Mary Sifton Pepper
Published: 2013-09
Total Pages: 44
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This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1901 edition. Excerpt: ... Maids and Matrons of New France INTRODUCTION 'TTHE nineteen pioneer women who dis--embarked on the shores of Massachusetts in 1620 have been celebrated ever since in romance and poetry. Twelve years earlier a banner bearing the lilies of France was planted on the headlands of Quebec. The colony thus inaugurated was increased from time to time by the emigration of small groups of women from the mother country. These few heroic souls, the pioneer women of Canada, played as important a part in its growth, and are as worthy of eternal remembrance, as their Anglo-Saxon sisters of New England. Yet, with few ex ceptions, they have waited in vain for a poet to tell in immortal verse their heroic deeds, or an historian to perpetuate their fame. The history of many of these women of the Canadian wilderness never will be known, for it is buried under the soil moistened by their sweat and tears. One of the intrepid sisterhood, Jeanne Mance, has been commemorated by a part of a monument in Montreal; an island resort in the St. Lawrence recalls by its name the brief sojourn of Helen de Champlain on these shores; the annals of a few others have been written by graphic historians; but monuments and histories have done little toward making their names known beyond the confines of the land where they labored and died. They were few in number: one patient housewife eking out a frugal existence on the rock of Quebec; two or three gentlewomen, who, with a sublime but misplaced confidence in the docility of the savages, un dertook to teach and civilize them; some who attempted to introduce the corruption and gayety of the French court into this primitive civilization; representatives of religious sisterhoods whom the most appalling difficulties could not...