The earliest traces of life in Bron can be found in the cemetery and date from 71 BC. The town as it is today did not take shape until approximately 1812.
In mid-August 1944, prisoners from Montluc prison were taken to Bron Airfield where 109 of them, including 72 Jews, were killed in the Bron massacres [fr], which would become known as Le Charnier de Bron ("The Charnel house of Bron").[8]
Bron was spared much of the damage caused by the riots in many of France's suburbs in the 1990s, such as in Vénissieux and Villeurbanne.
Population
Historical population
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1793
441
—
1800
446
+0.16%
1806
448
+0.07%
1821
694
+2.96%
1831
798
+1.41%
1836
850
+1.27%
1841
929
+1.79%
1846
999
+1.46%
1851
981
−0.36%
1856
981
+0.00%
1861
1,010
+0.58%
1866
1,041
+0.61%
1872
1,015
−0.42%
1876
2,168
+20.89%
1881
2,470
+2.64%
1886
2,712
+1.89%
1891
2,691
−0.16%
1896
2,665
−0.19%
Year
Pop.
±% p.a.
1901
3,206
+3.77%
1906
3,506
+1.81%
1911
4,160
+3.48%
1921
6,397
+4.40%
1926
8,774
+6.52%
1931
12,423
+7.20%
1936
13,161
+1.16%
1946
12,597
−0.44%
1954
14,195
+1.50%
1962
26,959
+8.35%
1968
41,619
+7.51%
1975
44,563
+0.98%
1982
40,638
−1.31%
1990
39,683
−0.30%
1999
37,369
−0.67%
2007
38,833
+0.48%
2012
39,232
+0.20%
2017
41,543
+1.15%
Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues. Updates on reimplementing the Graph extension, which will be known as the Chart extension, can be found on Phabricator and on MediaWiki.org.
^"Climat France" (in French). Météo-France. Archived from the original on 7 October 2020. Retrieved 16 December 2014.
^"Lyon–Bron (69)"(PDF). Fiche Climatologique: Statistiques 1981–2010 et records (in French). Météo-France. Archived from the original(PDF) on 10 March 2018. Retrieved 10 March 2018.