Johan Beetz

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Johan Beetz (1874–1949)

Johan Beetz (1874–1949), a Belgian physician, surgeon, naturalist, painter, illustrator and businessmen, settled in Piastre Baie (Baie-Johan-Beetz) in 1897, on the north shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence, in the Côte-Nord region, Minganie RCM, in Quebec, Canada.[1]

Family residence of Johan Beetz and Adéla Tanguay (Le Chateau)[2] Baie-Johan-Beetz

Johan Beetz was born in 1874, in an aristocratic family, at the château d'Oudenhouven, Boortmeerbeek, Belgium. His father Johannes Beetz died when he was two years old and his mother Céline Verzyl (or Versyl) remarried an English major named Walter Turner. He had a privileged childhood and the future King Albert was among his childhood acquaintances.[citation needed] In his youth, he participated in hunting in Morocco, Algeria and Congo, and took part in archeological digs. He studied medicine and biology.

However, his fiancée (and cousin) Marthe Versyl died of pneumonia. Apparently seeking a change in his life, he considered moving from Belgium to Africa, but then he happened to converse with a certain Monsieur Warner, who talked about the hunting and fishing in Pashti-Baie (or Piastrebaie), rename Baie-Johan-Beetz[3] in Côte-Nord region, along the shore of the Gulf of St. Lawrence in Quebec, Canada, where Warner had a house.

Beetz bought Warner's house on the spot and moved there in May 1897. Within this year, Beetz meet Henry de Puyjalon, a pioneer in Canadian ecology who was among the first to suggest wildlife conservation areas.[4][5] Beetz married a local girl Adéla Tanguay (1884–1954), on September 27 1898, he built a Second Empire-inspired rural residence that residents today call le château (the castle).

As early as 1910, residents expressed the desire to change the name from Piastre Baie to Baie-Johan-Beetz; this name would become official upon the creation of the municipality on December 5, 1968.

Physician, naturalist and businessman

References

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