Rooms Booking
The Wentworth Community Center is located at 86 chemin Louisa.
Reservation
To make a reservation, please call 450-562-0701 or email info@wentworth.ca.
Wentworth Community Center
Located at 86 Louisa Road, the Wentworth Community Center is the ideal venue for hosting events and activities in Wentworth.
Whether you’re planning a family reunion, an association event, or just a casual gathering with friends, the Wentworth Community Center provides the perfect space and facilities to meet your needs.
The room includes:
- Fully equipped kitchen: Oven, stove, refrigerator, utensils, and dishes are available for preparing your meals and snacks.
- Audio/projector system: Play your music, presentations, or videos using the audio system and projector.
- Tables and chairs:Modular furniture to adapt to your needs and the setup of your event.
St Aidan's Church
The rental service will soon be available.
A bit of history
Text written by Flavie Vaudry, real estate development agent, at the MRC d'Argenteuil
Listed in the inventory of the built heritage of the MRC d’Argenteuil since 1996, St. Aidan’s Anglican Church is revealed at the bend of a curve on Chemin Louisa, in Wentworth. Built in 1893 on land donated by John Neill, the church was consecrated in 1895. At the time, worshipers entered from the south side of the church, on the side of the road, which was not the ideal for funerals and transporting coffins. The portico was therefore moved to the west side of the church, and a steeple topped with a wrought iron cross was added. In neo-Gothic style, the rubble stone foundations, as well as the openings in pointed arches, bear witness to the period of construction of the building. The first place of worship on the site, it was only in 1958 that the community hall was added to it, erected in a similar style and connected to the east facade of the church by a covered passage.
Located on elevated ground off the road, the church is close to various community amenities and the Louisa Cemetery. The latter, consecrated the same year as the church, however houses older burials, the first listed dating from 1890. Before this date, families buried their dead on their land; the territory of Wentworth also includes several of these family burial sites. The names inscribed on the monuments of Louisa Cemetery are reflected in the toponymy of the municipality, which thus honors the memory of some of its pioneers, including George Seale (1824-1910), John Neill (1849-1929) and William Watchorn (1835-1903). This eternal resting place, still active, is said to have been enlarged twice, in 1941 and 1982.