Safekipedia

French Americans

Adapted from Wikipedia · Discoverer experience

French-Canadian immigrants learning English at a night school in Holyoke, Massachusetts, in 1902.

French Americans or Franco-Americans are citizens or nationals of the United States who identify with having full or partial French or Québécois heritage, ethnicity, and/or ancestral ties. This includes French-Canadian Americans, whose experience and identity are unique within the broader community.

The state with the largest proportion of people identifying as having French ancestry is Maine, while California has the largest number of people with French ancestry. Many U.S. cities have large French American populations. As of 2020, there are about 9.4 million U.S. residents who declare French ancestry or French Canadian descent, and about 1.32 million spoke French at home according to the 2010 census. An additional 750,000 U.S. residents speak a French-based creole language.

Franco-Americans are less visible than other similarly sized ethnic groups. This is partly because they often identify more closely with regional identities such as French Canadian, Acadian, Brayon, or Louisiana French, rather than a unified French American identity. Despite this, the French presence has had a significant impact on American place names.

History

Main articles: New France and History of the Franco-Americans

Some Franco-Americans arrived before the founding of the United States, settling in places like the Midwest, Louisiana, or Northern New England. Many cities and geographic features in these areas still carry names given by early Franco-American inhabitants. Twenty-three of the Contiguous United States were partly colonized by French pioneers or French Canadians, including places like Iowa (Des Moines), Missouri (St. Louis), Kentucky (Louisville), and Michigan (Detroit).

A big part of Franco-American history is the Quebec diaspora from the 1840s to the 1930s. During this time, nearly one million French Canadians moved to the United States, mainly to New England mill towns. They were escaping economic hard times in Québec and looking for jobs in American manufacturing. French Canadians had very high birth rates, which helped their population grow even though not many people came from France. These immigrants mostly settled in Québec and Acadia, but some moved to Ontario and Manitoba. Many of the first French-Canadian migrants worked in New England’s lumber industry and, to a lesser extent, in the mining industry around the Great Lakes. This first group of seasonal workers was later followed by more permanent settlers who worked in mills.

Louisiana

Louisiana Creole people are descendants of the colonial settlers in Louisiana, especially those of French and Spanish descent, but also including people of mixed-race heritage. Louisiana Creoles share common European roots and cultural ties, like using the French language and practicing Catholicism. Those of mixed race also sometimes have African and Native American ancestry. As a group, they worked hard to get education, skills, businesses, and property. They were mostly Catholic, spoke Colonial French (and sometimes Louisiana Creole), and kept many French customs, mixed with their other ancestries and Louisiana culture.

The Cajuns of Louisiana have a special heritage. They see themselves as different from Louisiana Creoles, even though some records say the Acadians’ descendants are also called Créoles. Their ancestors lived in Acadia, in what is now New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, and part of Maine, during the 17th and early 18th centuries. In 1755, after the British took over French forts in the area, they demanded the Acadians swear loyalty to the British Crown. Most refused, so the British deported them to the Thirteen Colonies in the south. This event is known as the expulsion of the Acadians. Over the next generation, about four thousand Acadians traveled to Louisiana and started a new life. The name Cajun comes from the word Acadian. Many still live in what is called Cajun Country, where much of their colonial culture remains. French Louisiana, sold by Napoleon in 1803, covered parts of fifteen current U.S. states and had French and Canadian colonists spread across it, though they were most numerous in the southern part.

During the War of 1812, Louisiana residents of French origin fought on the American side in the Battle of New Orleans. Jean Lafitte and his group were later honored by US General Andrew Jackson for helping defend New Orleans.

In Louisiana today, more than 15 percent of the population in Cajun Country reported speaking French at home in the 2000 United States census.

Another group of immigrants to Louisiana came from Saint-Domingue (now Haiti); many Saint Dominicans fled during this time, and half of them eventually settled in New Orleans.

Biloxi in Mississippi, and Mobile in Alabama, still show French American heritage since they were founded by the Canadian Pierre Le Moyne d’Iberville.

The Houma Tribe in Louisiana still speaks the same French they learned 300 years ago.

Colonial era

Main article: Huguenot § North America

In the 17th and early 18th centuries, a few thousand Huguenots—Calvinist refugees fleeing religious persecution after the 1685 Edict of Fontainebleau by Louis XIV of the Kingdom of France—arrived in the Dutch colony of New Netherland and its capital city, New Netherland. Some were among the first Europeans to settle on Staten Island. In 1674, with the signing of the Treaty of Westminster to end the Third Anglo-Dutch War (1672–1674), the Netherlands gave the colony to Great Britain, who renamed it New York, and its capital to New York City, after Prince James, Duke of York, the brother of King Charles II of England.

For nearly a century, French settlers kept a distinct French Protestant identity that kept them separate from American society, but by the time of the American Revolution, they had generally married into and joined the larger Presbyterian community. In 1700, they made up 13% of the white population of the Province of Carolina, and 5% of the white population of the Province of New York. The largest group settled in South Carolina, where the French were 4% of the white population in 1790. With help from the international Huguenot community, many also moved to Virginia. In the north, Paul Revere of Boston was a well-known figure.

The Marquis de Lafayette, known as “The Hero of the Two Worlds” for his accomplishments in the service of the United States in the American War of Independence.

A new wave of French-heritage people arrived at the very end of the colonial era. After the failed invasion of Quebec in 1775-1776, hundreds of French-Canadian men who had joined the Continental Army stayed in the ranks. Under colonels James Livingston and Moses Hazen, they fought in many battles of the Revolutionary War. After the war, New York State created the Canadian and Nova Scotia Refugee Tract stretching westward from Lake Champlain. Though many of the veterans sold their land claims in this large area, some stayed, and the settlement continued. From early colonizing efforts in the 1780s to the time of Quebec’s “great hemorrhage,” the French-Canadian presence in Clinton County in northeastern New York was strong.

Midwest

From the beginning of the 17th century, French Canadians explored and traveled to the region with coureur de bois and explorers like Jean Nicolet, Robert de LaSalle, Jacques Marquette, Nicholas Perrot, Pierre Le Moyne d’Iberville, Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac, Pierre Dugué de Boisbriant, Lucien Galtier, Pierre Laclède, René Auguste Chouteau, Julien Dubuque, Pierre de La Vérendrye, and Pierre Parrant.

The French Canadians set up many villages along waterways, including Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin; La Baye, Wisconsin; Cahokia, Illinois; Kaskaskia, Illinois; Detroit, Michigan; Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan; Saint Ignace, Michigan; Vincennes, Indiana; St. Paul, Minnesota; St. Louis, Missouri; and Sainte Genevieve, Missouri. They also built many forts in the area, such as Fort de Chartres, Fort Crevecoeur, Fort Saint Louis, Fort Ouiatenon, Fort Miami (Michigan), Fort Miami (Indiana), Fort Saint Joseph, Fort La Baye, Fort de Buade, Fort Saint Antoine, Fort Crevecoeur, Fort Trempealeau, Fort Beauharnois, Fort Orleans, Fort St. Charles, Fort Kaministiquia, Fort Michilimackinac, Fort Rouillé, Fort Niagara, Fort Le Boeuf, Fort Venango, and Fort Duquesne. The forts were used by soldiers and fur trappers who had long trade networks reaching back through the Great Lakes to Montreal. Large agricultural settlements were established in the Pays des Illinois.

The region was given up by France to the British in 1763 as part of the Treaty of Paris. Three years of war by the Natives, called Pontiac's War, followed. It became part of the Province of Quebec in 1774 and was taken by the United States during the Revolution.

New England and New York State

Further information: New England French, Quebec diaspora, and French-Canadian Americans

In the nineteenth century, many people of French heritage came from Quebec and New Brunswick to work in manufacturing cities, especially textile centers, in New England and New York State. They lived together in areas known as "Little Canadas." During the same period, French speakers from Quebec became a large part of the workers in other regions and industries, like the saw mills and logging camps in the Adirondack Mountains and their foothills. They became a bigger and bigger part of the region's population; by the mid-twentieth century, Franco-Americans made up 30 percent of Maine's population.

The Statue of Liberty is a gift from the French people in memory of the American Declaration of Independence.

Factories could employ whole families, including children. Some French-Canadian women saw New England as a place where they could find new opportunities and create different economic paths for themselves, away from the expectations of their farm families in Canada. By the early twentieth century, some women saw moving temporarily to the United States as a time for self-discovery and independence. Most women moved permanently to the United States, using inexpensive railroads to visit Quebec from time to time. When these women married, they had fewer children and with longer gaps between them than women in Canada. Some women never married, and stories suggest that being independent and economically strong were important reasons for choosing work over marriage and motherhood. These women followed traditional gender roles to keep their 'Canadienne' cultural identity, but they also changed these roles in ways that gave them more independence as wives and mothers. Women also helped shape the Franco-American experience as members of religious groups. The first hospital in Lewiston, Maine, opened in 1889 when the Sisters of Charity of Montreal, the 'Grey Nuns,' started the Asylum of Our Lady of Lourdes. This hospital was important for the Grey Nuns' mission to provide social services for Lewiston's mostly French-Canadian mill workers. The Grey Nuns had a hard time starting their hospital because of limited money, language problems, and opposition from existing medical groups.

The French-Canadian community in the Northeast tried to keep its cultural traditions alive. This happened within the Catholic Church, although they had some difficulties. According to Raymond Potvin, the mostly Irish church leaders were slow to recognize the need for French-language churches; several bishops even suggested assimilation and only English-language parish schools. By the twentieth century, some parish schools for French-speaking students opened, but they gradually closed later in the century, and many French-speaking people left the Church. At the same time, the number of priests to lead these churches got smaller. Like Church groups, Franco-American newspapers such as Le Messager and La Justice supported the idea of survivance—the effort to keep traditional culture alive through faith and language. Because of the commercial and industrial economy in these areas, by 1913, the French and French-Canadian populations in New York City, Fall River (Massachusetts), and Manchester (New Hampshire) were the largest in the country. Out of the 20 largest Franco-American populations in the United States, only four cities were outside of New York and New England, with New Orleans ranking 18th largest in the nation. Because of this, many French institutions were started in New England, including the Société Historique Franco-américaine in Boston and the Union Saint-Jean-Baptiste d’Amérique of Woonsocket, the largest French-Catholic cultural and mutual benefit group in the United States in the early twentieth century. Immigration from Quebec slowed down in the 1920s.

During the decline of the textile industry from the 1920s to the 1950s, the French community moved up socially and culturally. This pattern of moving up continued during the 1970s and 1980s as many Catholic groups started using English and children went to public schools; some parish schools closed in the 1970s. In recent years, people have started to identify less with the French language.

Franco-American culture keeps changing in the twenty-first century. Well-known genealogical groups and public history places still work to share the Franco-American story. Their work is sometimes supported by the commercial and cultural interests of Quebec and state governments in the Northeast. New groups and events have helped this effort. Some people have compared recent changes to how young people in the 1970s adopted and modernized “Franco” culture. For some, a “renaissance” or “revival” is happening.

The New Hampshire PoutineFest, started by Timothy Beaulieu, uses a famous Quebec dish to get more people interested in the culture. The French-Canadian Legacy podcast gives current views on French-Canadian experiences on both sides of the border. Through work with the Quebec Government Office and local groups, the podcast team made a GeoTour about Franco-American life in major New England cities. Events to remember people have recently included pioneer suffragist Camille-Lessard Bissonnette. Abby Paige has brought the community's history and its complex stories to the stage. The culture and its appearances in Louisiana, the Midwest, and the Northeast are now part of a course at Harvard University. Francophonie Month (March) and St. John the Baptist Day (June 24) are times for celebration and more visibility. At the same time, some community members are asking to think again about Franco-Americans’ role in talks about race and class.

Well-known American culture figures who kept strong ties to their French roots include musician Rudy Vallée, who grew up in Westbrook, Maine, the child of a French-Canadian father and an Irish mother, and writer Jack Kerouac, who grew up in Lowell, Massachusetts. Kerouac was the child of two French-Canadian immigrants and wrote in both English and French. Franco-American political leaders from New England include U.S. Senator Kelly Ayotte (R, New Hampshire), Governor Paul LePage of Maine, and Presidential adviser Jon Favreau, who was born and raised in Massachusetts.

California

During the early years of the California Gold Rush, over 20,000 migrants from France arrived in the state. By the mid-1850s, San Francisco had become the center of the French population on the West Coast, with over 30,000 people of French descent, more than any other group except Germans. During this time, the city's French Quarter was created, along with important businesses and institutions like the Boudin Bakery and French Hospital. Between 1921 and 1931, when the U.S. needed lots of workers, about 2 million French immigrants came to America for jobs. This had a big effect on both the American and French economies. As the later part of the 19th century went on, more French immigrants arrived in San Francisco, and French business people played big roles in shaping the city's food, fashion, and financial areas. This earned the city the nickname "Paris of the Pacific".

Members of the French community in Holyoke, Massachusetts taking English classes at a YMCA night school, 1902

French immigrants and their descendants also moved to what is now the North Bay, where they helped develop Wine Country and the modern California wine industry. After the 1906 San Francisco earthquake, French architecture (especially Beaux-Arts) was widely used in rebuilding the city, as seen in its City Hall, Legion of Honor Museum, and downtown news kiosks.

Because of historic ties and cultural exchanges between France and the area, most French multinational businesses have set up their U.S. offices or branches in the San Francisco Bay Area since the rise of Silicon Valley and the Dot-com bubble.

Civil War

Franco-Americans were one of the most important Catholic groups in the Union army during the American Civil War. The exact number is unclear, but historians think between 20,000 and 40,000 Franco-Americans served in this war. In addition to those born in the United States, many who served in the Union forces came from Canada or had lived there for several years. Canada's national anthem was written by one such soldier named Calixa Lavallée, who wrote this anthem while he served for the Union, reaching the rank of Lieutenant. Confederate General P. G. T. Beauregard was a well-known Louisiana Creole.

Politics

Walker (1962) looks at voting in U.S. presidential elections from 1880 to 1960, using election results from 30 Franco-American communities in New England, along with sample survey data for the 1948–60 elections. According to Walker, from 1896 to 1924, Franco-Americans usually supported the Republican Party because of its conservatism, focus on order, and support for tariffs to protect textile workers from foreign competition. In 1928, with Catholic Al Smith as the Democratic candidate, Franco-Americans switched to the Democratic Party and stayed there for six presidential elections. They were part of the New Deal Coalition. Unlike Irish and German Catholics, very few Franco-Americans left the Democratic Party because of foreign policy and war issues in the 1940 and 1944 campaigns. In 1952 many Franco-Americans moved away from the Democrats but returned strongly in 1960.

More recent work has added to Walker's findings. Ronald Petrin has studied the rise of Republican support among Massachusetts Franco-Americans in the 1890s; the long economic downturn during President Grover Cleveland's time and Franco-Irish religious arguments were likely reasons for more support for the GOP. Petrin notes different political actions in large cities and smaller towns. Madeleine Giguère has confirmed the later shift to the Democratic Party through her research on Lewiston's presidential voting during the twentieth century. In the most detailed study of Franco-American political choices, Patrick Lacroix finds different patterns of political involvement across New England and New York State. In southern New England, Republicans actively sought the "Franco" vote and even nominated Aram J. Pothier, a native of Quebec, who won his race for the governorship of Rhode Island and served seven terms in that office. In northern New England, Franco-Americans faced being left out of power and more often turned to the Democrats. During the 1920s, this regional difference disappeared. Because of anti-union and anti-labor policies by Republican state governments, an increasingly unionized Franco-American working class began supporting the Democrats across the region. Elite "Francos" still preferred the GOP.

Since most Franco-Americans’ ancestors left France before the French Revolution, they usually prefer the fleur-de-lis to the modern French tricolor.

Franco-American Day

In 2008, the state of Connecticut chose June 24 as Franco-American Day to honor the French Canadians and their cultural impact on the state. Since then, other states like Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont have also celebrated Franco-American Day festivals on the same day.

Demographics

Colonial French American population in 1790

The U.S. government worked with scholars to estimate how many people in America in 1790 had French roots. They looked at family names from the first U.S. census to guess how many people came from France. They found that about 2.3% of people in the U.S. in 1790 had French background. Most of these people lived in areas that were once part of New France, west of British America. In the Thirteen Colonies, French Americans were most common in New York, New Jersey, South Carolina, and Georgia.

Distribution of Franco-Americans according to the 2000 census

2000 Census

In the year 2000, about 5.3% of people in the U.S. had French or French Canadian ancestry. By 2013, around 129,520 people living in the U.S. were born in France. French Americans made up a large part—close to or more than 10%—of the population in seven states, six of which are in New England and one is Louisiana. California has the most French Americans, followed by Louisiana, but Maine has the highest percentage at 25%.

Historical immigration

State or TerritoryFrance French
#%
Connecticut2,1000.90%
Delaware7501.62%
 Georgia1,2002.27%
Kentucky & TennesseeTenn.2,0002.15%
Maine1,2001.25%
Maryland2,5001.20%
Massachusetts3,0000.80%
New Hampshire1,0000.71%
New Jersey4,0002.35%
 New York12,0003.82%
North Carolina4,8001.66%
Pennsylvania7,5001.77%
Rhode Island5000.77%
South Carolina5,5003.92%
Vermont3500.41%
Virginia6,5001.47%
Thirteen Colonies 1790 Census Area54,9001.73%
Ohio Northwest Territory6,00057.14%
New France French America12,85064.25%
Spanish Empire Spanish America-
United States73,7502.29%

Religion

Most Franco Americans have a Roman Catholic background, which includes many French Canadians and Cajuns. Smaller groups of Protestants arrived later, with the earliest being the Huguenots who came from France during the colonial time. Many settled in cities like Boston, Charleston, New York, and Philadelphia.

Creole girls, Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana, 1935

In the late 1800s and early 1900s, there were some disagreements between English-speaking Irish Catholics and French-Canadian immigrants, especially about teaching the French language in schools. These tensions happened in places like Fall River, Danielson, and North Brookfield.

Education

Further information: Category:French international schools in the United States

There are several French international schools in the United States. These schools work together with the Agency for French Education Abroad to help students learn in French and connect with French culture.

French language in the United States

Further information: French language in the United States

French is the second most commonly taught foreign language in American schools, after Spanish. About 12.3% of people in the United States learn French. In the past, French was the most popular foreign language to learn, but Spanish grew more popular later.

According to the U.S. Census in 2000, French is the third most spoken language in the country, after English and Spanish. Many Haitian immigrants in Florida and New York City also speak French. In earlier times, French was spoken in many villages in the Midwest and later in New England by people from Quebec. French newspapers were common in cities like New Orleans and some New England cities. French-speaking neighborhoods, sometimes called "Little Canada," were places where French-speaking families lived, went to school, and attended church.

After 1960, these French-speaking areas slowly disappeared. There were few French-language schools left, mostly Catholic churches still used the language. By 1976, most Franco Americans spoke English, and many younger people were less interested in their French heritage.

Flag

The Franco-American flag is a special flag made for people in the United States who have French or Quebec roots. It was created in May 1983 at a meeting in Manchester, New Hampshire. The flag has a blue background with a white fleur-de-lis and a white five-pointed star.

The blue and white colors are used because they appear on the flags of the United States and French-speaking countries like France or Quebec. The star stands for the United States, and the fleur-de-lis represents French culture. This flag is especially meaningful for French Canadians living in the northeastern part of the United States.

Settlements

Cities founded

Further information: List of U.S. place names of French origin

Buildings with iron galleries at St. Philip Street and Royal Street, French Quarter, New Orleans

States founded

  • Arkansas – named by French explorers from the corrupted Indian word meaning "south wind". Arkansas Post was its first French establishment in 1686 by Henri de Tonti.
  • Illinois – French for the land of the Illini, a Native American tribe. Also named from the Pays des Illinois which had a substantial population at the time of New France. French explorers Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet explored the Illinois River in 1673. In 1680, other French explorers constructed a fort at the site of present-day Peoria, and in 1682, a fort atop Starved Rock in today's Starved Rock State Park. French Canadians came south to settle particularly along the Mississippi River, and Illinois was part of the French empire of La Louisiane until 1763, when it passed to the British with their defeat of France in the Seven Years' War.
  • Indiana – In 1679 the French explorer René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle was the first European to cross into Indiana after reaching present-day South Bend at the Saint Joseph River. French-Canadian fur traders soon arrived, bringing blankets, jewelry, tools, whiskey and weapons to trade for skins with the Native Americans. By 1702, Sieur Juchereau established the first trading post near Vincennes. In 1715, Sieur de Vincennes built Fort Miami at Kekionga, now Fort Wayne. In 1717, another Canadian, Picote de Beletre, built Fort Ouiatenon on the Wabash River. In 1732, Sieur de Vincennes built a second fur trading post at Vincennes. French Canadian settlers, who had left the earlier post because of hostilities, returned in larger numbers.
  • Louisiana – from the French Louisiane, in honor of King Louis XIV. Named by Cavelier de La Salle who founded Louisiana and died in Texas. Many Acadians migrated to Louisiana and are today known as Cajuns.
  • Maine – Two Jesuit missions were established by the French: one on Penobscot Bay in 1609, and the other on Mount Desert Island in 1613. The same year, Castine was established by Claude de La Tour. In 1625, Charles de Saint-Étienne de la Tour erected Fort Pentagouet to protect Castine.
  • Michigan – French transcription of Ojibwe word Mishii'igan (syncopated as Mishiigan) which means "great lake". The French forts of Fort Saint-Joseph and Fort Michilimackinac, as well as the French establishments of Detroit and Saint Ignace were located in the area of Michigan which was part of New France.
  • Minnesota – The first Europeans in the area were French fur traders who arrived in the 17th century. Explorers such as Daniel Greysolon, Sieur du Lhut, Father Louis Hennepin, and Joseph Nicollet, among others, mapped out the state.
  • Missouri – The first European settlers were mostly ethnic French Canadians, who created their first settlement in Missouri at present-day Ste. Genevieve, about an hour south of St. Louis. They had migrated about 1750 from the Illinois Country. St. Louis was founded soon after by French from New Orleans in 1764.
  • Vermont – comes from a contraction of French words, Vert, green, and mont, mount, mountain. It was named by the French explorer Samuel de Champlain. French seigneuries were subdivided along Lake Champlain at the time of New France, which was later given to the British colonies by the Treaty of Paris in 1763.
  • Wisconsin – named after the Meskousing River. This spelling was later corrupted from the local Native American language to "Ouisconsin" by French explorers, and over time this version became the French name both for the Wisconsin River and for the surrounding lands. La Baye was Wisconsin's main community at the time of New France. English speakers anglicized the spelling to its modern form when they began to arrive in greater numbers during the early 19th century.

Historiography

Historians have studied the experiences of Franco-Americans who moved to New England between 1860 and 1930. They have different views on what happened to this community. Some believe the Franco-Americans stayed strong together, while others think they changed too much to keep their traditions. These different ideas have made it hard to explore other parts of their history, like their politics or arts.

In recent years, new research has looked at Franco-Americans in new ways. Some historians study how moving between countries affected families and roles in their communities. Others look at how Franco-American women lived and worked. There is also growing interest in Franco-Americans in other parts of the United States, like the Midwest and the West Coast.

Notable people

For a more comprehensive list, see List of French Americans.

Images

French flags representing France's influence in America.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on French Americans, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.