Jump to content

Camille Lessard-Bissonnette

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Camille Lessard Bissonette)

Camille Lessard-Bissonette, 1883–1970, pen name Liane, was a Canadian-American suffragist and writer, who contributed to Le Messager from 1906 to 1938.

Lessard-Bissonette immigrated with her family from Quebec where she was a teacher, and then became a mill worker in Lewiston, Maine at the Continental Mill. She then became a columnist for Le Messager, Lewiston. She wrote pro-the-vote for women in 1910-11[1]—two years before the conversation even began in Canada. Le Messager moved to 223 Lisbon Street, Lewiston[2] where she wrote her articles about suffrage as well as many other issues concerning women's lives.

The Franco-American culture was closed off to the conversation of suffrage both in the Franco-American immigrant group and in the mainstream, and plus, for Camille, due to language barrier, she was not recognized in the early Maine women's suffrage movement.

Lessard-Bissonette is one of 2,200 women listed in The National Collaborative for Women's History Sites, The National Votes for Women Trail.[3] Lessard-Bissonette is the only Franco-American woman in the Online Biographical Dictionary of the Woman Suffrage Movement in the United States.[4]

Camille wrote, in French, about the French-Canadian woman's immigrant experience, Canuck,[5] which was published by Le Messager, as a series, feuilleton, after she had left the U.S., in the 1930s. Janet Shideler, Ph.D., her biographer, wrote Camille Lessard-Bissonnette: The Quiet Evolution of French-Canadian Immigrants in New England. Lessard-Bissonette's book, Canuck,[6] has been translated into English by Sylvie Charron, Ph.D. and Sue Huseman, Ph.D.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Shideler, Janet L. Camille Lessard-Bissonnette: The Quiet Evolution of French-Canadian Immigrants in New England. New York: Peter Lang Publishing, Inc, 1998.
  2. ^ "Le Messager Newspaper Staff, 175 Lincoln Street, Lewiston, 1908". Maine Memory Network.
  3. ^ "National Votes for Women Trail".
  4. ^ "Biographical Sketch of Camille Lessard Bissonnette | Alexander Street Documents". documents.alexanderstreet.com.
  5. ^ Lessard, Camille. Canuck: Un Roman. Bedford, N.H: National Materials Development Center for French, 1980. Print.
  6. ^ Robbins, Rhea C. Canuck and Other Stories. Brewer, Me: Rheta Press, 2006. Print.