Briefcase found in attic holds clues to secret society of francophones - Action News
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New Brunswick

Briefcase found in attic holds clues to secret society of francophones

An old briefcase hidden for years in an attic in northwestern New Brunswick could unlock some of the mystery surrounding a former secret society of francophones, according to historians.

Stuffed with documents about the long-disbanded Order of Jacques Cartier and its influential members

This briefcase, kept hidden in an attic, contains documents related to the Order of Jacques Cartier dating from 1953 to 1965. (Nadia Gaudreau/Radio-Canada)

An oldbriefcase hidden for years in an attic in northwestern New Brunswick could unlock some of the mystery surrounding a former secret society offrancophones, according to historians.

The Orderof Jacques Cartier, commonly known as La Patente, was founded in 1926to advance the religious, social and economic interests of French Canadians.

The group was disbanded in 1965 and all related documents were supposed to be destroyed.

But one member couldn't bring himself to do so, andinstead locked a stash of paperwork away in the attic of his home in Grand Falls, where they remained until this past November.

The briefcase, which has been donatedto the Centre for Acadian Studies at the University ofMoncton,is filled with documents dating from 1953 to 1965, including statutes and regulations, a booklet on initiation, and a list of members.

"We're quite thrilled to finally get to peek on that period of history," saidChristine Dupuis, an archivist at the centre.

Christine Dupuis, an archivist at the Centre for Acadian Studies, and documentation technician Francois LeBlanc, who did his thesis on the order, are excited to learn more about the influential group through the documents. (Vanessa Blanch/CBC)

"I think we have lots of hidden secrets and stories in our attics and archiving is mostly about bringing those secrets out into the light and sharing them with the world."

"So I think for us, for Acadians and for archivists, historians, it's really a great discovery."

Francois LeBlanc, a documentation technician at the centre, is particularly excited about the donated material. His thesis for his masters in history was about the Orderde Jacques Cartier in Acadie, with a focus on the Monctonarea during the group'slast 15 years.

"I thought that I would be putting my thesis in a drawer and forgetting aboutit, but it's a perfect time to justtake it out again and refresh on the whole Ordrede Jacques Cartier."

Former premier among members

LeBlanc said the group wasfounded in Ottawaand gradually spread across the country, infiltrating influential associations, businesses and politics.

"All they wanted to do was bring the French influence out in the world," he said.

A New Brunswick chapter started in 1933, with members ranging from carpenters and plumbers to "big names." A couple of noteworthy examples includedLouis Robichaud, a lawyer who went on to become apolitician,premier and senator, and Georges Dumont, a physician turned politician.

All of them were Catholics and meetings were commonly held in church basements,said LeBlanc. Priests and other church officials were automatically granted high status in the order, he said.

"So that's how important the Catholic church was."

Initiation involved blindfold, plank

Some of the many douments related to the secret order, commonly known as La Patente. (Vanessa Blanch/CBC)

Others had to meet certain criteria.

"You basically had to have a voice in the community you were in and you also had to pay I think itwas$12 a year, so itwasn'ttoo bad," said LeBlanc.

But they also had to walk a plank blindfolded to demonstrate their trust in the fellowship, according to an initiation pamphlet among the discovered documents.

"It's really asecretsociety initiation, like we see in the moviesand shows," said Dupuis. "So it's quiteinteresting to see that something like that happened in our communities."

Some of the issues members worked on discreetly behind the scenes included gettingbilingual road signs and stamps, and getting more francophones intopublic office, said LeBlanc.

In Moncton, they wereintegral to the 1955 Bicentennial Celebrationof the Deportation, commemoratingthedispersion of the Acadians, and saving the French-language daily newspaper, L'vangeline.

Magazine article exposed group

But 1963 marked the beginning of the end for the order. An article about the group was published in Maclean's magazine.

"After thatit wasn't secret anymore, so they couldn't do what they didbefore," said LeBlanc.

There was also a dispute between Ottawa and Montreal about where the headquarters should be, he said.

"So in 1965, they just stopped."

The documents will be available for public viewing at the Centre for Acadian Studies, but they must be handled wearing gloves to help preserve them for generations to come. (Vanessa Blanch/CBC)

LeBlanc, 30, and Dupuis, 27,are looking forward to learning more from the documents.

"We heard about stories of our predecessors finding stuff in the walls, in the attics, underneath boards and stuff like that and we never [thought] that it [would] happen to us," he said.

"Something like this, it's amazing."

The documents will also be available for public viewing and reference, said Dupuis, noting the centre is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year and has lots of information to share.

"This is just one little piece of what we have," she said.

With files from Information Morning Moncton