Cajun History
This is some information a friend of mine sent me. I'm not sure of the source but it's very interesting. If you read a lot about Cajun History on the internet you'll get a few slightly different versions. Here is one of them....
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Cajun History
It is now in style to be Cajun, everywhere you look that is someone or
something claiming to be Cajun. It doesn't matter what State you are in
you will find some cajun food or cajun music. Just listen to me folks,
just because it says Cajun, it don't make it so. The only place you can
get real CAJUN COOKING IS IN CAJUN COUNTRY, unless your cook is a REAL
CAJUN. What you need to do is asked him his name, who his parents are,
and where is he from. After that ask him for his birth certificate, and
his parents birth certificate. Look it over real good, it might be
forged. Why even China is trying to get in on it. They are sending
crawfish to the USA and trying to sell it as cajun crawfish!! The
package even looks like it is cajun. I believe it is re-packed in
Louisiana by foreigners (people from another state or a non-cajun). Just
turn that package of crawfish over and look, it says a prouduct of
China. JUST HOW LOW CAN YOU GET !!!!
In 1884 in Burnswick, Canada the Acadian people adopted "Our Lady Of The
Assumption" as the patroness of the Acadian people. A fact ratifed by
Pope Pius X. August 15 is celebrated as her feast day. The song "Ave
Marie " was picked as their National Hymn.
A flag was adopted with the French tricolor to which a yellow star was
added in the blue field. The star represents "Our Lady Of The
Assumption.
A Little Cajun History
You cannot write Cajun history without writing their Religious history.
In The Beginning
When some of the first French people went to Nova Scotia it was under
French rule. Many left France for a better place to live or for new
land, who knows all the reasons. When they first came to Canada it was
not because of religion. The first recorded confirmation of French
fishing vessel was in 1504 off the Banks of New Foundland. King Francis
I in 1515 pulled a strategic marriage, incorporating the independent
duchy of Britain into metropolitan France. By the 1550s the St. Lawrence
River as far as Tadoussac was visited by French fur Traders. Maps that
were publish in 1548 identified the peninsula of Nova Scotia as
"L'Arcadie". Forty-nine fishing ships from La Rochelle, France were
fishing the Grand Banks by the year 1560. In the 1525 to 1598 the
religious and political cultural conflict suggest the motivation for
more French immigration to the new world. The wars that were going on in
France strained the economy and it is very hard to say which person left
for what reason.
In 1603 King Henri IV of France sent expeditions to set up a permanent
fishing and trading post at Tadoussac. Most of the French settlers came
to Canada at that time. In 1603 the first permanent fishing and trading
base was started on the Grand Banks. King Heri IV of France granted
colonization rights between the 40th and 46th parallels, what we now
know as New England and Nova Scotia. In 1605 the colonist, supplies and
two building were move to a more protected area of the Annapolis Basin.
They drew up plans for a fort like wooden buildings surrounding a
courtyard. The settlement was named Port Royal, one of the first
permanent settlements in North American. Now Ainnapolis Royal, Nova
Scotia.
Those first French people became known as ACADIANS.
King Henri IV was assassinated in 1610. By than French claims on Acadia
lands were not recognized by England. The colonies were continually
contested by both the French and the English. In late 1613 Port Royal
was destroyed by a English military expedition from Virginia led by
Samuel Argall, a Virginia pirate. The colonists fled into the hills,
those who survived lived with the indians continuing a haphazard fur
trade with France. You might note that it was not till 1620 the Pilgrims
arrive at Plymouth Rock.
In 1632 it was then given back to the French by King Charles I of
England. The Treaty of St. Germain-en-Laye was signed and a renewed
period of French colonization followed. In 1681, La Salle, a former
Jesuit from Quebec set sail down the Mississippi River to the Gulf
looking for new land. He named the new land he found Louisiana in honor
of his king. Sir William Phips in 1690 led an expedition that sacked
Port Royal. Prisoners were taken and brought to Boston. In 1699
Iberville and Bienville Exploring along the Gulf Coast entered
Louisiana's Lake Pontchartain and went inland as far north as Baton
Rouge. They brought the first Jesuit (member of the men's Roman Catholic
Society of Jesus) with them.
In 1713 the French government sold out the Acadians to the British by
giving Nova Scotia (Acadia) back to Great Britain. The British took the
Acadians lands by force, harassing and persecution the Acadians in many
ways. They tried to force them to bear arms against France and renounce
their Catholic faith. The Acadians refused to do so, and many left and
journeyed to the Louisiana Territory.
In 1727 King George I of England died and was succeeded by King George
II who passionately hated both the French and the Catholics. To
understand why the English hated the Catholics and French so much you
have to know a little history of The Church. In the year 1532 King Henry
VII had broken away from the Roman Catholic Church because the Pope
would not approve the divorce he wanted. At that time the King started
his own church the "Church of England". In 1534, the Act of Supremacy
made the king head of the Church of England
In 1754 some people fled Canada and Nova Scotia and traveled overland
and down the Mississippi River to Louisiana. May and June of 1755
Lieutenant Governor Charles Lawrence secretly plotted the details of the
cruel deportation of the Cajuns. On October 8 to the 27 in the year of
1755 the British began a cruel and systematic program of deportation. In
1758 Louisbourg fell, refugees found along the St. John River and Cape
Sable were also rounded up for deportation. In 1759 Quebec fell.
As many as 5,000 were deported to the 13 original British Colonies,
which had laws outlawing all Catholics within their borders. (it was
1776 before they adopted the Declaration of Independence) The refugees
being French, Catholic and penniless found nothing but hatred awaiting
them there. They were not even allowed to get off the ship. Some did
manage to get off the ship and made their way back to Acadia. Others
found safety in the French Islands of Martinque, Guadaloupe and St.
Dominque. Some Acadians found refuge and evaded capture by living among
the friendly Indians. The other Cajuns captured were brought to England
as prisoners of war and put in concentration camps. Some 1,500 Cajuns
that were not sent to England were sent to Virginia instead as prisoners
of war, then later expelled. 652 were imprisoned in Halifax, out of the
652, there were only 216 survivors.
On May 18, 1756 the Seven Year War began and the English were forced to
dump many refugees in Maryland, The Carolinas and Georgia. Most of these
refugees set out for Louisiana.
Some of the Acadians were sent out to sea where they set sail for
Louisiana stopping where they could to get supplies. As many as 1/4 of
the deportees died on the way, either from shipwreck, epidemic or
starvation. In the Treaty of 1763 France ceded all their Canadian lands
and territories east of the Mississippi to Great Britain. All French
military and most civilians move west of the Mississippi to French
Louisiana. By the end of 1763 some 2,342 Acadian refugees were scattered
among ten French port cities. The 1764 census showed that that were
still 1,762 Acadians in Nova Scota. 1,076 of them were imprisoned in
Halifax, and many of them eventually set sail for the French West
Indies. They later migrated to Louisiana. With the end of the war the
prisoners that were held in concentration camps in England were
liberated on May 16, 1763. Starting on May 16, 1763, refugees were
shipped out to different places. May 16, 1763 340 shipped, 218 survivors
May 26, 1763 341 shipped, 160 survivors
May 26, 1763 (??) shipped, 138 survivors June 8, 1763 (??) shipped, 217
survivors On December 29, 1763 Maryland refugees wrote of slavery and
such hardship, that out of the 2,000 that had made it to Maryland there
were only 810 left. Most of these survivors went to St. Gabriel, which
was south of Baton Rouge.
The Acadian refugees in Pennsylvania and Georgia wrote how, many of
their children were kidnapped or sold outright to slavery.That they had
not been allowed confession or any other religious rights for as long as
eight years. The Acadians that made it to South Louisiana, found much of
the best land was already owned by the French and Spanish settlers who
came earlier. The great majority of them were given traveling direction
only and ordered to leave the New Orleans area. These Acadians made
their way to the less accessible back country of the Opelousas and
Attakapas Indians Here the Acadians lived relatively isolated and
undisturbed for years. By 1790 over 4,000 Acadian refugees had relocated
in Louisiana. In 1810 another 6,000 Acadian refugees arrived, fleeing
the West Indies' political turmoil. Over the years those areas where
most of them settled became known as Acadiana Parishes. Today there are
22 Acadian Parishes which are Acadia, Ascensions, Assumption, Avoyelles,
Calcasieu, Cameron, Evangeline, Iberia, Iberville, Jeferson Davis,
Lafayette, Lafourche. Point Coupee, St. Landry, St. Martin, St. James,
St. John The Baptist, St. Charles, St. Mary, Terrebonne, Vermilion and
West Baton Rouge.
MY PERSONAL VIEWS
I tried my best to get the years and history correct, I hope I did. It
was just such slow work and my old eyes aren't that good. The Acadia
people never did give up their Catholic faith, and many were killed
because of it. It was a holocaust of the persecution of many French
people of Catholic Faith.
As I write of how the Acadia people survived I see how strong a people
they were. They were harassed, killed, their land and children taken
from them all because of their faith, I can't help but think could I
have stood fast to my Catholic faith? Could anyone stand fast to any
faith under these condition?
Without Ignoring the number of Spaniards, Germans and Italians who came
to Louisiana during the 18th century we can say with pride that it was
the Acadiana families that made Louisiana Territory what it was. They
were hard working, land loving, stable Acadian families that made the
territory a stable and prosperous Colony. For more than a hundred years
their lives remained almost unchanged. The Acadians raised large
families and preserved their French language, traditions and culture.
The Acadians had always lived near the Sea but now they were spread out
all over south Louisiana. Their French language was inadequate in this
area. There were all this new vegetation and wild animals they had never
seen or heard of before. They had to develop a new vocabulary for all
the things that touched their daily lives.
They used words that may have heard from Indians or Spaniards or maybe
the way something looked reminded of a French word. The Acadians put all
this together and a new language and culture was born. After many years
the word Acadian was shortened to "CAJUN". They used their new language
and culture while preserving their Acadian memories. The first public
schools for Cajuns was establish in 1875, but compulsory education was
not adopted until 1922. From 1930 to 1960 no French or Cajun speaking
was allowed on public school grounds in Louisiana. The French and Cajun
language did not return to Louisiana school till 1968. The establishment
of "Le Conseil pour le Development de Francais en Louisiane" (CODOFIL)
brought French back to the Louisiana schools. Thank's for the Dance.
garyv@liv.auracom.com
