name of road 138 .
History
The street was named according to Sir John Coape Sherbrooke (1764 - 1840), a soldier which was lieutenant-governor of the Nova Scotia (1812 - 1816) then governor as a chief of British North America (1816 - 1818).
July 11th, 2007, Sherbrooke crumbles
A viel sewer which dates of more than 100 years is broken down, between the streets Amherst and Beaudry. It will be closed for at least a month, between Saint-Denis and of Lorimier. More than 45000 vehicles pass daily on this section.
Notable places
Of is in west:
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