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3 or maybe 4 Saints 
from New France 
(Old Canada) 
in the 1600 and 1700s 
Written by: Fergus JM Ducharme 
Assisted by: She Who Must be Obeyed # 1 and # 2
When New France was founded in the early 1600s, one of the main objectives, 
besides making the settlement venture pay dividends to the French King was to 
convert the aboriginal population to Christianity. 
It was in fact Samuel de Champlain who returned to New France on 2nd June 1615 
with four Recollects (The Recollects were a French reform branch of the Order of 
Friars Minor, commonly known as the Franciscans) in order to further religious life in 
the new colony. The Roman Catholic Church was eventually given en 
seigneurie large and valuable tracts of land estimated at nearly 30% of all the lands 
granted by the French Crown in New France. 
The Recollects were important as early missionaries to the French colonies in 
Canada, although they were later displaced there by the Jesuits. 
As noted above, the first Recollect missionaries sailed with Samuel de Champlain, 
embarking from Rouen and arriving at Quebec City on 2 June 1615. The Recollect 
friars are said to have brewed the first beer in New France in 1620.
Joseph Le Caron, O.M.R., was one of the four pioneer missionaries of Canada, 
together with Father Denis Jamet, Father Jean Dolbeau, and Brother Pacifique du 
Plessis, all Recollect friars, Le Caron was also the first missionary to the Hurons. 
Born around 1586, Le Caron took Holy Orders and served as chaplain and tutor to 
the Duke of Orléans, the future King Henry IV of France, and his son the Dauphin 
(later Louis XIII of France). When the King died, Le Caron renounced any 
ecclesiastical advancement and joined the Recollects, a reform branch of the Order 
of Friars Minor who followed a strict life of poverty, with whom he made his 
profession in 1611. 
In 1615 Samuel de Champlain brought four Recollect friars to New France, 
including Father Le Caron, as missionaries to the Indians. On April 24, 1615, they 
sailed from Honfleur aboard the St. Étienne. 
Le Caron reached Canada on May 25 and immediately accompanied some fur-traders 
to Sault St. Louis. His intention was to meet the Huron traders there and go 
with them to their own country. After a short time he travelled to Quebec to provide 
himself with a portable altar kit. On June 24, 1615 he assisted Father Denis Jamet 
in saying the first Mass in Quebec, on the Île de Montréal.
Le Caron returned to the Sault, and went into the land of the Hurons, being the 
first to visit their settlements and preach the Gospel, preceding even Champlain. 
His party made the 1,100-km voyage following the Ottawa River as far as the 
Mattawa, the Mattawa as far as Lake Nipissing, and then the French River to 
Georgian Bay. He thus became the first European to see Lake Huron, which he 
reached by the end of July, a few days before Champlain also arrived. 
On August 12, 1615 he celebrated the first Mass in Huron country, in the 
presence of Champlain. Le Caron stayed with the Hurons about a year (1615– 
16), and was again among them in 1623. 
In 1623, he was accompanied by Father Viel who would contribute significantly to 
Le Caron's dictionary. 
In 1616, Le Caron returned to France with Champlain, to look after the spiritual 
and material interests of the colony. The following spring saw him in Canada 
again, as Provincial Commissary. During this time he celebrated the wedding of 
Louis Hébert’s eldest daughter Anne to Étienne Jonquet, the first recorded 
Christian marriage in Canada. 
During the winters of 1618 and 1622 he evangelized the Montagnais of Tadousac.
Champlain and Le Caron’s route along the French River
Among the first missionaries sent by France to its colony, Viel traveled 
to Huron territory, arriving there with fellow Recollect Father Joseph Le 
Caron in 1623. He was studying the language and collecting material to 
add to Le Caron’s dictionary. 
After almost two years, in May 1625 Viel decided to return to Quebec. 
After a long period of travel, he was murdered by the three Indian 
companions in his canoe. A young man called Ahuntsic, who was 
following in another canoe, witnessed the crime, and suffered the same 
fate. The event took place near present day Sault-au-Récollet and was 
well witnessed and recorded. The friar's body was recovered from the 
water a few days later and buried at Quebec City. 
Le Caron with the help of Viel compiled the first dictionary of the Huron language, and also 
dictionaries of the Algonkin and Montagnais languages. None of them exist today. 
In June 1624, he sent to France a study he had written on the Indians, their customs and the 
difficulties involved in their conversion. Large extracts of the document were preserved by Le 
Clercq. 
The Recollects were expelled by the British in 1629. After the permanent conquest by the British 
the Recollects were forbidden from accepting new ‘recruits’ starting in 1759. The last Canadian 
Recollect, Louis Demers died in Montreal in 1813.
Replica of Champlain’s Ship: Don de Dieu, which transported him 
back and forth to France over the years he was in Canada
The Ursulines and Hospitalières arrive at Québec, 1639 
In 1625, the Ursulines landed in New France to assist the Récollets and soon took a leadership 
role both in the missions and among the clergy. This situation continued until the arrival of the 
first bishop p in 1659 and even beyond this date. 
In 1632, after Québec had been captured by the British, the Jesuits came back to run the 
Récollect missions at Champlain ( now Trois-Rivières) for the Abenaki, at Tadoussac for the 
Algonquins, on Georgian Bay for the Hurons and at Île Royale, in Acadia, for the Mi’kmaq. 
Beginning in 1632, the Jesuits wrote up annual accounts of their missions’ progress. Known as 
The Relations, these accounts were sent to France to be published for propaganda purposes. 
Their aim was not so much to recruit large numbers of settlers, but rather to attract other 
missionary congregations. The Jesuits sought the aid of nuns who could take on responsibility for 
the conversion and education of girls. The Ursuline nuns of Tours and Bordeaux including Marie 
de l’Incarnation, most notably were faithful readers of the Relations. They answered the Jesuits’ 
call and offered their services. 
It took three long years of negotiating with the authorities, but the nuns eventually won 
permission to leave for Canada, a country described by Jacques Cartier as “the land God gave 
to Cain.”
In 1639, after a three month voyage the Ursulines and the Hospitalières finally landed. 
The Ursulines dedicated themselves to converting young Amerindian girls and according to the 
king’s orders to “civilize” them. 
The Hospitalières were to care for the sick, which included Aboriginal peoples suffering from 
epidemics of European diseases, as well as French soldiers and sailors, who very often arrived at 
Québec in a sorry state of health. 
At first, the Ursulines were lodged in an abandoned fur warehouse on the Québec wharf, loaned 
to them by merchants in the Compagnie des Cents-Associés (Company of One Hundred 
Associates). The nuns’ mission thus began in these cramped, unsanitary and poorly heated 
quarters; they had to wait until 1642 for the construction of their convent in the Upper Town of 
Quebec to be completed. 
Their first boarders were Algonquin and Innu girls entrusted to them by the other missionaries; a 
little later, the nuns took in the daughters of settlers. In the 1650s, they started to admit small 
groups of Huron girls, as well as a few Iroquois, particularly the daughters of converted chiefs, 
and these latter pupils were described by the sisters as their “heart’s delights.” French and 
Aboriginal boarders stayed in the same dormitory, ate in the same refectory and played in the 
same yard. However, when it came to schooling, the Aboriginal girls were taught in separate 
classrooms, to make it easier to convert them.
Tomb of St Marie de L’incarnation at the Ursuline 
Convent in Quebec City
The First Ursuline’s of Quebec Residence in 1689 occupying the 
location of the current Notre Dames des Victories Church in 
Lower Town, Quebec.
By the end of the 17th century, the three government towns of New France: Québec, 
Trois-Rivières and Montréal, all had a good number of grade schools both for girls 
and for boys. 
Québec City had the Ursulines’ Convent, the Ouvroir de la Providence run by the 
Notre-Dame Congregation, the Jesuits’ College, the Grand Séminaire and the Petit 
Séminaire. 
In Trois-Rivières there was the hospital-school operated by the Ursulines; and 
Montréal was served by the Sulpicians’ grade schools and colleges for boys and 
Marguerite de Bourgeoys’ schools for girls, as well as the hospitals and hospices 
managed at one time or another by Jeanne Mance, Marguerite d’Youville, the 
Charron brothers and the Hospitalières of Dieppe and of La Flèche.
The Sulpicians recruited their members exclusively among the priests at their Saint-Sulpice 
seminary, in France. 
In 1657, under the direction of their grand vicar, Abbé Gabriel Thubières de Levy de Queylus, the 
order founded the seminary in Montréal. Acquiring the seigneury of the island of Montréal in 1664, 
they fulfilled many roles: they were parish priests in the town and its surroundings, Superiors for 
nuns’ congregations in Montréal, teachers, missionaries and explorers. 
When the time came for a bishop to be named for the colony, the Sulpician Abbé Queylus was 
poised to assume this title, while the Jesuits lobbied in support of their candidate, Monseigneur de 
Laval. This led to major conflict between the two orders. 
Abbé Queylus had already assumed the role of grand vicar to the archbishop of Rouen, 
Monseigneur François de Harlay and he was certain that the position belonged to him. 
Since most of the vessels sailing for the colony left from the port of Rouen at the time, the 
archbishop claimed to have exclusive rights to New France. 
The Jesuits, however, had been in charge of the Canadian Church since 1632 and had a strong 
candidate in Monseigneur de Laval, who had studied at the College La Flèche, a Jesuit institution. 
In the end, the Jesuits won their case and Monseigneur de Laval was appointed to head the 
Church in Canada.
Monseigneur Francois de Laval arriving in Quebec after his 
appointment – to note: he is also a future Saint…
Marguerite Bourgeoys arrived at Montréal along with some 200 men and women who 
were part of the “great recruitment” of 1653. 
This was an initiative designed to help repopulate the town, which had been steadily 
losing its inhabitants as a result of Iroquois attacks. The new colonists represented all 
kinds of professions and rekindled hope in the heart of Montréal’s founder, Sieur de 
Maisonneuve. 
Marguerite Bourgeoys was obliged to put off establishing a school until 1658, since there 
were not enough children in the town. In the meantime, she busied herself with assisting 
Jeanne Mance at her hospital and visiting families in the settlement. 
Marguerite Bourgeoys was a woman of action and travelled back to France several times 
to recruit new teachers for the Notre-Dame Congregation. Over the years, she founded 
several grade schools for girls in Montréal, Québec, Trois-Rivières and Louisbourg, as 
well as on Île d’Orléans. 
Since the congregation’s rules forbade keeping pupils over the age of 14 at their 
convents, older girls could not attend grade school.
Marguerite Bourgeoys
Marguerite Bourgeoys meets Jeanne Mance
The main entrance of Hotel Dieu Hospital in Montreal founded by Jeanne Mance
Hotel Dieu Hospital, Montreal
As a young child, Marguerite d’Youville grew up in one of the colony’s most eminent families, 
being related to the Gathiers de Varennes on her mother’s side. 
However, her father was heavily in debt when he died, leaving his family in stricken 
circumstances. In 1722, she married François-Madeleine d’Youville, who, after squandering both 
his fortune and hers on gambling and alcohol, died eight years later. 
Left with only a house to her name, Marguerite d’Youville withdrew from the world and devoted 
her energy to prayer and charitable work. 
She gathered around her women like herself who were poor, but who shared her ideals. 
This was the nucleus of the Congrégation des Soeurs de la Charité de l’Hôpital général de 
Montréal, which she eventually founded in 1747. 
In the meantime, the 1740s were very difficult years for Marguerite d’Youville. The Sulpicians, 
who were the spiritual advisors of Montréal, wanted Madame d’Youville and her followers to 
replace the Charron brothers and take over the direction of the Hôpital Général, which was 
experiencing serious problems. It was not an easy undertaking, especially since certain 
prejudices died hard in the town. 
The inhabitant, who nicknamed the women the “Grey Nuns,” believed that Marguerite d’Youville 
would continue her husband’s disreputable ways, since he had been known as a brutal, 
dishonest merchant, a gambler and inveterate drinker.
Francois-Madelaine 
d’Youville 
Marguerite Dufrost 
de la Jemmerais 
The widowed Marguerite 
d’Youville
She helped society’s rejects and problems never seemed to be 
far from her, in 1765 the ‘hospital’ was burned to the ground 
and she effectively had to start over…
However, as the population became aware of the need for the apostolic work she was doing and 
her zeal in helping the poor, the situation improved. The Soeurs de la Charité were even able to 
open a wing for “fallen women,” as they were called at the time, and thus modified the hospital’s 
vocation, since it had been reserved for men until then. 
When Marguerite d’Youville took control of the hospital in 1747, the establishment was bankrupt 
and burdened with a debt of over 40,000 livres. 
She worked tirelessly to restore the hospital’s viability through every imaginable means: weaving, 
producing candles and communion wafers, curing tobacco, baking and selling bread, and 
marketing produce from the sisters’ farm. 
Marguerite d’Youville accepted society’s rejects;those who would be turned away from other 
hospitals: abandoned children, the mentally disturbed, orphans, disabled soldiers, the elderly and 
lepers. 
Anyone who was able to help was put to work, whether it was as tailors, cobblers or bakers. 
She even hired British soldiers as farm workers or orderlies, and these men taught the sisters 
English. Her resourcefulness enabled her social mission to survive one of the worst periods in the 
history of New France, marked by epidemics, bad harvests, war and, as of 1763, the 
perturbations accompanying the advent of British rule.
Marguerite was Beatified in 
1959, by Saint John XXIII and 
Canonized in 1990, by Pope 
John Paul II. 
St John XXIII called her “The 
Mother of Universal Charity“ 
when he Beatified her. 
Her Feast Day is: October 16th 
and she is considered the 
Patron Saint of: widows & 
difficult marriages.
Statue of Marie Bruyere (founder of the Grey 
Nuns of Ottawa) with St. Marguerite d’Youville, 
the children and the sick, placed in the 
Beechwood Cemetery in Ottawa.
St Marguerite d’Youville’s tomb at the Grey 
Nuns Motherhouse in Varrennes, Quebec in 
suburban Montreal where she was born. 
St Marguerite died in Montreal at age 71 at the 
Montreal General Hospital
Let’s summarize: 
In our narrative today, we have met 3 Canadian 
Saints of the Catholic Church and one Saintly 
person who should, in our opinion, be considered 
for Sainthood. 
They are:
St Marguerite Bourgeoys 
She was Beatified on November 12th 1950 by Pope Pius XII 
She was Canonized on October 31st, 1982, by Pope John 
Paul II 
Her major shrine is Notre-Dame-de-Bon-Secours Chapel in 
Montreal 
Her feast day is: January 12th 
She is the Patron Saint: against poverty; the loss of parents &; 
people rejected by religious orders. 
Click the link to read: “The Rest of the Story”
Jeanne Mance 
Although not now a Saint of the Church, Jeanne Mance 
should be! 
Her works selflessness certainly merit at least consideration 
for such a holy honour. 
For the complete story on Jeanne Mance follow this link to 
her complete biography. 
Click the link to read: “The Rest of the Story”.
Saint Marguerite d’Youville 
Click the link to read: “The Rest of the Story”
Bishop Francois de Laval 
He was beatified June 22nd, 1980 by Pope John Paul II 
He was Canonized April 2nd, 2014 by Pope Francis 
His Shrine is: The Cathedral of Notre Dame of Quebec. 
His Feast Day is: May 6th 
Saint Francois de Laval 
Click the link to read: “The Rest of the Story”
We want to thank the following for their contributions to this article: 
Other materials and some photos provided by: www.wikipedia.org 
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons 
Attribution - ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
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3 maybe 4 Saints of New France

  • 1. proudly presents: 3 or maybe 4 Saints from New France (Old Canada) in the 1600 and 1700s Written by: Fergus JM Ducharme Assisted by: She Who Must be Obeyed # 1 and # 2
  • 2.
  • 3.
  • 4. When New France was founded in the early 1600s, one of the main objectives, besides making the settlement venture pay dividends to the French King was to convert the aboriginal population to Christianity. It was in fact Samuel de Champlain who returned to New France on 2nd June 1615 with four Recollects (The Recollects were a French reform branch of the Order of Friars Minor, commonly known as the Franciscans) in order to further religious life in the new colony. The Roman Catholic Church was eventually given en seigneurie large and valuable tracts of land estimated at nearly 30% of all the lands granted by the French Crown in New France. The Recollects were important as early missionaries to the French colonies in Canada, although they were later displaced there by the Jesuits. As noted above, the first Recollect missionaries sailed with Samuel de Champlain, embarking from Rouen and arriving at Quebec City on 2 June 1615. The Recollect friars are said to have brewed the first beer in New France in 1620.
  • 5.
  • 6. Joseph Le Caron, O.M.R., was one of the four pioneer missionaries of Canada, together with Father Denis Jamet, Father Jean Dolbeau, and Brother Pacifique du Plessis, all Recollect friars, Le Caron was also the first missionary to the Hurons. Born around 1586, Le Caron took Holy Orders and served as chaplain and tutor to the Duke of Orléans, the future King Henry IV of France, and his son the Dauphin (later Louis XIII of France). When the King died, Le Caron renounced any ecclesiastical advancement and joined the Recollects, a reform branch of the Order of Friars Minor who followed a strict life of poverty, with whom he made his profession in 1611. In 1615 Samuel de Champlain brought four Recollect friars to New France, including Father Le Caron, as missionaries to the Indians. On April 24, 1615, they sailed from Honfleur aboard the St. Étienne. Le Caron reached Canada on May 25 and immediately accompanied some fur-traders to Sault St. Louis. His intention was to meet the Huron traders there and go with them to their own country. After a short time he travelled to Quebec to provide himself with a portable altar kit. On June 24, 1615 he assisted Father Denis Jamet in saying the first Mass in Quebec, on the Île de Montréal.
  • 7.
  • 8. Le Caron returned to the Sault, and went into the land of the Hurons, being the first to visit their settlements and preach the Gospel, preceding even Champlain. His party made the 1,100-km voyage following the Ottawa River as far as the Mattawa, the Mattawa as far as Lake Nipissing, and then the French River to Georgian Bay. He thus became the first European to see Lake Huron, which he reached by the end of July, a few days before Champlain also arrived. On August 12, 1615 he celebrated the first Mass in Huron country, in the presence of Champlain. Le Caron stayed with the Hurons about a year (1615– 16), and was again among them in 1623. In 1623, he was accompanied by Father Viel who would contribute significantly to Le Caron's dictionary. In 1616, Le Caron returned to France with Champlain, to look after the spiritual and material interests of the colony. The following spring saw him in Canada again, as Provincial Commissary. During this time he celebrated the wedding of Louis Hébert’s eldest daughter Anne to Étienne Jonquet, the first recorded Christian marriage in Canada. During the winters of 1618 and 1622 he evangelized the Montagnais of Tadousac.
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11. Champlain and Le Caron’s route along the French River
  • 12.
  • 13. Among the first missionaries sent by France to its colony, Viel traveled to Huron territory, arriving there with fellow Recollect Father Joseph Le Caron in 1623. He was studying the language and collecting material to add to Le Caron’s dictionary. After almost two years, in May 1625 Viel decided to return to Quebec. After a long period of travel, he was murdered by the three Indian companions in his canoe. A young man called Ahuntsic, who was following in another canoe, witnessed the crime, and suffered the same fate. The event took place near present day Sault-au-Récollet and was well witnessed and recorded. The friar's body was recovered from the water a few days later and buried at Quebec City. Le Caron with the help of Viel compiled the first dictionary of the Huron language, and also dictionaries of the Algonkin and Montagnais languages. None of them exist today. In June 1624, he sent to France a study he had written on the Indians, their customs and the difficulties involved in their conversion. Large extracts of the document were preserved by Le Clercq. The Recollects were expelled by the British in 1629. After the permanent conquest by the British the Recollects were forbidden from accepting new ‘recruits’ starting in 1759. The last Canadian Recollect, Louis Demers died in Montreal in 1813.
  • 14. Replica of Champlain’s Ship: Don de Dieu, which transported him back and forth to France over the years he was in Canada
  • 15. The Ursulines and Hospitalières arrive at Québec, 1639 In 1625, the Ursulines landed in New France to assist the Récollets and soon took a leadership role both in the missions and among the clergy. This situation continued until the arrival of the first bishop p in 1659 and even beyond this date. In 1632, after Québec had been captured by the British, the Jesuits came back to run the Récollect missions at Champlain ( now Trois-Rivières) for the Abenaki, at Tadoussac for the Algonquins, on Georgian Bay for the Hurons and at Île Royale, in Acadia, for the Mi’kmaq. Beginning in 1632, the Jesuits wrote up annual accounts of their missions’ progress. Known as The Relations, these accounts were sent to France to be published for propaganda purposes. Their aim was not so much to recruit large numbers of settlers, but rather to attract other missionary congregations. The Jesuits sought the aid of nuns who could take on responsibility for the conversion and education of girls. The Ursuline nuns of Tours and Bordeaux including Marie de l’Incarnation, most notably were faithful readers of the Relations. They answered the Jesuits’ call and offered their services. It took three long years of negotiating with the authorities, but the nuns eventually won permission to leave for Canada, a country described by Jacques Cartier as “the land God gave to Cain.”
  • 16.
  • 17.
  • 18. In 1639, after a three month voyage the Ursulines and the Hospitalières finally landed. The Ursulines dedicated themselves to converting young Amerindian girls and according to the king’s orders to “civilize” them. The Hospitalières were to care for the sick, which included Aboriginal peoples suffering from epidemics of European diseases, as well as French soldiers and sailors, who very often arrived at Québec in a sorry state of health. At first, the Ursulines were lodged in an abandoned fur warehouse on the Québec wharf, loaned to them by merchants in the Compagnie des Cents-Associés (Company of One Hundred Associates). The nuns’ mission thus began in these cramped, unsanitary and poorly heated quarters; they had to wait until 1642 for the construction of their convent in the Upper Town of Quebec to be completed. Their first boarders were Algonquin and Innu girls entrusted to them by the other missionaries; a little later, the nuns took in the daughters of settlers. In the 1650s, they started to admit small groups of Huron girls, as well as a few Iroquois, particularly the daughters of converted chiefs, and these latter pupils were described by the sisters as their “heart’s delights.” French and Aboriginal boarders stayed in the same dormitory, ate in the same refectory and played in the same yard. However, when it came to schooling, the Aboriginal girls were taught in separate classrooms, to make it easier to convert them.
  • 19.
  • 20.
  • 21. Tomb of St Marie de L’incarnation at the Ursuline Convent in Quebec City
  • 22.
  • 23. The First Ursuline’s of Quebec Residence in 1689 occupying the location of the current Notre Dames des Victories Church in Lower Town, Quebec.
  • 24.
  • 25.
  • 26. By the end of the 17th century, the three government towns of New France: Québec, Trois-Rivières and Montréal, all had a good number of grade schools both for girls and for boys. Québec City had the Ursulines’ Convent, the Ouvroir de la Providence run by the Notre-Dame Congregation, the Jesuits’ College, the Grand Séminaire and the Petit Séminaire. In Trois-Rivières there was the hospital-school operated by the Ursulines; and Montréal was served by the Sulpicians’ grade schools and colleges for boys and Marguerite de Bourgeoys’ schools for girls, as well as the hospitals and hospices managed at one time or another by Jeanne Mance, Marguerite d’Youville, the Charron brothers and the Hospitalières of Dieppe and of La Flèche.
  • 27. The Sulpicians recruited their members exclusively among the priests at their Saint-Sulpice seminary, in France. In 1657, under the direction of their grand vicar, Abbé Gabriel Thubières de Levy de Queylus, the order founded the seminary in Montréal. Acquiring the seigneury of the island of Montréal in 1664, they fulfilled many roles: they were parish priests in the town and its surroundings, Superiors for nuns’ congregations in Montréal, teachers, missionaries and explorers. When the time came for a bishop to be named for the colony, the Sulpician Abbé Queylus was poised to assume this title, while the Jesuits lobbied in support of their candidate, Monseigneur de Laval. This led to major conflict between the two orders. Abbé Queylus had already assumed the role of grand vicar to the archbishop of Rouen, Monseigneur François de Harlay and he was certain that the position belonged to him. Since most of the vessels sailing for the colony left from the port of Rouen at the time, the archbishop claimed to have exclusive rights to New France. The Jesuits, however, had been in charge of the Canadian Church since 1632 and had a strong candidate in Monseigneur de Laval, who had studied at the College La Flèche, a Jesuit institution. In the end, the Jesuits won their case and Monseigneur de Laval was appointed to head the Church in Canada.
  • 28. Monseigneur Francois de Laval arriving in Quebec after his appointment – to note: he is also a future Saint…
  • 29. Marguerite Bourgeoys arrived at Montréal along with some 200 men and women who were part of the “great recruitment” of 1653. This was an initiative designed to help repopulate the town, which had been steadily losing its inhabitants as a result of Iroquois attacks. The new colonists represented all kinds of professions and rekindled hope in the heart of Montréal’s founder, Sieur de Maisonneuve. Marguerite Bourgeoys was obliged to put off establishing a school until 1658, since there were not enough children in the town. In the meantime, she busied herself with assisting Jeanne Mance at her hospital and visiting families in the settlement. Marguerite Bourgeoys was a woman of action and travelled back to France several times to recruit new teachers for the Notre-Dame Congregation. Over the years, she founded several grade schools for girls in Montréal, Québec, Trois-Rivières and Louisbourg, as well as on Île d’Orléans. Since the congregation’s rules forbade keeping pupils over the age of 14 at their convents, older girls could not attend grade school.
  • 32.
  • 33.
  • 34. The main entrance of Hotel Dieu Hospital in Montreal founded by Jeanne Mance
  • 36.
  • 37. As a young child, Marguerite d’Youville grew up in one of the colony’s most eminent families, being related to the Gathiers de Varennes on her mother’s side. However, her father was heavily in debt when he died, leaving his family in stricken circumstances. In 1722, she married François-Madeleine d’Youville, who, after squandering both his fortune and hers on gambling and alcohol, died eight years later. Left with only a house to her name, Marguerite d’Youville withdrew from the world and devoted her energy to prayer and charitable work. She gathered around her women like herself who were poor, but who shared her ideals. This was the nucleus of the Congrégation des Soeurs de la Charité de l’Hôpital général de Montréal, which she eventually founded in 1747. In the meantime, the 1740s were very difficult years for Marguerite d’Youville. The Sulpicians, who were the spiritual advisors of Montréal, wanted Madame d’Youville and her followers to replace the Charron brothers and take over the direction of the Hôpital Général, which was experiencing serious problems. It was not an easy undertaking, especially since certain prejudices died hard in the town. The inhabitant, who nicknamed the women the “Grey Nuns,” believed that Marguerite d’Youville would continue her husband’s disreputable ways, since he had been known as a brutal, dishonest merchant, a gambler and inveterate drinker.
  • 38. Francois-Madelaine d’Youville Marguerite Dufrost de la Jemmerais The widowed Marguerite d’Youville
  • 39. She helped society’s rejects and problems never seemed to be far from her, in 1765 the ‘hospital’ was burned to the ground and she effectively had to start over…
  • 40. However, as the population became aware of the need for the apostolic work she was doing and her zeal in helping the poor, the situation improved. The Soeurs de la Charité were even able to open a wing for “fallen women,” as they were called at the time, and thus modified the hospital’s vocation, since it had been reserved for men until then. When Marguerite d’Youville took control of the hospital in 1747, the establishment was bankrupt and burdened with a debt of over 40,000 livres. She worked tirelessly to restore the hospital’s viability through every imaginable means: weaving, producing candles and communion wafers, curing tobacco, baking and selling bread, and marketing produce from the sisters’ farm. Marguerite d’Youville accepted society’s rejects;those who would be turned away from other hospitals: abandoned children, the mentally disturbed, orphans, disabled soldiers, the elderly and lepers. Anyone who was able to help was put to work, whether it was as tailors, cobblers or bakers. She even hired British soldiers as farm workers or orderlies, and these men taught the sisters English. Her resourcefulness enabled her social mission to survive one of the worst periods in the history of New France, marked by epidemics, bad harvests, war and, as of 1763, the perturbations accompanying the advent of British rule.
  • 41. Marguerite was Beatified in 1959, by Saint John XXIII and Canonized in 1990, by Pope John Paul II. St John XXIII called her “The Mother of Universal Charity“ when he Beatified her. Her Feast Day is: October 16th and she is considered the Patron Saint of: widows & difficult marriages.
  • 42.
  • 43. Statue of Marie Bruyere (founder of the Grey Nuns of Ottawa) with St. Marguerite d’Youville, the children and the sick, placed in the Beechwood Cemetery in Ottawa.
  • 44. St Marguerite d’Youville’s tomb at the Grey Nuns Motherhouse in Varrennes, Quebec in suburban Montreal where she was born. St Marguerite died in Montreal at age 71 at the Montreal General Hospital
  • 45. Let’s summarize: In our narrative today, we have met 3 Canadian Saints of the Catholic Church and one Saintly person who should, in our opinion, be considered for Sainthood. They are:
  • 46. St Marguerite Bourgeoys She was Beatified on November 12th 1950 by Pope Pius XII She was Canonized on October 31st, 1982, by Pope John Paul II Her major shrine is Notre-Dame-de-Bon-Secours Chapel in Montreal Her feast day is: January 12th She is the Patron Saint: against poverty; the loss of parents &; people rejected by religious orders. Click the link to read: “The Rest of the Story”
  • 47. Jeanne Mance Although not now a Saint of the Church, Jeanne Mance should be! Her works selflessness certainly merit at least consideration for such a holy honour. For the complete story on Jeanne Mance follow this link to her complete biography. Click the link to read: “The Rest of the Story”.
  • 48. Saint Marguerite d’Youville Click the link to read: “The Rest of the Story”
  • 49. Bishop Francois de Laval He was beatified June 22nd, 1980 by Pope John Paul II He was Canonized April 2nd, 2014 by Pope Francis His Shrine is: The Cathedral of Notre Dame of Quebec. His Feast Day is: May 6th Saint Francois de Laval Click the link to read: “The Rest of the Story”
  • 50. We want to thank the following for their contributions to this article: Other materials and some photos provided by: www.wikipedia.org This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution - ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License
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