Item 116313 - St. Louis Church, Fort Kent, ca. 1911

Item 116313 - St. Louis Church, Fort Kent, ca. 1911
Contributed by Acadian Archives
Item 116313
St. Louis Church, Fort Kent, ca. 1911
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*Credit line must read: Collections of Acadian Archives
Image Info

This collection consists of one postcard possibly depicting a men's retreat at the St. Louis Church in Fort Kent. The altar confirms that this is the church completed in 1911.

Records indicate that Fort Kent's first Roman Catholic church was built in 1860. For a decade, it operated as a mission of Frenchville and St. Francis. The parish of St. Louis was officially founded in 1870. On October 1, 1875, it received its first resident pastor, Fr. Cléophas Demers, who was responsible for building a larger wooden church in the 1880s. Fire destroyed the structure on March 30, 1907. Parishioners relocated to a temporary chapel. The present structure was built between 1909 and 1911 during the pastorate of Arthur Décary.

The priest at the pulpit may be a guest preacher, a priest's assistant, or any one of the pastors who served the parish during this period: Arthur Décary (1904-1919); Raoul Bourbeau (1919-1925); Joseph A. Normand (1925-1934); or Aimé Giguère (1934-1951).

The church attests to the significance of the Roman Catholic faith to people of Acadian and French-Canadian descent in the Upper St. John Valley. Priests invited religious orders from Quebec to teach in local public schools and the present-day Northern Maine Medical Center was founded by the pastor of St. Louis and originally had a religious vocation.

The postcard's publisher might have been H. A. Sawyer, a local businessman who sold photographic prints at his jewelry store. Other Fort Kent postcards dating from this era bear his name.

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