article

Augustin Lavallée

(Jean-Baptiste André) Augustin Lavallée, (Pâquet dit Lavallée). Luthier, bandmaster, teacher, music dealer, b Verchères, Lower Canada (Quebec), 1816, d Montreal 15 Feb 1903.

Lavallée, Augustin

(Jean-Baptiste André) Augustin Lavallée, (Pâquet dit Lavallée). Luthier, bandmaster, teacher, music dealer, b Verchères, Lower Canada (Quebec), 1816, d Montreal 15 Feb 1903. He had been a blacksmith, a logger, and a gunsmith, when he moved with his family to St-Hyacinthe, Que, around 1850 to begin working with the organ manufacturer Joseph Casavant, who had built his first organ in 1840. Lavallée opened his own string-instrument workshop in St-Hyacinthe in 1852 and also conducted the village band before setting up in business in Montreal in 1869 with his son Charles under the name of Lavallée & Fils. Self-taught as an instrument maker, he and his son are believed to have made close to 200 violins. According to the anonymous author (Jules Jehin-Prume?) of Une Vie d'artiste, a biography of Frantz Jehin-Prume, the latter entrusted Lavallée with his Guarnerius after it had been crushed by a sleigh, and Lavallée restored it to its owner 'as good as new.'

See also Calixa (his son).

Help The Canadian Encyclopedia

The Canadian Encyclopedia is a project of Historica Canada, a non-profit, nonpartisan organization devoted to teaching Canadians more about our shared country.  We also produce the Heritage Minutes and other programs. If you believe all Canadians should have access to free, impartial, fact-checked, regularly updated information about Canada’s history and culture in both official languages, please consider donating today. All donations above $3 will receive a tax receipt.

Donate