User:DeanKampas/Esther Wheelwright
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[edit]Capture by the Wabanaki [edit]
[edit]During the late summer and early fall of 1702 there was talk of an imminent attack by the Indians and French. By the spring of 1703, French and Indian forces were stationed along the borderlands preparing for their attack. On 21 August 21, 1703 the two-day attack ensued. The Wheelwrights′ status, and John Wheelwright's involvement as militia captain, meant that they were one of the prime targets. The attack covered an area of over fifty miles. People who escaped capture were killed, buildings were torched and homes were looted. The only Wheelwright among the seven kidnapped was Esther, who was taken captive by the Wabanaki.
Because of her age and sex, Esther was probably adopted into a Wabanaki family, and was expected to assume the personality, duties, and role of a Wabanaki daughter. As her adoptive family taught her how to live as a Wabanaki girl and to pray as a Catholic, it is possible that they "became attached to this child with an extraordinary affection". After only a few months with the Wabanaki, Esther had probably shed so much of her former identity that she would have barely been recognized by her English family. ^^^^^While there is no direct evidence that Esther was renamed following her conversion to Catholicism, there is evidence that many Catholic Wabanaki women who were baptized were named Catherine or Marie. It is possible that Esther was renamed "Mali," pronounced as "Molly" in English, which is a Wabananki corruption of the name "Marie."[1]=====
Two Jesuit priests who were also brothers, Jacques and Vincent Bigot, were active missionaries in Acadia and Quebec from the 1680s through the 1710s. They were probably some of the first French priests she met, and they were instrumental in her eventual move to Québec because of their long history of bringing Wabanaki girls to the Ursuline convent school. [I intend to add more about Jacques and Vincent Bigot here.]
^^^^^At the time of Esther's capture, food was scarce among the Wabanaki, as constant warfare with the English had greatly disrupted the flow of agricultural harvest in the area. Malnutrition and disease were widespread, especially among children. Scurvy was particularly common among the Wabanaki, carrying off a number of women and children. Due to the poor health of most Wabanaki at the time, it is likely Esther would have suffered a number of deficiencies during her captivity.[2]=====
Life at the Chateâu St. Louis [edit]
[edit]Esther's birth family eventually learned about her faith and, using their ties through the government of Massachusetts, petitioned the General Governor of New France, Philippe de Rigaud, Marquis de Vaudreuil, to get her back. Vaudreuil had the clear order from Versailles: "You have nothing so important in the present state of affairs as the maintenance of peace with the Iroquois and other Indian nations." Wartime conditions meant that it was difficult to act on Esther's return to Wells. Vaudreuil himself was denouncing the "deplorable state" of New France's economy to his superiors and had to carefully plan his moves. In order to negotiate a better deal with New England, Vaudreuil started to spread the idea that the young girl was the daughter of an important English man. Esther, in these conditions, found herself sheltered at his own residence, the Chateau St. Louis, in Québec City.
For a year, Esther was immersed in the French aristocracy. Vaudreuil's wife, Louise-Élisabeth de Joybert, took her under her wing. Although he must have known that she was not from a very important family, he called her "the daughter of a governor of a small place", inflating her family's status by calling her father a "governor," a title which in New France was reserved for ennobled men only. Upon her arrival, she would have been 'degreased' and dressed up à la française. Her new household was served by indigenous slaves, although Vaudreuil had never admitted this to his superiors. Esther had known life as a Puritan, then as a Wabenaki, and now she experienced a taste of life as a French aristocrat in New France.
^^^^^Of the various societies and environments Esther lived in, the transition from living among the Wabanaki and life with the Vaudreuil family in the Chateau St. Louis was the most stark. Esther, who had previously been accustomed to living in intimate close quarters with her adopted Wabanaki family, would have found the Chateau St. Louis to be large and luxurious in comparison. She would likely have been introduced to imported luxuries such as chinaware, and attended events such as lavish balls and banquets.[3]=====
However, her time at the Chateau St. Louis was brief. By January 1709, she was enrolled as a boarding student at the Ursuline boarding school.
Life as an Ursuline nun [edit]
[edit]In 1712, Mother Superior Le Marie des Anges created a contract for 18-year-old Esther's entry to the convent. Esther then began a three-month postulancy, during which she abided by the disciplined monastic schedule but did not don the religious habit. Her connections with Father Bigot and the Marquis de Vaudreuil allowed Esther to have an impressive career as an Ursuline nun. Most women of modest backgrounds like Esther who were joining the Ursulines were only permitted to become lay nuns, meaning they were relegated to the back of the procession and were forbidden to sing in church. Esther, however, was allowed to become a choir nun despite not being able to afford the full dowry.
In January 1713, Wheelwright was given her veil and habit and became a novice as Sister Esther Marie Joseph de l'Enfant Jésus. Father Bigot paid for her marriage gown, normally the responsibility of the novice's parents, and delivered the sermon at the ceremony. His story of her life emphasized Catholic and French resilience in the face of grim English Protestantism. As the great-granddaughter of a Protestant minister, who was raised by the Wabanaki then converted to Catholicism and embraced French culture, Esther's story was a symbol of the future of French superiority in the New World.
For one year as a novice, Esther was trained for monastic life by observing a strict routine and following the Rules of the Quebec Ursulines. She performed daily activities in obedience to superiors and learned to sacrifice all luxuries. During her time as a novice, the Wheelwrights frequently wrote to Esther asking her to return. The letters did have an effect on Esther and she later admitted that they caused her "infinite trouble", but she remained committed to her religious life.
After the Treaty of Utrecht was signed on 11 April 11, 1713, Esther was at risk of being reclaimed by English officers. On 16 February 1714, English commissioners met with the Marquise de Vaudreuil demanding proof that all captives who remained in New France were there by their own will. In the face of these threats, the Ursulines were forced to expedite Esther's novice training period so that she could take her vows as soon as possible. On 12 April 1714, Esther took her final vows as an Ursuline sister.
As an Ursuline nun, Sister Esther Marie-Joseph Wheelwright de l'Enfant Jésus had no contact with her family, and over time lost her connections with most people from her previous life. Those who had been instrumental in her joining the Ursulines, including the Marquise de Vaudreuil and Father Bigot, died in the succeeding years. In 1724, the Wabanaki were attacked by an English force led by a friend of the Wheelwrights, Captain Johnson Harmon, and many of the people with whom Esther grew up were killed.
^^^^^Life inside the Ursuline Convent remained shuttered from the outside world, however some practices that were routinely practiced by Ursuline nuns during this period included self-mortification, which included flagellation. While Ursuline nuns committed themselves voluntarily to acts of penance and mortification, it is possible Esther may have engaged in these acts of piety.[4]=====
As Esther moved up in the convent hierarchy, she took on more responsibilities. She progressed from class mistress, to principal of the boarding school, and mistress of the novices. In 1726 she became a religieuse vocale which meant she could vote in the assembly and became "Mother Marie-Joseph de l'Enfant Jésus". In 1747 Esther received correspondence from her mother stating that her father had died. In his will he left money for Esther and instructions for her brothers to take care of her should she ever return to Wells, indicating her parents' enduring hope for her return, even after many decades of religious commitment. After her parents' deaths, Esther's brothers maintained correspondence with their sister in Quebec, acknowledging the benefits that might come with having a contact in New France.
In 1759, English forces attacked New France in the Battle of Quebec. The nuns were evacuated from the convent and Esther was sent to the Hôpital Général as a nurse. General Louis-Joseph de Montcalm's army was overwhelmed by the English army, and Montcalm died on 14 September 1759. He was buried in the convent's chapel.
References
[edit]- Ann M. Little, The Many Captivities of Esther Wheelwright (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2016), ch. 2.
- Ann M. Little, The Many Captivities of Esther Wheelwright (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2016), ch. 2.
- Wheelwright (2011), pp. 95–97
- Ann M. Little, The Many Captivities of Esther Wheelwright (New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2016), ch. 4.
- ^ Little, Ann M. (2016-09-27), "Esther Wheelwright", The Many Captivities of Esther Wheelwright, Yale University Press, pp. 47–83, retrieved 2022-10-12
- ^ Little, Ann M. (2016-09-27), "Esther Wheelwright", The Many Captivities of Esther Wheelwright, Yale University Press, pp. 47–83, retrieved 2022-10-12
- ^ Julie., Wheelwright, (2012). Esther : the remarkable true story of Esther Wheelwright : puritan child, native daughter, Mother Superior. HarperCollins Canada. ISBN 978-1-55468-894-4. OCLC 833139100.
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: CS1 maint: extra punctuation (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Little, Ann M. (2016-09-27), "Esther Wheelwright", The Many Captivities of Esther Wheelwright, Yale University Press, pp. 116–166, retrieved 2022-11-10