Who Lives in Sherbrooke
A predominantly Francophone city, with a historic Anglophone minority in Lennoxville and a growing presence of immigrants from French-speaking African and Latin American countries.
Sherbrooke is Francophone on a large scale: French is the mother tongue of roughly nine out of ten residents. The Anglophone minority, tied to Bishop's University and the Townshippers community, is concentrated in the former municipality of Lennoxville and has maintained English-language schools and churches for generations.
The immigrant population is still smaller than in Montreal, but it has been growing. The most visible flows come from French-speaking African countries (Ivory Coast, Cameroon, Morocco, the Democratic Republic of the Congo), Latin America (Colombia, Venezuela, Mexico), and Syrian refugees resettled in recent years.
Most of the population is Catholic by Quebec tradition, with declining religious practice, as in the rest of the province. Immigrant communities have brought small evangelical congregations, mosques, and Orthodox churches, particularly in central neighborhoods and near the university campuses.
- French
- English
- Spanish
- Arabic
- Haitian Creole
- Catholicism
- No religion
- Islam
- Protestantism
- Orthodox Christianity