"Grand-Remous" is French for "great eddy" and is a reference to a large whirlpool on the Gatineau River near the Grand Remous Chute. This name matches the Atikamekw name "Obémiticwang", also meaning "choppy waters" or "big stir."[4]
Its territory consists of low hills which vary between 200 meters (660 ft) and 380 meters (1,250 ft) above sea level, and which are partly cleared, mostly around Grand-Remous and along highway 105.[5]
History
The township municipality, formed in 1937, was first called Sicotte, named in honour of Louis-Victor Sicotte (1812-1889), County Deputy of Saint-Hyacinthe from 1857 to 1863. The local post office was also named Sicotte in 1927, but renamed to Grand-Remous in 1933. In 1973, the municipality changed its name to conform to the name of the village where the majority of the population lived.[4]
On October 11, 2003, the Township Municipality of Grand-Remous became the Municipality of Grand-Remous.[4]
Demographics
Historical census populations – Grand-Remous
Year
Pop.
±%
1941
310
—
1951
375
+21.0%
1956
893
+138.1%
1961
900
+0.8%
1966
872
−3.1%
1971
971
+11.4%
1976
1,029
+6.0%
1981
1,145
+11.3%
Year
Pop.
±%
1986
1,161
+1.4%
1991
1,184
+2.0%
1996
1,257
+6.2%
2001
1,261
+0.3%
2006
1,249
−1.0%
2011
1,168
−6.5%
2016
1,161
−0.6%
2021
1,159
−0.2%
Includes revised count for 2001. Source: Statistics Canada[6][7]
Private dwellings occupied by usual residents (2021): 563 (out of 778 total)[3]