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The following information is
taken from a paper entitled, The Marist Brothers on Franco-American Soil,
written by Brother Paul Ambrose Fontaine, F.M.S., probably in 1986, in which, as the title
suggests, he talks about the order's arrival and foundations in the New England area,
specifically in Lewiston, Maine; Manchester, New Hampshire; Lowell, Lawrence, Haverhill,
Tyngsboro and Whitinsville, Massachusetts; Trumbull, Connecticut. Here we quote Brother
Paul Ambrose.1892 - Lowell, Mass. - Ecole Saint Joseph
The Marist work in Manchester had become well known and the Superiors were receiving
requests for Brothers from various parishes of New England. One of the two accepted for
opening in 1892 was the request of the Oblate Fathers who had asked the Marist Brothers to
take charge of their Ecole Saint Joseph belonging to the Paroisse Saint-Jean-Baptiste in
Lowell. We have worked with the Oblate Fathers for years in many countries of the world,
and this new foundation in Lowell would serve to continue that close link with the great
group of men dedicated to Mary in parish work. Brother Angelicus, who had worked at the
foundation of the Ecole Sainte-Marie in Manchester, was asked to assist in the foundation
of our Marist work at Ecole Saint-Joseph in Lowell.
Thirteen Brothers came to take over Ecole Saint-Joseph with Brother Chryseuil as the
founder. Many of the original group would be long remembered, as they were pioneers who
had left their mark there for years. The Lowell Alumni would remember the names of
Brothers Priscilianus, Pierre Vincent, Joseph Athanasius and Mary Florentius, who would
later be the founder of the present Central Catholic High School in Lawrence, Mass. The
Lowell families were large and poor, and the parents did not hesitate to allow their sons
to enter the religious life at least to give it a try. They really had nothing to lose.
There was serious work done in Lowell for years and there always was a very close
relationship with the Oblate Fathers. In fact, we later joined them in their mission in
the Philippines and today we have our own flourishing province of Filipino Marist
Brothers. When the registration of the school began to go down and the school population
dwindled, the Sisters took over the work of the Grammar School and the Brothers were sent
to work in various High Schools.
I personally taught the seventh grade in Lowell in 1936 where I had 63 boys in the same
class. When it was time for the daily roll call in the morning, because of the sixty-three
students it used to take a bit of time. I recall that the students were quite attentive
however waiting for me to join the family name of three boys together in rapid succession.
Thus Floriant Hétu, Wilfrid Jolys and Raymond Lamoureux (Hétu, Jolys, Lamoureux were the
cause for an occasional laugh. My year in Lowell was a very good year. When we withdrew
from Saint Joseph's in Lowell in 1968, the Marist Brothers had been working there for SEVENTY-SIX
YEARS.
-Lowell, Mass. - Sainte Jeanne D'Arc
During our years of work in Lowell, one of the pastors prevailed on the Brother
Provincial to provide him with a few Brothers for his Grammar School in the parish of
Sainte Jeanne d'Arc assuring him that the three or four Brothers could live with and form
a Community with those of the Saint Joseph school.
Thus we did open the school in 1936 under the Principalship of Brother Joseph Stephane,
and the Marist Brothers worked in that parish for TEN YEARS when the Brothers
withdrew in 1946. Brother Joseph Stephane and his little black satchel will long be
remembered as he went along after school bringing extra food to some of the needy families
and bringing them encouragement as well.
1923 - Tyngsboro, Mass. - St. Joseph
Juniorate
By 1905 serious plans were being formulated for an eventual break with Canada and the
formation of a separate Province of the Marists in the United States. The school in Maine
had closed, but all the other foundations were prospering. There were 84 Marist Brothers
working in the USA and 51 of these were Franco-Americans. By 1923 there would be at least
sixty Franco-Americans in our four New England schools, and it was thought best to start
thinking of a local Training Center for Marist vocations. A tract of land of some 167
acres was purchased in Tyngsboro, Mass. in 1922, and the construction was started at once,
while the first group of Brothers lived in the old Indian Wanalancet House, which had been
the home of the Tyng Family. The constructions of the St. Joseph Juniorate was completed
in 1924 ant it was then opened as a Training House. I entered there in 1926. For years our
various New England schools and the many Franco-American parishes used those facilities
for parish picnics, retreats, for athletic training camps and seminars. When vocations
started to diminish in the terrible sixties, St. Joseph's became a Novitiate for a while
and then later a Retirement for the elderly Brothers. In 1977 the Superiors asked me to
attend to the sale of the house and property and to re-locate the retired Brothers to a
more adequate set-up. We were then down to ten Brothers living in a house which was built
for 150 candidates and with a 167 acre property to maintain. It was planned that it should
be preferably sold for some educational purpose rather than for the condominium
developments, which were springing up all over. It was sold in 1977 to Dr. An Wang for use
as the Wang Institute for Graduate Studies in Computer Sciences*. We had served and lived
in that place for FIFTY-FOUR YEARS.
*Web page Editor's Note: After the collapse of Wang
the property fell into the hands of Boston University who, in March 2002 is still the
current owner. |