| New England French | |
|---|---|
| français de Nouvelle-Angleterre | |
| Native to | United States (New England) (primarilyMaine,New Hampshire, andVermont) |
Native speakers | 170,000 (2015)[1][a] |
Early forms | |
| Language codes | |
| ISO 639-3 | – |
| Glottolog | None |
| Linguasphere | 51-AAA-iid |
Percentage of population speaking French at home, including other dialects but excluding French-based creoles (2015)[1] 10–15% 5–10% 1–5% 0.5-1% | |
New England French (French:français de Nouvelle-Angleterre) is a variety of French spoken in theNew England region of the United States.[4] It descends fromCanadian French because it originally came fromFrench Canadians who immigrated to New England during theGrande Hémorragie.
New England French is one of the major forms of theFrench language that developed in what is now the United States, the others beingLouisiana French and the nearly extinctMissouri French,Muskrat French andMétis French. The dialect is the predominant form of French spoken in New England (apart from standard French), except in theSaint John Valley of northernAroostook County, Maine, whereBrayon French predominates.
The dialect is endangered. After the First World War, laws were instituted banning immersive bilingual teaching outside of dedicated foreign-language classes, and during the 1960s and 1970s some public schools disciplined students for speaking French in school; however, in recent years it has seen renewed interest and is supported by bilingual education programs in place since 1987.[4] A continuing trend of reduced bilingual and foreign-language education has affected the language's prevalence in younger generations.[5][6] However, cultural programs in recent years have led to renewed interest between older generations speaking the dialect, and the language has also been bolstered by newly arrived refugee populations fromFrancophone Africa in cities such asLewiston.[7][8]

Dating back to the earliest colonial period, a French presence remained in New England with its proximity toQuebec, even after many Acadians were exiled inLe Grand Dérangement and later settled inSpanish Louisiana. Although theFrench and Indian War would leave distance between the Yankee and Franco settlers, the role ofFrance in the American Revolution as well as the contributions of French military figures likeRochambeau in theSiege of Yorktown, engendered an alliance againstLoyalists at that time.
Early figures from French stock who would become a part of the American narrative includedPeter Faneuil, Gov.James Bowdoin, andPaul Revere, all descendants ofHuguenots who fled persecution to the New World. However, while Faneuil and Bowdoin both spoke fluently, the latter encouraged his sonJames Bowdoin III to learn the language, but was described as decidedly pro-British after the Revolution, for his disdain at France's reversion of theEdict of Nantes.[9][10] In contrast, born to a French household, Revere (anglicized fromRivoire) only spoke the English of the Bay Province, though he had family who spoke the French language in Boston and overseas, and would correspond with them, having replies translated for him.[11]
The French language remained extant in Boston during its time as a British colony, though not abundant, one reason being a fear of the influence ofCatholicism; academically this prevented the language from gaining early acceptance atHarvard, when its first instructor was dismissed in 1735, after two years of teaching, due to rumors of converting students fromProtestantism.[12] Six decades later, one of the first publishers of a French textbook in the Americas was Harvard's first salaried French instructor, Joseph Nancrède, who compiled then-contemporary French texts and published them alongside limited English translations in hisL'Abeille Françoise in 1792. Years before, in 1789, Nancrède established the first French newspaper of Boston, a short-lived weekly published for six months that year which he described in itsprospectus as a means to foster commerce between the Americans and French-speaking world, and "to convey adequate ideas of the Majesty of Congress to nations who scarcely know that there is one existing."[12][13]
Outside of Boston, prior to theIndustrial Revolution and theSecond Industrial Revolution, the influence of French settlers in New England was diminished almost entirely following the end of theFrench and Indian War and the1763 Treaty of Paris, which gave control of the region to the British. During this time many ofVermont's earliest settlers returned to Quebec; however, the Vermont Archaeological Society has noted in the past that a small number of French remained settled, at farms too remote to meet the notice of the fledgling colonial government.[14] Similarly,Maine was claimed by the French to the east of theKennebec River, and during the expulsion of the Acadians, French culture largely left that landscape as well.[15]
Prior to theGreat Migration of the Québécois during the Second Industrial Revolution, one of the earliest examples of New England French arose from thePapineau Rebellion inLower Canada. Following the rebellion,Ludger Duvernay, one of the 26 patriot leaders arrested by Canadian authorities for printing articles critical of the British colonial government, went into exile in the States. Formerly publishingLa Minerve inMontreal, he issued a prospectus for a French-language paper in 1838, hoping Americans would support a journal that promoted civil rights and independence in Lower Canada. He set up inBurlington, Vermont, what was described as the first French-Canadian American newspaper, publishing the first issue ofLe Patriote Canadien on August 7, 1839, for both Canadians across the border and apatriot community in the United States.[16][17]

Beginning in the late 1840s, greater numbers of French Canadians began to settle in the States, at first for seasonal agricultural jobs, and then eventually brought in by horse and later train, to serve as factory workers for the large mill towns being built bythe Boston Associates and others all across the six New England states. By 1899 there were reportedly 120 French-language parishes in New England, and by that time of the 1.5 million people of French-speaking Canada, about 600,000 had migrated to the U.S., primarily to New England.[18][19] To a degree these newcomers integrated and learned the English language; however,La Survivance also endured.[20] On the eve of theChinese Exclusion Act, in 1881Carroll D. Wright described the newly-arrived French as the "Chinese of the Eastern States" for their refusal to entirely integrate, the use of their labor by mill owners to subvert union wages, and the creation of separate French-language institutions. This statement would serve as a flashpoint of controversy for decades, but others in the Yankee political class would welcome the newcomers, with SenatorHenry Cabot Lodge remarking in a 1908 immigration speech to the Boston City Club that they "represent one of the oldest settlements on this continent. They have been, in the broad sense, Americans for generations, and their coming to the United States is merely a movement of Americans across an imaginary line."[21][22][23] Industrial cities as large asFall River, Massachusetts, and as small asSomersworth, New Hampshire, would often have bilingual signs, and American customs such as baseball gradually adopted by younger generations had their own francized jargon, with it being as common for a muff[b] to be met with an outcry of "sacré nom" by spectators.[24]
One of the earliest examples of New England French being differentiated from Canadian French andAcadian French came in an 1898 study inJohns Hopkins University'sModern Language Notes, noting variants ofphonology, and studies would continue sporadically covering vocabulary into the late 20th century.[25][26][27] By 1924, approximately 1.5 million people, regardless of origin, spoke French in New England,[28][c] which at the1920 US Census was recorded at 7.4 million residents, placing the proportion of French speakers at about one-fifth of the population, or nearly the same proportion as that of French speakers in Canada in 2016.[28][29]


During the late 19th through mid-20th centuries, the dialect was supported with more than 250 French newspapers extant in New England, many being published weekly and only seeing publication for a few years, while some would endure from the late 1800s and early 1900s into theinterwar period, with 21 newspapers and four monthlies in existence in 1937, and a handful publishing through the 1960s, such asLe Messager inLewiston, Maine,L'Indépendant inFall River, Massachusetts,[30] andLa Justice inHolyoke, Massachusetts.[31] However, competition with the daily English press, a lack of public support from non-speakers, and the availability of larger Quebec publications likeLa Presse inMontreal led to a gradual decline of the New England French newspaper trade. In one 1936 editorial in theWoonsocketL'Union, the editorship described an apathy that had set in with the French community in response to an increase in advertising for financial support-[31][d]
"Our press is barely able to maintain itself ... One of our weeklies has just expired; others live almost exclusively on ads; many get only blame and denigration in return for the free publicity they give to Franco-American works ... It's all the hostility, the apathy, the indifference of Franco-Americans that prevent our newspapers from achieving perfection ... Their defects come from their relative helplessness rather than from their incompetence."
Many of these ads would increasingly appear in English, and changing mediums like radio, as well as a frustration with the helpless financial situation leading to more ads only aggravated the decline.[31] One exception to this was Lewiston'sLe Messager, whose publisher-owner, Jean-Baptiste Couture, founded central Maine's first, and New England's only radio station owned by a Franco-American weekly,WCOU, in 1938.[14]: 256 [32] The bilingual WCOU would outlive the paper, broadcasting regular French programming through at least 1972.[33] A few newspapers were able to retain a readership beyond the 1960s independently. This includedLe Travailleur, a Worcester French-language weekly that folded in 1978 which, in its final years, could hardly be described as in the tradition of its predecessors, as it was mainly syndicated news from France.[14]: 258 [34] During a period of revival in preserving New England French in academia and civics, the Ligue des Sociétés de Langue Française ("League of French Language Societies") inLewiston launched its monthlyL'Unité, which published from 1976 through 1984.[35][36]: 100 The only New England French news outlet to endure intothe emergence of the internet wasLe Journal de Lowell; founded in 1975, the monthly paper would continue to produce French-language content, including the translation of English ads, until December 1995, when it abruptly ceased publication.[37]
A combination of cultural and economic forces would drive a decline in the use of the French language in New England through the end of the 20th century. Attitudes varied among Anglophone Yankees. During a speech in 1891 in Boston, Canadian Prime MinisterWilfrid Laurier urged a French-Canadian audience, "One of the things that is absolutely essential is to study the English language, the language of [this] country...most of you, if you are now over a million on this side of the 45th line, you have not come for any other object than that of earning your daily bread. So, while not losing the memory of your origin, remember that you have duties to fulfill as citizens of the Republic and that you must love your adopted homeland."[20][e]
While a sense of civic solidarity with Americans was expressed by Laurier and other French-American and Canadian leaders, economic discrimination also disfavored New England French speakers. Not unlike the exclusion some Francophones inLouisiana would witness,[38] attitudes towards French speakers in New England would also result in disparate outcomes. In a 1983 study by theUS Commission on Civil Rights, a Vermont committee found that though the French language was spoken by a large part of its population, they often held disparately lower wealth and educational outcomes than monolingual English-speaking peers, with few resources given to bilingual education. The committee would attribute this in part to theAmericanization Department of theUS Bureau of Education program, begun in 1919, requiring all students to be taught in English alone, prompting laws in Rhode Island, Maine, and New Hampshire prohibiting immersive teaching, requiring only English in classes not specifically dedicated to foreign language. Connecticut and Vermont would both see bills introduced for preventing the use of French in Catholic schools, but neither would pass their legislatures.[5] A consequence of those laws that were enacted however, were that entire communities where only French was spoken were subject to scrutiny by the state. A threat of penalty or termination of funding for speaking French outside of French classes led to measures in Maine which suppressed the language. Most notably, children were often asked to refrain from speaking anything but English when state officials were present, leading to "silent playgrounds" during days schools were being inspected.[39]
In turn, as the economy of Canada improved, a number of those whose families had moved to the United States would return to Quebec,Ontario, andNew Brunswick, as well, into the latter half of the 20th century.[40]

A decline in the French language was evident by the mid-20th century, with Joseph Ubalde-Paquin, a president of theSociété Historique Franco-Américaine, noting during the 2nd Congress of the French Language in Boston in 1937 (2e Congrès de la Langue française), that "the Franco-Americans always speak valiantly the French Language, but the French spirit disappears from their families; their children think in English and therefore speak more easily in the English language." Paquin went on to urge families to francize their prayer and song, so future generations "may serve as an extension of ourselves and our ancestors".[41][f] Such groups, organized at a national and international level in New England, represented more than gatherings ofFranco-Americans, but rather other speakers of the French language as well. For example, a 1938 reception forRené Doynel de Saint-Quentin saw representation from Louisiana and from Boston'sSyro-Lebanais community. In 1938 as well, New Englanders saw representation at theSecond Congress on the French Language in Canada (Deuxième Congrès de la langue française au Canada), which included resolutions to establish 12survivance committees in the New England states, promoting press, cultural institutions and similar.[42] To some degree a Comité de la Survivance française en Amérique would remain active into the 1950s,[43] while meetings of the Société Historique Franco-Américaine would continue in cooperation with other French-speaking communities through the 1980s.[44]
In 2012 the state of Maine, one of two states (along with Vermont) where French was the second-most spoken language, created a Franco-American Task Force to evaluate the current status of the language among Franco-Americans in Maine. Among its findings were that of this population, only 12.3% over the age of 5, about 40,000 individuals, spoke French. Some 98.5% of these Franco-Americans had been born in the United States, indicating the persistence of New England French. Nevertheless, the report concluded the French language was no longer inherently part of French-American identity.[45] As part of this effort, in 2012 Maine launched an immersive Maine French Heritage Language Program, designed to have at least four in five classes conducted in French, catering to both the New England dialect and those of immigrants and refugees.[46] However, this program was cut by 2014, when the French Department of theUniversity of Southern Maine, providing program curricula, was closed entirely.[47] By 2019, the decline had not seen any changes in trend despite the language's centuries-old presence in the state. Even with renewed bilingualism initiatives, a lack of support for foreign-language programs and a shortage of teachers, as well as the stigmatism of the previous English-only laws were blamed in part for a lack of knowledge in French in Maine's youngest generation.[6]
The Massachusetts American and French Canadian Cultural Exchange Commission, though not strictly a linguistic body like Louisiana'sCODOFIL, maintains, and develops cultural ties between French-Canadians and Franco-Americans, as well as a number of Francophone organizations.[8][48]
Although not taught strictly in the New England dialect, in recent years new efforts have arisen to preserve the language, with a Maine chapter of theAlliance Française established inPortland in August 2019, adding to others in Hartford, Providence,Greater Burlington, the Centre Franco-Americain inManchester, and the French Cultural Center in Boston. The New England dialect, and some of the vocabulary and mannerisms that characterize it, not unlike Acadian, Canadian, and Cajun French, however, have faced less institutional support, in favor ofStandard French.[49] A number of smaller local cultural and language preservation groups remain extant, including Le Comité Franco-Américain de Lowell and L'Association Francophone de Fall River in Massachusetts.
While not approached from a preservation standpoint, in recent years a "French Friendly" policy has been adopted through the Northern Border Regional Commission by the state of New Hampshire and itschambers of commerce, and Burlington, Vermont, providing training for service industry employees to provide Canadian French service to a substantial French-Canadian tourist demographic.[50][51]
As the French language is only differentiated fromFrench Creole inUS Census Bureau figures, this provides an estimate of the French-speaking population but speakers of the dialect are not enumerated specifically. According to the 2016American Community Survey, in total there were about 160,000 residents in New England who spoke some form of the language at home, with the highest population inMassachusetts, and the highest per capita residential population in Maine. By county, the 2015 American Community Survey showed the highest populations of French speakers inMiddlesex County, Massachusetts, with 16,593 household speakers, andHartford County, Connecticut, with 11,620. Per capita, the only county with more than 10% of residents speaking any form of French at home wasAroostook County, Maine (9,800 or 14.6%), due to its geographic proximity to Canada and speakers ofAcadian andQuebec French.Coos County, New Hampshire (2,923 or 9.6%),Androscoggin County, Maine (8,913 or 8.8%) andEssex County, Vermont (374 or 6.3%) were the only other counties with more than 5% of the population speaking French, with Androscoggin County, home toLewiston, Maine, being the sole county not bordering Canada with such a proportion of speakers.[1][52]
The figures below include speakers of anyFrench dialect, as estimated during the 2012-2016American Community Survey:[52]
| State | French name | Number of speakers | Percent French-speaking |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maine | Maine | 38,695 | 3.06% |
| New Hampshire | Nouveau Hampshire | 21,260 | 1.68% |
| Vermont | Vert Mont | 8,508 | 1.43% |
| Rhode Island | Île Rhode | 9,382 | 0.94% |
| Massachusetts | Massachusetts | 54,710 | 0.86% |
| Connecticut | Connecticut | 25,828 | 0.76% |
French language spoken at home by more than 10% of the population, as estimated for the 2011-2015 American Community Survey:[53][54][55]
| Community | French name | State | Percent French-speaking | Total population of community (2010 census) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Frenchville | Ville-Française | Maine | 67.4% | 1,087 |
| Hamlin | Hamlin | Maine | 62.8% | 219 |
| Grand Isle | Grande Île | Maine | 62.6% | 467 |
| Madawaska | Madawaska | Maine | 61.8% | 4,035 |
| Dennistown Plantation | Plantation de Dennistown | Maine | 59.3% | 30 |
| St. Agatha | Sainte-Agathe | Maine | 56.6% | 747 |
| Van Buren | Van Buren | Maine | 56.5% | 2,171 |
| Cyr Plantation | Plantation Cyr | Maine | 55.9% | 103 |
| Fort Kent | Fort-Kent | Maine | 47.5% | 4,097 |
| Wallagrass | Wallagrass | Maine | 46.9% | 546 |
| St. John Plantation | Plantation de Saint-Jean | Maine | 44.2% | 267 |
| New Canada | Nouveau-Canada | Maine | 40.7% | 321 |
| Eagle Lake | Lac Aigle | Maine | 40.1% | 864 |
| Winterville Plantation | Plantation de la Ville d'hiver | Maine | 39.0% | 224 |
| St. Francis | Saint-François | Maine | 38.2% | 485 |
| Ferdinand | Ferdinand | Vermont | 30.0% | 32 |
| Norton | Norton | Vermont | 24.2% | 169 |
| Canaan | Canaan | Vermont | 22.8% | 972 |
| Clarksville | Ville de Clark | New Hampshire | 17.2% | 265 |
| Berlin | Berlin | New Hampshire | 16.7% | 10,051 |
| Stewartstown | Stewartstown | New Hampshire | 16.0% | 1,004 |
| Portage Lake | Lac Portage | Maine | 15.7% | 391 |
| Lewiston | Lewiston | Maine | 14.7% | 36,592 |
| Caswell | Caswell | Maine | 14.7% | 306 |
| Milan | Milan | New Hampshire | 13.6% | 1,337 |
| Errol | Errol | New Hampshire | 13.1% | 291 |
| Sabattus | Sabattus | Maine | 12.9% | 4,876 |
| Dummer | Dummer | New Hampshire | 12.2% | 304 |
| Wentworth Location | Emplacement de Wentworth | New Hampshire | 12.1% | 33 |
| Averill | Averill | Vermont | 11.1% | 24 |
| Lyman | Lyman | Maine | 10.1% | 4,344 |
Although many variations of French are spoken by populations within New England, including Quebec, Acadian, and European French, a 1961 speaking study conducted by theUnited States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare found a number of features of the New England dialect that were prevalent in the mid-20th century. Some colloquialisms found in New England French are similar to rural Quebec French with the use of words likechar (roughly, "chariot"), compared with the standard French word for car,voiture ("vehicle", "automobile"), and represent words regarded as archaic in standardized French or words used in other dialects but of similar, yet distinct, usages. When respondents were presented with more advanced Standard French prompts, however, they generally demonstrated comprehension andcode switching. Some examples of responses provided in the study and other regional literature include:[27]
| English | Standard French | Laurentian French | New England French |
|---|---|---|---|
| bottleneck | goulot | goulot | gougeau |
| corn | maïs | blé d'Inde | blé d'Inde |
| car | voiture | voiture/auto/char | char |
| dollar | dollar | dollar/piastre | piastre |
| heavy | lourd | lourd/pesant | pesant |
| midwife | sage-femme | sage-femme | baboche[56] |
| mirror | miroir | miroir | glace |
| now | maintenant | maintenant/astheure | astheure[57][g] |
| pineapple | ananas | ananas | pomme de pin[58] |
| potato | pomme de terre | patate | pétate |
| strainer | passoire | passoire | tamis |
| sweeper | balayeuse | balayeuse | balai |
Given the ubiquity of English in the region as well as the close proximity of French and English speaking groups, oftentimes code switching is used extensively by Franco-American families even when French is not spoken by all members of the household. Many of these words are used as terms of endearment between grandparents referring to their grandchildren, or by their parents, and often picked up by the children themselves, in households of Franco-American families whose youngest generations primarily speak English.
Examples include substitutions as simple as calling grandparentsmémère (shortenedmémé) orpépère (pépé), while a 1969 study found other more opaque examples, a small sample of which includes:[59]
Though not offering weekly or monthly coverage, theNew York-based bilingualFrance-Amérique magazine writes periodic news stories onFrancophone community events and institutions in New England.[60][61] With the exception of Francophone group publications such as the newsletter ofBoston Accueil, no regular French periodicals are extant within New England today. In other mediums the language is rarely found, with the exception ofCanadian French AM repeaters ofRadio-Canada from Quebec, and an online forum maintained by theOrganisation internationale de la Francophonie, "Bienvenue à Boston".[62][63]
Peter Faneuil who inherited his uncle's firm on condition that he remained unmarried, spoke English and French; in his private correspondence he used French as his main language
{{cite book}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)Of course they have to pick up some English, but even the little boys who are grandsons of 'the original French' prefer the Gaelic tongue. When they are playing baseball a muff is more than likely to call out a 'sac' nom' than one of the epithets familiar on the lips of Yankee critics.
New England has more than 1,500,000 French-speaking people.
{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)He directed two French radio programs, the first at WCOU of Lewiston from 1960 to 1972…
Now my mother spoke only French until she went to college to become a teacher. Her first teaching assignment was to teach kindergarten in Madawaska, Maine. All the children came to her speaking only French, and she had to teach them in English. Imagine her stress. It would have been so much easier for her and for those little ones to teach them in French. Occasionally inspectors from the State would visit the schools. When word came that the inspectors were coming the teachers were told to be sure that only English was spoken in the school and on the grounds. So when the children went out for recess they were told to be sure to only speak English. These little French children played in silent playgrounds when the inspectors were in the area. I can't even imagine a silent playground.
"Even thebaboche (midwife, to you) made it her business to be on hand...")
Pauline Courchesne (2007), a Franco-American speaker of French from Holyoke, Massachusetts, recounts an episode in which, while in France, she use the term from her region for pineapple, which ispomme de pin (literally, 'apple of pine'). Unaware that the word for pineapple in France isananas, she wrotepommes de pin on a customs form for a box of pineapples that she was sending to Czechoslovakia. The French postal worker gave her a strange look but passed the box through...It wasn't until later that she learned that, in the eyes of the French postal worker, she had sent a box of pine cones...