Little Canadas

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Little Canada" or "le petit Canada" is the name traditionally given to neighborhoods in cities and towns settled by immigrants from the Province of Quebec, known as French Canadians.

Approximately 900,000 French Canadians emigrated to the United States in the period of 1840-1930, the vast majority of whom settled in the six New England states: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont. Emigrants moved to states close to Quebec, particularly those bordering the province, because of their generally impoverished state and lack of jobs as a result of overpopulation in their agrarian society. Centers of the New England textile industry such as Lowell, Massachusetts and Woonsocket, Rhode Island were a major destination for Quebec labor.

Of French Canadians from other provinces, those from Ontario typically emigrated to Illinois and Michigan, while those from Manitoba and other Western provinces usually emigrated to Minnesota and Wisconsin. Minneapolis and St. Paul, Minnesota boasted a large French Canadian community circa 1900.

One of the more famous "Little Canadas" was the West Side of Manchester, New Hampshire, a city with a large French Canadian population due to the recruitment of labor in Quebec to work in the textile mills in the 19th and 20th centuries. "La Caisse Populaire Ste. Marie," or "St. Mary's Bank," located in Manchester's Little Canada, was the first credit union chartered in the United States, specifically founded to serve the French Canadian population. The credit union, or "people's bank" ("la caisse populaire") was a financial institution pioneered in Quebec by French Canadians, who had difficulty obtaining credit from banks controlled by anglophone Canadians.

The most famous resident of Manchester, New Hampshire's "le petit Canada" was Grace Metalious, author of the best-selling novel Peyton Place. Interestingly, Metalious denied her French Canadian heritage and mostly lived in non-French Canadian neighborhoods in Manchester, due to her mother's desire to avoid prejudice. During World War II, Metalious eventually had to live in Little Canada after her husband went off to war due to a housing shortage.

Another famous resident of Manchester's Little Canada was Revlon founder Charles Revson, of Russian-Jewish extraction, who grew up in a cold-water tenement in the area.

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