Saint-Hilarion () is a parish municipality in Charlevoix Regional County Municipality, in the administrative region of Capitale-Nationale of the province of Quebec, Canada.
It is named after Saint Hilarion.
In 1822. the geographic township of Settrington was proclaimed, named after a village in Yorkshire, England. Colonization of the area began in 1830 with the arrival of the first settlers from Les ÃÂboulements.
In 1855, the Township Municipality of Settrington was created, followed by the parish of Saint-Hilarion-de-Settrington in 1860. That same year, the Settrington Post Office opened (renamed to Saint-Hilarion Post Office in 1892).
In 1956, the Township Municipality of Settrington changed statutes and its name to become the Parish Municipality of Saint-Hilarion.
The landscape of Saint-Hilarion, with an altitude of , is dotted by several lakes, such as Lac aux Bois-Verts and Lac ÃÂ la Mine.
Rivers flowing through the municipality are:
The municipality of Saint-Hilarion lies about from the center of the Charlevoix impact structure, discovered in 1968 and which, in 2009, is considered the thirteenth largest impact structure identified on Earth. (The municipality of Les ÃÂboulements being the center). Its soil, as in many municipalities in Charlevoix, is full of impactite, rocky material found at the site of a meteoric impact. An asteroid with a diameter of struck the Charlevoix region about 350 million years ago, creating an impact structure in diameter. The Charlevoix region is known for its regular seismic activity within the Charlevoix Seismic Zone, even if the tremors are not always felt. There is a tremor every two days, very weak magnitude.
Major earthquakes felt in Saint-Hilarion:
In the 2021 Census of Population conducted by Statistics Canada, Saint-Hilarion had a population of living in of its total private dwellings, a change of from its 2016 population of . With a land area of , it had a population density of in 2021.
Mother tongue (2021)
List of former mayors:
The most famous native of Saint-Hilarion is the journalist Olivar Asselin (1874-1937), who participated in the founding of the newspaper Le Devoir in 1910.