Franco-American of New England | Hardcover

Franco-American of New England | Hardcover

Page 173

... Denis-Michel-Aristide Magnan, Histoire de la race française aux États-Unis (History of the French race in the United States), Paris, Librairie Vic et Amat, 1912, 253. ...

Page 175

... See Yves-Henri Nouailhat, Évolution économique des États-Unis du milieu du xixe siècle à 1914 (Economic evolution in the United States from the mid-nineteenth century to 1914), Paris, SEDES, 1982, 342. 17. Louise Lamphere, op. cit., note 16. ...

Page 202

... Alexandre Goulet, Une Nouvelle-France en Nouvelle-Angleterre (A New France in New England), Paris, Librairie de jurisprudence ancienne et moderne, 1934, 131. 114. Quoted in Robert Rumilly, op. cit., note 5, 218. 115. Id., 220. ...

Page 221

... It was “useless to make sacrifices to build churches and erect schools, if we are constrained to swell the ranks of associations which seek to have us slowly lose our distinctive traits by prohibiting our language.”196 In the words of Charles-Édouard ...

Page 251

... Yves-Henri Nouailhat, Les États-Unis: l’avènement d’une puissance mondiale, 1898–1933 (The United States: the birth of a world power, 1898–1933), Paris, Éditions Richelieu, 1973, 234. 38. Leonard Dinnerstein and David Reimers, Ethnic Americans. ...

Page 262

... Mgr William Hickey, appointed coadjutor of the Providence diocese in 1919 and bishop of that diocese in 1921, was born at Worcester and studied theology at the SaintSulpice Seminary at Paris. ...

Page 305

... As concerns the connection of the Franco-American elite with France, see François Weil, Les Franco-Américains (The FrancoAmericans), Paris, Belin, 1989, 175. 228. All belong to the same family. ...

Page 308

... In truth, every militant had always known that preserving the institutional network established by the earliest generations of emigrants was the only way to safeguard the distinctive traits of their nationality. But, their unanimity stopped there. ...

Page 340

... “Between the French that we speak and that which is spoken at Paris, there is at most, the same difference in accent as exists, for example, between the English spoken at Boston and that spoken at London.” ...

Page 351

... “a national renasence” 333 of those characteristic traits would have spelled the end of the FrenchCanadian nationality.161 Preservation, one word which might have indicated that the radicals refused change—yet it was never uttered. ...