enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. History of the Franco-Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Franco...

    Most Modern-day Franco-Americans of French Canadian or French heritage are the descendants of settlers who lived in Canada during the 17th century (Canada was known as New France at that time), Canada then came to be known as Province of Québec in 1763, which then renamed to Lower Canada in 1791, and then to the Canadian Province of Québec after the Canadian Confederation was formed in 1867.

  3. Francophone Canadians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francophone_Canadians

    Francophone Canadians or French-speaking Canadians are citizens of Canada who speak French, and sometimes refers only to those who speak it as their first language. In 2021, 10,669,575 people in Canada or 29.2% of the total population spoke French, including 7,651,360 people or 20.8% who declared French as their mother tongue.

  4. French Canadians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Canadians

    Francophones living in Canadian provinces other than Quebec have enjoyed minority language rights under Canadian law since the Official Languages Act of 1969, and under the Canadian Constitution since 1982, protecting them from provincial governments that have historically been indifferent towards their presence.

  5. French-Canadian Americans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French-Canadian_Americans

    French-Canadian Americans (French: Américains franco-canadiens; also referred to as Franco-Canadian Americans or Canadien Americans) are Americans of French-Canadian descent. About 2 million U.S. residents cited this ancestry in the 2020 census. In the 2010 census, the majority of respondents reported speaking French at home. [2]

  6. New England French - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_England_French

    The Bulletin de la Société Historique Franco-américaine for 1943, one of many institution created from La Survivance. 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 by the Boston ...

  7. French America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_America

    The Ordre des francophones d'Amérique is a decoration given in the name of the community to its members. It can also be described as the Francophonie of the Americas. Because French is a Romance language , French America is sometimes considered to be part of Latin America , but this term more often refers to Hispanic America and Portuguese ...

  8. History of the Franco-Americans in Holyoke, Massachusetts

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Franco...

    A recipient of the Académie française's Prix Montyon, he was the first Canadian author to receive such an honor from a European nation. [112] A group of the city's French-Canadian residents would organize a banquet welcoming him to the United States, held at former-Mayor Whiting's Windsor Hotel on January 31, 1882. [113]

  9. Assemblée de la francophonie de l'Ontario - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assemblée_de_la...

    In 2004, the organization changed its name to L'Assemblée de la francophonie de l'Ontario, partly to reflect Canadian francophones' modern shift away from identifying as French Canadian. In 2010 / 2011, their revenue was 1.4 million dollars. 1.2 million of that came from various government entities.