Showing posts with label Georges Arsenault. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Georges Arsenault. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 23, 2020

'This is Acadie' - P.E.I. celebrating 300 years of French being spoken

By Daniel Brown (daniel.brown@theguardian.pe.ca) Local Journalism Initiative Reporter and published in The Chronicle-Herald on May 08, 2020 Updated: May 09 at 6 a.m.

Acadian historian Georges Arsenault holds a photo of his maternal grandfather's grandparents, Léon Poirier and Marie Bernard. they were married in Tignish in 1846 and had 16 children, six of whom died in infancy. In 1915, they celebrated their 69th wedding anniversary, and Léon died later that year at the age of 96. He was a great-grandchild of Pierre Poirier. Photo credit - Daniel Brown/Local Journalism Initiative Reporter 

Pierre Poirier had a loaf of bread to thank for getting him out of prison.

It was the summer of 1755. Recently wed and living near what's now Sackville, N.B., Poirier was one of many Acadian men in his region invited to a British-run information session regarding land.

Georges Arsenault, a P.E.I. historian and descendent of Pierre, confirmed that this was just a ploy.

"Once they got there they were imprisoned," he said.

The men were held at Fort Lawrence, N.S. during what was the beginning of what has since become known as the Great Upheaval. For about three months, Pierre waited to be forcibly deported, while his wife, Marguerite, fled to escape the same fate.

They were just some of the many early Acadians whose plight played a role in shaping the Maritime provinces. This year, Prince Edward Island is celebrating the tricentennial anniversary of these first French settlers.

"In 1720, that's when the first settlement was opened on the Island," Arsenault said. "French has been spoken on the Island for 300 years."

It might mark the first time this centennial is recognized on P.E.I. That's because it wasn't until the 1960s that the French language started to become more celebrated across the Maritimes – a shyness that may have been influenced by the hardships their ancestors faced, Arsenault said.

Léon Poirier and Marie Bernard got married in Tignish in 1846. They had 16 children, six of whom died in infancy. In 1915, they celebrated their 69th wedding anniversary, and Léon died later that year at the age of 96. He was a great-grandchild of Pierre Poirier. - Contributed
Pierre was unable to be with Marguerite during his incarceration, but some of the prisoner's wives were occasionally allowed to bring them food. With a little planning, one of these women baked her husband a large, inconspicuous loaf of bread.

Little did the British soldiers know that she had hidden a knife inside of its crust.

The prisoners used it to dig a 12-foot tunnel underneath the walls of their confinement. On a stormy October night, about 85 of them, including Poirier, managed to make their escape and avoid being deported,

He went straight home to his village to reunite with Marguerite, who by this point was about eight months pregnant with their first child. But alas, the community was deserted.

Having grown up in the community of Abram-Village, Arsenault has always valued his family's history. He believes it's important to know because it wasn't as well documented when he was in school.

"When I went to school, I couldn't speak French," he said.

His years of Acadian research led him to publish a few books, his most recent being Illustrated History of the Acadians of Prince Edward Island. It was written to act as a resource for people wanting to learn more about this 300-year journey, he said.

"There's about a quarter of Islanders who claim they have French ancestry," he said. "I'd like to encourage people to read up on the history."

During Pierre's journey, he met some Mi'kmaq people in the area, who Arsenault notes had resided in the Maritimes well before the colonies. They informed Pierre that the people of his village fled to Cocagne, N.B.

"That's where it's told Pierre found his wife," Arsenault said.

Having reunited at long last, they arranged to set sail for the colony of Île Saint-Jean as refugees. The same month Pierre escaped incarceration, Marguerite also gave birth to their daughter, Rosalie.

They settled there until 1758, when they were forced away to escape deportation a second time. Eventually they were able to return and settle down for good, but many Acadians still found it hard to secure land and stable work because of their language, Arsenault said.

DID YOU KNOW?
Many P.E.I. communities inherited their names from the early French settlers, Arsenault said. These include:

Morell
Crapaud
Souris
Bay Fortune
While some used to have French names but have since been translated, such as:
St. Peter's Harbour (Havre-Saint-Pierre)
Wood Islands (Île à Bois)
Cape Bear (Cap à l'Ours)
North River (Rivière du Nord)

Alvina, left, and Alcide Bernard lead the parade and showcase their Acadian pride during the Acadian Festival in Evangeline in 1992. - Photo credit, Georges Arsenault/Special to The Guardian

Today, Île Saint-Jean is known as P.E.I., and French is looked at much differently.

P.E.I. Lt.-Gov. Antionette Perry is part of a committee planning celebrations for this year’s Acadie 300 Î.-P.-É. While it has been postponed due to the COVID-19 pandemic, there will be events offered to some extent soon, likely via virtual platforms, she said.

Like Arsenault, she is a descendent of Pierre Poirier.

"We're all connected some way, there," she said.

That's because, according to Arsenault's research, Pierre was likely the first to change his surname as it was difficult for the English to pronounce. He changed it to Perry, Arsenault said.

Pierre and Marguerite's lineage still lives on today. Their children were among the pioneers of Tignish, and many of their descendants made names for themselves, whether as the first Maritime Acadian to be ordained a priest or the first elected into the House of Commons.

Acadian on both sides, Perry is grateful for the sense of freedom she feels in living her heritage on P.E.I., where the French language has since become a vibrant and lively part of Island life, she said.

"I know that I would not be able to live my culture as fully as anywhere else in the world. Because this is Acadie, after all."

Twitter.com/dnlbrown95

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

The Odyssey of Pierre Poirier by Georges Arsenault

The Odyssey of Pierre Poirier
by Georges Arsenault and posted to Facebook on Dec 13, 2016


On this Acadian Day of Remembrance (13 December 2016), I have a special thought for the thousands of Acadians who died during the Deportation years. I also think about my ancestors who managed to escape deportation, especially my ancestor Pierre Poirier who escaped two deportations, the one in 1755 and the one in 1758. His story deserves to be told.

I am Georges à Aldine Poirier/Perry à Léon à Romain à Léon à Joseph à Pierre à Pierre Poirier.

In the summer of 1755, Pierre Poirier was a young man married to Marguerite Girouard. They were expecting their first child. They lived in Tintamarre (near present-day Sackville, N.B.). Like most of the men of the region, Pierre was arrested in the month of August and taken prisoner by the British soldiers. While waiting to be deported, he was incarcerated with others at Fort Lawrence which was located near the place where the Nova Scotia Tourism Information Centre stands today, not far from Amherst.

The wives of the prisoners were allowed to bring them food. At the request of the men, one of the women brought a knife which she hid in a large loaf of bread. With the help of this knife, the men were able to dig a tunnel under the walls of the fort. During the stormy night of the 1st and 2nd of October 1755, Pierre Poirier and 85 other Acadian prisoners managed to escape through the 12 foot underground tunnel they had made!

Pierre immediately headed for home hoping to find his wife who was about eight months pregnant. He found the village of Tintamarre deserted. He met some Mi’kmaq who told him that all the women, children and elders had gone to Cocagne to escape deportation. Pierre headed for Cocagne where he found Marguerite. From there, the couple sailed to île Saint-Jean (PEI). It is not known if their baby was born in Cocagne or on the Island. It is known, however, that Marguerite gave birth on October 15 to a girl, Rosalie, who was baptized the following November 24, 1755, at Port-la-Joye.

Pierre Poirier remained on île Saint-Jean with his young family until 1758. That summer, Lord Rollo and a contigent of British soldiers arrived on the Island to deport the inhabitants to France. For a second time, Pierre managed to escape deportation. With quite a few other families, Pierre fled to a refugee camp on the Restigouche River at the head of the Bay of Chaleur.

Around 1761, the Poirier family returned to the Island and settled at Havre-Saint-Pierre (St. Peters Harbour) for several years. Pierre and a number of Acadian men were hired to fish cod for British entrepreneurs. During his stay at Havre-Saint-Pierre, Pierre also went to Trois-Rivières (Montague area) in the winter of 1768 with eight other Acadian men to cut pine trees for William Livingston, and later that same year he was employed as a labourer for 11 days by Isaac Deschamps to do public work on the Island such as clearing land for the settlement of Charlottetown. 

The Anglophones for whom Pierre worked in order to feed his family, seemed to have difficulty pronouncing his family name, Poirier. To their ears, it sounded a bit like Perry, a popular name in England. That is probably how Pierre’s family name was translated to Perry. It is written in a number of ways in the 18th century documents in English: Paurie (1765), Purrie (1768), Pery (1790), Perry (1795), Perrie (1798). Pierre Perry seems to have been the first Poirier to more or less adopt the surname Perry. For many years, only his descendants were known by that name on the Island.

From Havre-Saint-Pierre, Pierre Poirier moved his family to Malpeque Bay in the early 1770s where they settled in Lot 17 in what is now North St. Eleanors. We don’t know where and when Pierre and Marguerite Poirier died. They were still alive and living in Lot 17 when the 1798 census was taken. By 1799, the Acadians started leaving the shores of Malpeque Bay to settle elsewhere in Prince County. Their children, Pierre (la Grand’couette), Basile, Rosalie, and Marguerite figure among the pioneers of Tignish while the other members of the family, Germain and Madeleine, are listed among the founders of Mont-Carmel.

Rosalie, born in 1755, married Joseph Richard. They are the ancestors of the Richards from the Tignish region. Marguerite married Julien DesRoches and they have among their descendants many of the West Prince DesRoches. As for Madeleine, she married Firmin Gallant, nicknamed “Panneau”, and they settled in Mont-Carmel. Their descendants are found in large numbers in the Evangeline Region, among them are the families with nicknames such as Panneau, Cannon, Calumet, and Blague.

Several of Pierre and Madeleine Poirier’s descendants have made history : 1) Rev. Sylvain Éphrem Perrey (1802-1887) was the first Acadian born in the Maritimes after the Deportation to be ordained to the priesthood; 2) Stanislaus Perry (1823-1898) was the first Acadian elected to the Legislative Assembly of PEI and the first Acadian from the Maritime Provinces to be elected to the House of Commons in Ottawa; 3) Joseph Alphonse Bernard (1881-1962) was the first Acadian to be named Lieutenant Governor of a Canadian province. His mother was a daughter of Stanislaus Perry.

On this Acadian Day of Remembrance, I applaud my ancestors Pierre Poirier and Marguerite Girouard, remarkable survivors of the Grand Dérangement (Great Upheaval).
************************************************************************
Note : The information about Pierre Poirier as being one of the escapees from Fort Lawrence in 1755 comes from the research of genealogist Placide Gaudet. See: « La famille Poirier (Généalogie préparée par feu Placide Gaudet) », L’Évangéline, 28 January 1943.





Photo Caption: Léon (à Joseph à Pierre à Pierre) Poirier/Perry and Marie Bernard. They were my maternal grandfather's grandparents. They lived in Ascension, parish of Tignish. In 1915, they celebrated their 69th wedding anniversary. Léon died in 1915. He was 96 years old. Léon and Marie had 16 children, six of whom died in childhood.

Photo caption: Five generations of the Poirier family, of Tignish, 1903. From left to right: Joseph, François, Jean, Gilbert et Colas



Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Resources - Acadians on PEI - by Georges Arsenault

As a follow-up to the excellent talk given today by Island historian and folklorist Georges Arsenault, he has kindly provided a list of articles that may be of interest.

Articles on-line by
George Arsenault


Articles in The Island Magazine



Other articles:

Georges Arsenault, “The Acadian Settlements of Pinette and Pointe Prime”, Keepsakes and Memories: Our Belfast, (Susan Hornby, editor), Belfast, Belfast Historical Society, 2009,
p. 23-37.


Other resources:

Acadian Ancestral Home - by Lucie LeBlanc Consentino.
Website for Acadian genealogy, history and research.

History of PEI Crafts Council 1965 - 1985 - digital format

 The history of the PEI Crafts Council 1965 - 1985 is available as both full pages in another post as well as in digital format here.  FROM ...