Amédée Papineau | |
---|---|
Born |
Montreal, Lower Canada |
July 26, 1819
Died | November 23, 1909 Montebello, Quebec, Canada |
Nationality | Canadian |
Other names | Louis Joseph Amédée Papineau |
Occupation | Writer, political and lawyer |
Known for | Participation in Rebellions of 1837, founder of the Société des Fils de la Liberté |
Louis-Joseph-Amédée Papineau, or Amédée Papineau (1819-1903) was a writer and Québecois patriot. and present at the meeting at which the Société des Fils de la Liberté was founded. He was the eldest son of Louis-Joseph Papineau, a leader in the Rebellion of 1837 in Lower Canada, and was involved in the rebellion himself. His father was forced to flee, and Amédée followed him to Saratoga Springs, New York. Between 1837 and 1842, he drew up the first four books of his personal journal as Journal d'un Fils de la Liberté in which he chronicled the events of the 1837 rebellion and his life in exile.[1]
In 1846 Amédée married Mary Eleanor Westcott in Saratoga Springs. After her death in 1890, he converted from Catholicism to Presbyterianism, and in 1896 married Martha Jane Iona. She was 25. Both marriages produced children.
He is also the uncle of the journalist Henri Bourassa, the founder of the newspaper Le Devoir.
(Rough translation : journal of a son of liberty(1838-1855).
(Rough translation : Childhood memories (1822-1837)
(Rough translation :letters of a traveler. From Edinburgh to Naples.)
(Rough translation :Amédée Papineau Correspondence tom 1 :1831-1841)
(Rough translation :Amédée Papineau Correspondence tom 2 :1842-1846)