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  • Assemblée annuelle de l'association 2020

    Notre rassemblement est reporté en 2021

  • Terre de l'ancêtre Joseph Thériault à St-Jean-Port-Joli

    Plaque commémorative placée en 2010 sur la terre de l'ancêtre Joseph Thériault à Saint-Jean-Port-Joli.

  • Georges Therriault et Irène Dufresne

    Famille de Georges Therriault et Irène Dufresne - pionniers de l'Estrie, QC vers 1850

Qui sommes-nous ?

L'Association, fondée en 1972, a pour but le rapprochement de la descendance Thériault d’Amérique, tant au Canada qu’aux États-Unis (Thériault comprend aussi Therriault, Thériot, Thério, Therrio, Therriot, Terrio, Terriot et autres orthographes).

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Notre mission ?

Nos objectifs :
• Promouvoir du sentiment d’appartenance de notre ancêtre Jehan Terriot à la lignée acadienne;
• Découvrir nos racines;
• Découvrir l’histoire de la migration des ancêtres et de leur installation en terre d’Amérique.

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Pourquoi devenir membre ?

Diverses activités stimulent les échanges entre les membres de l’Association dans le respect des choix régionaux. Ces rencontres permettent d’établir des contacts avec d’autres regroupements comme, par exemple, le congrès mondial acadien, les salons de généalogie, les assemblées annuelles, etc.

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Hardy handful made it to the Teche

 

Hardy handful made it to the Teche

By Jim Bradshaw

It was a bitter January 1756 for the Acadians exiled to Georgia, a place where – like Virginia – the government was unprepared to receive them and cared little whether they lived or died.

The first transport to the former penal colony of Georgia anchored at Savannah in early December 1755, and the colony’s governor, John Reynolds, immediately told his underlings to turn away any Acadians that were to be landed there. He warned the colony’s chief pilot that any landing of the Acadians would be done “at his peril.” But there was no other place for the exiles to go, and – unlike in Virginia, which shipped the Acadians off to England – Georgia eventually allowed 400 to 600 Acadians to land there, and then all but ignored them.

By mid-January 1756, the penniless, starving Acadians were forced to beg the colonial government for emergency assistance. The government’s response was to give just one week’s worth of rice to Acadians deemed too sick to feed themselves. All of the others were left to their own meager devices.

Realizing that there was no future for them in Georgia, about 200 of the Acadians, apparently with the governor’s blessings, were able to build 10 tiny, barely seaworthy sailboats that they hoped would get them back to Acadia.

They set sail about the beginning of March. When the little armada stopped in North Carolina, officials tried to convince them to give up their voyage. A handful may have stayed, but most of the Acadians continued to sail north in their leaky boats. Only 90 of the 200 who had begun the journey reached Massachusetts Bay in July.

Officials in Massachusetts decided they could not let the remaining Acadians return to their homeland. The 90 were arrested. The 200 or more Acadians who stayed in Georgia built huts outside Savannah and eked out a living by making oars, paddles and other sailing tools but were still debilitated by poverty and illness. Some sold themselves into virtual slavery as indentured servants and laboured on Georgia plantations.

After the 1763 Treaty of Paris ended the war that brought about their exile, most Acadians left Georgia, many of them to resettle in the French colony of Haiti. Some others apparently went to South Carolina.

But troubles were not over for the Acadians in Haiti. When the Haitian revolution broke out in the 1790s, Acadians were among the 10 000 people who fled first to Cuba and then were forced to leave there and come to Louisiana. A good number of them stayed in New Orleans but a handful finally ended their incredible journey and found solace on the banks of Bayou.

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Équipe du site

Rédacteur : Guy Thériault

Rédactrice adjointe : Karen Theriot Reader

Rédacteur adjoint : John Mark Hopkins

Webmestre : Matthieu Thériault

Webmestre adjoint : Réjean Devin