Trefflé Berthiaume

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Trefflé Berthiaume (4 August 18482 January 1915) was a Canadian typographer, newspaperman and politician.

Born in Saint-Hugues, Lower Canada, the son of Gédéon Berthiaume and Éléonore Normandin, Berthiaume was educated at the Séminaire de Saint-Hyacinthe. After school, he was an apprentice to a tailor for more than two years. In 1863, he started training as a typographer a profession which he worked in for some time. In 1884, he founded the Gebhardt and Berthiaume Lithographing and Printing Company Limited. In 1884, he was a co-founder of the magazine Le Monde illustré. In 1889, he became in charge of the editing, printing, and distribution of the Montreal newspaper La Presse. He became the owner in 1894.He helped La Presse to become a sensationalistic people's paper with articles on crime reporting, lurid reports with moralistic comments. It once featured drawings of a female murderess' thoughts.

He was called to the Legislative Council of Quebec for the division of Alma in 1896 and served until his death in 1915.

He died in Montreal in 1915 and is buried in the Notre Dame des Neiges Cemetery.

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