Skip to main content
French Catholic schools fought to defend the language against Anglicization, and the Marist Brothers made it their duty to promote its rigid teaching. In this image, the inscription on the wall reads: “Guerre à l’anglicisme” (“War on Anglicisms”).  Brother Jean-Ferdinand, Vice-Principal at the school in 1933, published several works on the subject, including “Refrancisons-nous” in 1951.
1904 - 1953

The Collège Saint-Charles and the Marist Brothers in Charlesbourg

The Académie de Charlesbourg was founded in 1904. The Marist Brothers found refuge in Quebec after the separation of the Church and State in France at the turn of the century. With their reputation as good teachers, they were recruited by the parish priest of Charlesbourg, Monsignor Louis-David Gosselin, who was looking for an institution to educate the peasants’ sons. The school was enlarged in 1943. Apart from the period between 1914 and 1922 when they aided France in the war, the Marist Brothers remained in Charlesbourg until 1962, when they were replaced by lay people.

Language at the heart of teaching

Auteur inconnu French Catholic schools fought to defend the language against Anglicization, and the Marist Brothers made it their duty to promote its rigid teaching. In this image, the inscription on the wall reads: “Guerre à l’anglicisme” (“War on Anglicisms”). Brother Jean-Ferdinand, Vice-Principal at the school in 1933, published several works on the subject, including “Refrancisons-nous” in 1951.
Chronoscope Which categories does this image belong to? (unilingual French for a limited time) Source: Société d’histoire de Charlesbourg Document in the public domain (free of copyright) - Société d'histoire de Charlesbourg - Date: 1926