Adolphe Lecours was the second head coach of the Montreal Canadiens, following Jack Laviolette. He managed the team for one year, 1910. His record that one year was 8-8-0. The head coach in sports coaching is the coach who is in charge of the other coaches. ... The Montréal Canadiens (officially le Club de Hockey Canadien, and known as le Bleu-Blanc-Rouge, The Habs, le Tricolore, les Glorieux, la Sainte-Flanelle, les Habitants, le Canadien, the Flying Frenchmen) are the oldest established National Hockey League and a member of the Leagues Original Six. ... Jack Laviolette (July 27, 1879 in Belleville, Ontario - January 10, 1960) was a Canadian professional ice hockey forward who played for the Montreal Canadiens. ... 1910 was a common year starting on Saturday (see link for calendar). ...
The chapel next to the residence of the Sisters of the Precious-Blood, a Community founded in 1861 in St-Hyacinthe, was built in 1871 by Abbé Lecours, who, at that time, was parish-priest of Notre-Dame in St-Hyacinthe.
A few Québécois painters were able to make themselves known or command respect in their milieu either through dogged determination or for their obvious talent: Plamondon and Hamel, Charles Huot, Napoléon Bourassa, Adolphe Rho in the Nicolet area, Ozias Leduc of Saint-Hilaire are the best known.
They displayed great effort in developing a religious art which might be considered in many ways as lacking originality, but for some of them, newness, rigor and depth were achieved.