Lachine

The Fur Trade at Lachine National Historic SiteStone warehouse (1803) at The Fur Trade at Lachine National Historic Site, Lachine, Montreal.

Lachine, former city, Montréal region, southern Quebec province, Canada. Until 2002 it was a western suburb of Montreal city, at which time it was incorporated into Montreal as a borough of that city. Lachine lies on the south shore of Montreal Island facing Lake Saint-Louis, which is a widening there of the St. Lawrence River.

Established in 1667 by the French explorer Robert Cavelier, sieur de La Salle, while he was searching for a route to China, it was named after a contraction of la petite Chine (“little China”). Settlement of the site began in 1675. In 1689 it was the site of a massacre of about 250 French settlers and soldiers by the Iroquois. Historically, Lachine was an important departure point for fur traders on their way to the West. It was incorporated as a city in 1848, and it maintained that status until it was merged into Montreal in 2002.

Local industries include the manufacture of pharmaceuticals and of machinery for the pulp and paper industry. Lachine is the headquarters of Rolls Royce Canada Limited, where engines are manufactured and serviced for both commercial and military aircraft. The borough is the site of a large marina for pleasure boating. The Lachine Museum comprises the Le Ber–Le Moyne House (1669), an archaeological collection, and two sculpture gardens. Also found in the borough is the Fur Trade at Lachine National Historic Site.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Jeff Wallenfeldt.