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Louis-Joseph Papineau

Louis-Joseph Papineau (October 7, 1786 – September 23, 1871), born in Montreal, Quebec, was a politician, lawyer, and the landlord of the seigneurie de la Petite-Nation. He was the leader of the reformist Patriote movement before the Lower Canada Rebellion of 1837–1838. His father was Joseph Papineau, also a politician in Quebec. Papineau was the eldest of eight children[1] and was the grandfather of the journalist Henri Bourassa, founder of the newspaper Le Devoir. Louis-Joseph Papineau is commemorated by a public artwork installed in the metro station, Papineau that serves the street named for his father Joseph Papineau.[2] L'École Secondaire Louis-Joseph Papineau in Montreal was named after him.[3][4]

Louis Joseph Papineau
Born(1787 -10-07)October 7, 1787
Died September 23, 1871(1871-09-23) (aged 84)
NationalityLower Canadian
Occupation(s)Lawyer, Member of Provincial Parliament, Speaker of the House of Assembly
Signature

Speaker of the Legislative Assembly

Papineau was elected Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada on January 21, 1815. The same year, he replaced Pierre-Stanislas Bédard as leader of the Parti Canadien. Under his leadership, the party worked for the reform of Lower Canada's political institutions and strongly opposed the abuses of the appointed Legislative Council.

In 1820, he refused a position on the Legislative Council offered by governor Dalhousie.

Childhood and education

 
The young Louis-Joseph, 10 years old

Papineau was described as an energetic child. His arrival at the Seminary of Quebec in 1802 was highly anticipated, and his reputation preceding him. Upon graduation, he began an apprenticeship under his father with the goal of becoming a blacksmith, but this was quickly abandoned when the young Papineau turned to law, joining his cousin Denis-Benjamin Viger.[1] Viger "was for a time the assembly's agent in London and became one of Papineau's prominent supporters and close friends, but after the rebellion, he was to follow Lafontaine."[5]

Papineau's later childhood was mainly spent on the seigniory of la Petite Nation, located on the Ottawa river, which was purchased by his father in 1801 from the Quebec Seminary.[5] During his time spent at the seigniory of La Petite-Nation, Papineau was sent to study at the College of Montreal where he rebelled and was forced to leave college. He was then sent to study at the Seminary of Quebec, where he completed his secondary studies.[5]

In 1808 Papineau was elected member of parliament for Kent (now Chambly, Quebec) before being admitted to the Bar of Lower Canada in 1810. Later, he served as a militia officer in the War of 1812.[6]

In 1822, he was sent to London with John Neilson to present a petition of 60,000 signatures against the Union project. While in the United Kingdom, he was replaced by Joseph-Rémi Vallières as Speaker.

In 1826, he was chosen leader of the Patriotes, a reformed and more radical Parti Canadien. In 1831, he sponsored a law which granted full equivalent political rights to Jews, 27 years before anywhere else in the British Empire. The events that led to Jews receiving full citizenship rights in Lower Canada in advance of other nations or territories in the British Dominion were due to the involvement of one Ezekiel Hart, a Jew who had proved his dedication to the burgeoning Canadian identity by raising money to support troops in Lower Canada to help in defence against United States invasion from the south.

Louis-Joseph was part of the committee that wrote the Ninety-Two Resolutions passed by the Legislative Assembly on February 21, 1834. The resolutions called for an elected Legislative Council and an Executive Council responsible before the house of the people's representatives.

Leader of the Patriotes

 
Louis Joseph giving a political speech for the "Assemblée des six-comtés".

After the arrival of the 92 Resolutions in Lower Canada on March 6, 1837, he led the movement of protest and participated in numerous popular assemblies. He led the committee that organized the boycott of essentially all British imports to Lower Canada. On November 15, he created the Conseil des Patriotes with Edmund Bailey O'Callaghan. He and O'Callaghan fled Montreal for Saint-Denis-sur-Richelieu on November 16, after governor Lord Gosford ordered their arrest and that of 25 other Patriot leaders. Papineau and O'Callaghan went to the home of Wolfred Nelson. He crossed the United States border on November 25.

In exile

On February 8, 1839, he departed to leave New York City for Paris where he hoped to get France involved. In May, he published the Histoire de l'insurrection du Canada (History of the insurrection in Canada) in the magazine Progrès. Despite meeting with influential politicians such as Lamartine and Lamennais, the France of Louis-Philippe also remained neutral. After his wife left in 1843 "he spent a large part of his leisure in the main archival repositories in Paris, where he copied documents relating to French rule in Canada".[7]

His role in the 1837 rebellions against British rule forced him into exile until 1845, when, three years after he had been granted amnesty, he finally decided to return to what in 1845 was called the Province of Canada but he visited Italy and Switzerland before getting to the Province of Canada.[5] He only returned to Montreal after he had been granted amnesty by the colonial government as well.

 
Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1840.

Return to politics

 
Portrait of Louis-Joseph Papineau, by Théophile Hamel.

In 1848, he was elected member of the new united Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada in the riding of Saint-Maurice. In severe disagreement with the emerging French Canadian Liberal Party, he sat as an independent member. A convinced republican after a long exile in the United States and France, Papineau supported the Montreal Annexation Manifesto that called for Canada to join the United States of America.[8][9]

Louis-Joseph Papineau, along with John Molson Jr., the son of John Molson, and Horatio Gates, served as the first Vice-Presidents of the Montreal Mechanics' Institute. He participated in the creation of the Parti rouge. He was defeated in 1851 but elected in a by-election in 1852. He did not present himself again in the elections of 1854. He retired from public life and reappeared only once to hold a conference at the Institut Canadien de Montréal in December 1867. He died at his manor in Montebello, Quebec near the modern Château Montebello on September 23, 1871.

Both Papineau's manor house in Montebello and his house in Montreal are National Historic Sites,[10][11] and both are units of the national park system. The one in Montreal, designated in 1968, is closed to the public, but the Montebello property, designated in 1986, is open seasonally, from May to October. Papineau, himself, was named a National Historic Person in 1937. A federal plaque reflecting that status was finally unveiled in 2022, with plans to install it at Montebello.

On October 21, 2012, a monument to his memory was unveiled at Saint-Denis-sur-Richelieu by Québec Premier Pauline Marois.

Family

 
Julie and Ézilda Papineau

M. Papineau married Julie Papineau (née Julie Bruneau) in Quebec City on April 29, 1818. Together, they had 9 children .[12][13]

  • Amédée Papineau (1819–1903) – heir of Louis-Joseph;
  • Didier Papineau (1820–1821);
  • Lachance Papineau (1822–1862) – died in a mental institution;
  • Arthur Papineau (1824–1825);
  • Aurelie Papineau (1826–1830);
  • Ézilda Papineau (1828–1894) – suffering from dwarfism, did not have any children and stayed all her life in Montebello, Quebec;
  • Gustave Papineau (1830–1851);
  • Charles Papineau (1833–1834);
  • Azélie Papineau (1834–1869) – married the painter and architect Napoléon Bourassa (1827–1916), mother of Henri Bourassa, a famous journalist.[13]

Bibliography

  • , Manoir-Papineau National Historic site of Canada, Parks Canada
  • Ouellet, Fernand (1972). "Papineau, Louis-Joseph". In Hayne, David (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. X (1871–1880) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  • Fernand Ouellet. "Louis-Joseph Papineau: A Divided Soul", in Canadian Historical Association, 11, Ottawa, 1960
  • James Marsh. Papineau, Louis-Joseph, in the Canadian Encyclopedia 2008-08-27 at the Wayback Machine
  • Edmund Bailey O'Callaghan. "A Biographical Sketch of the Hon. Louis Joseph Papineau, Speaker of the House of Assembly of Lower Canada", in Sentinel, Saratoga Springs, 1838
  • Gustave Proulx. Le Combat Magnifique: Louis-Joseph Papineau. Montréal: Les Presses de "La Presse", 1973. 124 p. Without ISBN
  • Thomas Storrow Brown. "Brief sketch of the life and times of the late Hon. Louis-Joseph Papineau", in New Dominion Monthly, 1872, January 1872, 20 pages
  • Johnny-Normand Pickering [-LeBlanc]: Le Mémorial Papineau, Éditions du Fleuve, Montréal, 1989[14]

Art Works

Paintings

Napoléon Bourassa, Louis-Joseph Papineau, beau-père de l'artiste, 1858, 152 x 114,9 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[15]

Alfred Boisseau, Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1871, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[16]

Charles Alexander Smith, L'Assemblée des six comtés à Saint-Charles-sur-Richelieu en 1837, 1891, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[17]

Lithography

Gerome Fassio, adapted from Antoine Maurin, Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1844, lithography, 37,8 x 30,7 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[18]

Sculptures

Louis-Philippe Hébert, adapted from Napoléon Bourassa, Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1874,  28,8 x 14 x 11,5 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[19]

Louis-Philippe Hébert, Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1887,  75 x 28 x 24 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[20]

Napoléon Bourassa, Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1900,  72 x 60,4 x 13,1 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[21]

Napoléon Bourassa, Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1900, 48 x 37 x 10 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[22]

Napoléon Bourassa, Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1900, 48 x 37 x 10 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[23]

Napoléon Bourassa, Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1900, 58 x 45,5 x 10 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[24]

Napoléon Bourassa, Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1900, 58 x 45,5 x 10 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[25]

Napoléon Bourassa, Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1900, 48 x 37 x 10 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[26]

Napoléon Bourassa, Louis-Joseph Papineau, 1900, 47 x 36 x 10 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[27]

Photography

Thomas Coffin Doane, Louis-Joseph Papineau, Daguerréotype, c. 1852, Library and Archives Canada, reference #3195235

Jules-Isaïe Benoît, dit Livernois, Louis-Joseph Papineau. Photographie d'un tableau de Théophile Hamel, 1863, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[28]

Unknown, Louis-Joseph Papineau, de l'album Eugène-Hamel, circa 1865, 9,8 x 5,1 cm and; 7,8 x 4,6 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[29]

Henri-Napoléon Grenier, Louis-Joseph Papineau, de l'album de collection dit de Napoléon Garneau, 1870-1871, 10,2 x 6,3 cm; and 9,5 x 5,9 cm , Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[30]

Unknown, Le Musée du manoir Papineau, à Montebello, circa 1895, , 25,3 x 30,3 cm and 16,3 x 21,3 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[31]

Photo-engraving

Napoléon Bourassa, Louis-Joseph Papineau, circa 1900, 13,5 x 9 cm and 38,1 x 29,2 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[32]

Drawing

Jobson Paradis, La Chapelle funéraire Papineau, Montebello, circa 1900-1915, 23,4 x 28,6 cm, Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Québec.[33]

Note

The Art works section was copied and adapted from the French Wikipedia page of Louis-Joseph Papineau . See that page's history for attribution.

Archives

There is a Papineau family collection at Library and Archives Canada.[34] There is also a Papineau family fonds at Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec.[35]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Ouellet, Fernand (1972). Louis-Joseph Papineau: A Divided Soul. Canadian Historical Association. p. 6.
  2. ^ "Station Papineau". Metro Montreal. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  3. ^ Soucy, Yves (4 June 2008). "L'école Louis-Joseph-Papineau fête ses 100 ans". LeDroit. Retrieved 15 May 2021.
  4. ^ "Famille de Louis-Joseph Papineau". Bibliothèque nationale du Québec. Government of Quebec. Retrieved December 31, 2012.
  5. ^ a b c d Ouellet, Fernand (1972). Louis-Joseph Papineau: A Divided Soul. Canadian Historical Association.
  6. ^ Bothwell, Bob (2007). Penguin History of Canada. Penguin Canada. p. 171. ISBN 978-0-14-318126-2.
  7. ^ Ouellet, Fernand (1972). Louis-Joseph Papineau: A Divided Soul. Canadian Historical Association. p. 17.
  8. ^ Gough, Barry M. (28 October 2010). Historical Dictionary of Canada. Scarecrow Press. p. 67. ISBN 978-0-8108-7504-3. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
  9. ^ Ouellet, Fernand (1972). "Papineau, Louis-Joseph". In Hayne, David (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. Vol. X (1871–1880) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  10. ^ Louis-Joseph Papineau. Canadian Register of Historic Places. Retrieved August 1, 2011.
  11. ^ Manoir Papineau. Canadian Register of Historic Places. Retrieved August 1, 2011.
  12. ^ Parks Canada Agency, Government of Canada (2017-06-21). "The Papineau family – Manoir Papineau National Historic Site". www.pc.gc.ca. Retrieved 2020-03-23.
  13. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2016-03-04. Retrieved 2014-12-06.
  14. ^ Pickering Leblanc, J.-Normand (1989). Le mémorial Papineau (in French). Montréal: Éditions du Fleuve. ISBN 978-2-89372-028-9. OCLC 21447143.
  15. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau, beau-père de l'artiste - Bourassa, Napoléon". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  16. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau. D'après une photographie - Boisseau, Alfred". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  17. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau. D'après une photographie - Boisseau, Alfred". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  18. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau - Fassio, Gerome, d'après Antoine Maurin". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  19. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau - Hébert, Louis-Philippe, d'après Napoléon Bourassa". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  20. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau - Hébert, Louis-Philippe". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  21. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau - Bourassa, Napoléon". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  22. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau - Bourassa, Napoléon". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  23. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau - Bourassa, Napoléon". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  24. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau - Bourassa, Napoléon". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  25. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau - Bourassa, Napoléon". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  26. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau - Bourassa, Napoléon". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  27. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau - Bourassa, Napoléon". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  28. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau. Photographie d'un tableau de Théophile Hamel - Livernois, Jules-Isaïe Benoît, dit". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  29. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau, de l'album Eugène-Hamel - Inconnu". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  30. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau, de l'album de collection dit de Napoléon Garneau - Grenier, Henri-Napoléon". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  31. ^ "Le Musée du manoir Papineau, à Montebello - Inconnu". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  32. ^ "Louis-Joseph Papineau - Bourassa, Napoléon". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  33. ^ "La Chapelle funéraire Papineau, Montebello - Paradis, Jobson". Collections | MNBAQ. Retrieved 2021-06-04.
  34. ^ "Papineau family collection, Library and Archives Canada". Retrieved September 17, 2020.
  35. ^ "Papineau family fonds, Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec". Retrieved September 17, 2020.

External links

  • "Biography". Dictionnaire des parlementaires du Québec de 1792 à nos jours (in French). National Assembly of Quebec.
  • W.P.M. Kennedy, ed. (1930). "The Ninety-Two Resolutions of 1834". Statutes, treaties and documents of the Canadian Constitution, 1713–1929. Toronto: Oxford University Press. pp. 270–290.
  • (PDF in French)
  • Unofficial English translation of the Political Testament of Louis-Joseph Papineau
  • Ancestry of Louis-Joseph Papineau (in French).
  • (Adobe Flash Player)
  • Louis-Joseph Papineau: The Demi-God, a 1961 National Film Board of Canada dramatization (Adobe Flash Player)
Political offices
Preceded by MPP, District of Kent
18091814
Succeeded by
Preceded by MPP, District of Montreal West
18141837
Succeeded by
none
Preceded by MLA, District of Saint-Maurice
18481851
Succeeded by

louis, joseph, papineau, 20th, century, canadian, parliamentarian, canadian, parliamentarian, october, 1786, september, 1871, born, montreal, quebec, politician, lawyer, landlord, seigneurie, petite, nation, leader, reformist, patriote, movement, before, lower. For the 20th century Canadian parliamentarian see Louis Joseph Papineau Canadian parliamentarian Louis Joseph Papineau October 7 1786 September 23 1871 born in Montreal Quebec was a politician lawyer and the landlord of the seigneurie de la Petite Nation He was the leader of the reformist Patriote movement before the Lower Canada Rebellion of 1837 1838 His father was Joseph Papineau also a politician in Quebec Papineau was the eldest of eight children 1 and was the grandfather of the journalist Henri Bourassa founder of the newspaper Le Devoir Louis Joseph Papineau is commemorated by a public artwork installed in the metro station Papineau that serves the street named for his father Joseph Papineau 2 L Ecole Secondaire Louis Joseph Papineau in Montreal was named after him 3 4 Louis Joseph PapineauBorn 1787 10 07 October 7 1787Montreal Province of QuebecDiedSeptember 23 1871 1871 09 23 aged 84 Montebello Quebec CanadaNationalityLower CanadianOccupation s Lawyer Member of Provincial Parliament Speaker of the House of AssemblySignature Contents 1 Speaker of the Legislative Assembly 2 Childhood and education 3 Leader of the Patriotes 4 In exile 5 Return to politics 6 Family 7 Bibliography 8 Art Works 8 1 Paintings 8 2 Lithography 8 3 Sculptures 8 4 Photography 8 5 Photo engraving 8 6 Drawing 9 Note 10 Archives 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksSpeaker of the Legislative Assembly EditPapineau was elected Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Lower Canada on January 21 1815 The same year he replaced Pierre Stanislas Bedard as leader of the Parti Canadien Under his leadership the party worked for the reform of Lower Canada s political institutions and strongly opposed the abuses of the appointed Legislative Council In 1820 he refused a position on the Legislative Council offered by governor Dalhousie Childhood and education Edit The young Louis Joseph 10 years old Papineau was described as an energetic child His arrival at the Seminary of Quebec in 1802 was highly anticipated and his reputation preceding him Upon graduation he began an apprenticeship under his father with the goal of becoming a blacksmith but this was quickly abandoned when the young Papineau turned to law joining his cousin Denis Benjamin Viger 1 Viger was for a time the assembly s agent in London and became one of Papineau s prominent supporters and close friends but after the rebellion he was to follow Lafontaine 5 Papineau s later childhood was mainly spent on the seigniory of la Petite Nation located on the Ottawa river which was purchased by his father in 1801 from the Quebec Seminary 5 During his time spent at the seigniory of La Petite Nation Papineau was sent to study at the College of Montreal where he rebelled and was forced to leave college He was then sent to study at the Seminary of Quebec where he completed his secondary studies 5 In 1808 Papineau was elected member of parliament for Kent now Chambly Quebec before being admitted to the Bar of Lower Canada in 1810 Later he served as a militia officer in the War of 1812 6 In 1822 he was sent to London with John Neilson to present a petition of 60 000 signatures against the Union project While in the United Kingdom he was replaced by Joseph Remi Vallieres as Speaker In 1826 he was chosen leader of the Patriotes a reformed and more radical Parti Canadien In 1831 he sponsored a law which granted full equivalent political rights to Jews 27 years before anywhere else in the British Empire The events that led to Jews receiving full citizenship rights in Lower Canada in advance of other nations or territories in the British Dominion were due to the involvement of one Ezekiel Hart a Jew who had proved his dedication to the burgeoning Canadian identity by raising money to support troops in Lower Canada to help in defence against United States invasion from the south Louis Joseph was part of the committee that wrote the Ninety Two Resolutions passed by the Legislative Assembly on February 21 1834 The resolutions called for an elected Legislative Council and an Executive Council responsible before the house of the people s representatives Leader of the Patriotes Edit Louis Joseph giving a political speech for the Assemblee des six comtes After the arrival of the 92 Resolutions in Lower Canada on March 6 1837 he led the movement of protest and participated in numerous popular assemblies He led the committee that organized the boycott of essentially all British imports to Lower Canada On November 15 he created the Conseil des Patriotes with Edmund Bailey O Callaghan He and O Callaghan fled Montreal for Saint Denis sur Richelieu on November 16 after governor Lord Gosford ordered their arrest and that of 25 other Patriot leaders Papineau and O Callaghan went to the home of Wolfred Nelson He crossed the United States border on November 25 In exile EditOn February 8 1839 he departed to leave New York City for Paris where he hoped to get France involved In May he published the Histoire de l insurrection du Canada History of the insurrection in Canada in the magazine Progres Despite meeting with influential politicians such as Lamartine and Lamennais the France of Louis Philippe also remained neutral After his wife left in 1843 he spent a large part of his leisure in the main archival repositories in Paris where he copied documents relating to French rule in Canada 7 His role in the 1837 rebellions against British rule forced him into exile until 1845 when three years after he had been granted amnesty he finally decided to return to what in 1845 was called the Province of Canada but he visited Italy and Switzerland before getting to the Province of Canada 5 He only returned to Montreal after he had been granted amnesty by the colonial government as well Louis Joseph Papineau 1840 Return to politics Edit Portrait of Louis Joseph Papineau by Theophile Hamel In 1848 he was elected member of the new united Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada in the riding of Saint Maurice In severe disagreement with the emerging French Canadian Liberal Party he sat as an independent member A convinced republican after a long exile in the United States and France Papineau supported the Montreal Annexation Manifesto that called for Canada to join the United States of America 8 9 Louis Joseph Papineau along with John Molson Jr the son of John Molson and Horatio Gates served as the first Vice Presidents of the Montreal Mechanics Institute He participated in the creation of the Parti rouge He was defeated in 1851 but elected in a by election in 1852 He did not present himself again in the elections of 1854 He retired from public life and reappeared only once to hold a conference at the Institut Canadien de Montreal in December 1867 He died at his manor in Montebello Quebec near the modern Chateau Montebello on September 23 1871 Both Papineau s manor house in Montebello and his house in Montreal are National Historic Sites 10 11 and both are units of the national park system The one in Montreal designated in 1968 is closed to the public but the Montebello property designated in 1986 is open seasonally from May to October Papineau himself was named a National Historic Person in 1937 A federal plaque reflecting that status was finally unveiled in 2022 with plans to install it at Montebello On October 21 2012 a monument to his memory was unveiled at Saint Denis sur Richelieu by Quebec Premier Pauline Marois Family Edit Julie and Ezilda Papineau M Papineau married Julie Papineau nee Julie Bruneau in Quebec City on April 29 1818 Together they had 9 children 12 13 Amedee Papineau 1819 1903 heir of Louis Joseph Didier Papineau 1820 1821 Lachance Papineau 1822 1862 died in a mental institution Arthur Papineau 1824 1825 Aurelie Papineau 1826 1830 Ezilda Papineau 1828 1894 suffering from dwarfism did not have any children and stayed all her life in Montebello Quebec Gustave Papineau 1830 1851 Charles Papineau 1833 1834 Azelie Papineau 1834 1869 married the painter and architect Napoleon Bourassa 1827 1916 mother of Henri Bourassa a famous journalist 13 Bibliography EditMain article Bibliography of Louis Joseph Papineau A Chronology of the Life of Louis Joseph Papineau Manoir Papineau National Historic site of Canada Parks Canada Ouellet Fernand 1972 Papineau Louis Joseph In Hayne David ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol X 1871 1880 online ed University of Toronto Press Fernand Ouellet Louis Joseph Papineau A Divided Soul in Canadian Historical Association 11 Ottawa 1960 James Marsh Papineau Louis Joseph in the Canadian Encyclopedia Archived 2008 08 27 at the Wayback Machine Edmund Bailey O Callaghan A Biographical Sketch of the Hon Louis Joseph Papineau Speaker of the House of Assembly of Lower Canada in Sentinel Saratoga Springs 1838 Gustave Proulx Le Combat Magnifique Louis Joseph Papineau Montreal Les Presses de La Presse 1973 124 p Without ISBN Thomas Storrow Brown Brief sketch of the life and times of the late Hon Louis Joseph Papineau in New Dominion Monthly 1872 January 1872 20 pages Johnny Normand Pickering LeBlanc Le Memorial Papineau Editions du Fleuve Montreal 1989 14 Art Works EditPaintings Edit Napoleon Bourassa Louis Joseph Papineau beau pere de l artiste 1858 152 x 114 9 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 15 Alfred Boisseau Louis Joseph Papineau 1871 Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 16 Charles Alexander Smith L Assemblee des six comtes a Saint Charles sur Richelieu en 1837 1891 Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 17 Lithography Edit Gerome Fassio adapted from Antoine Maurin Louis Joseph Papineau 1844 lithography 37 8 x 30 7 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 18 Sculptures Edit Louis Philippe Hebert adapted from Napoleon Bourassa Louis Joseph Papineau 1874 28 8 x 14 x 11 5 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 19 Louis Philippe Hebert Louis Joseph Papineau 1887 75 x 28 x 24 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 20 Napoleon Bourassa Louis Joseph Papineau 1900 72 x 60 4 x 13 1 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 21 Napoleon Bourassa Louis Joseph Papineau 1900 48 x 37 x 10 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 22 Napoleon Bourassa Louis Joseph Papineau 1900 48 x 37 x 10 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 23 Napoleon Bourassa Louis Joseph Papineau 1900 58 x 45 5 x 10 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 24 Napoleon Bourassa Louis Joseph Papineau 1900 58 x 45 5 x 10 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 25 Napoleon Bourassa Louis Joseph Papineau 1900 48 x 37 x 10 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 26 Napoleon Bourassa Louis Joseph Papineau 1900 47 x 36 x 10 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 27 Photography Edit Thomas Coffin Doane Louis Joseph Papineau Daguerreotype c 1852 Library and Archives Canada reference 3195235Jules Isaie Benoit dit Livernois Louis Joseph Papineau Photographie d un tableau de Theophile Hamel 1863 Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 28 Unknown Louis Joseph Papineau de l album Eugene Hamel circa 1865 9 8 x 5 1 cm and 7 8 x 4 6 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 29 Henri Napoleon Grenier Louis Joseph Papineau de l album de collection dit de Napoleon Garneau 1870 1871 10 2 x 6 3 cm and 9 5 x 5 9 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 30 Unknown Le Musee du manoir Papineau a Montebello circa 1895 25 3 x 30 3 cm and 16 3 x 21 3 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 31 Photo engraving Edit Napoleon Bourassa Louis Joseph Papineau circa 1900 13 5 x 9 cm and 38 1 x 29 2 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 32 Drawing Edit Jobson Paradis La Chapelle funeraire Papineau Montebello circa 1900 1915 23 4 x 28 6 cm Musee national des beaux arts du Quebec Quebec 33 Note EditThe Art works section was copied and adapted from the French Wikipedia page of Louis Joseph Papineau See that page s history for attribution Archives EditThere is a Papineau family collection at Library and Archives Canada 34 There is also a Papineau family fonds at Bibliotheque et Archives nationales du Quebec 35 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Louis Joseph Papineau Wikisource has original text related to this article Louis Joseph Papineau Quebec nationalism History of Quebec Timeline of Quebec history Denis Benjamin Papineau Amedee Papineau Societe des Fils de la LiberteReferences Edit a b Ouellet Fernand 1972 Louis Joseph Papineau A Divided Soul Canadian Historical Association p 6 Station Papineau Metro Montreal Retrieved 15 May 2021 Soucy Yves 4 June 2008 L ecole Louis Joseph Papineau fete ses 100 ans LeDroit Retrieved 15 May 2021 Famille de Louis Joseph Papineau Bibliotheque nationale du Quebec Government of Quebec Retrieved December 31 2012 a b c d Ouellet Fernand 1972 Louis Joseph Papineau A Divided Soul Canadian Historical Association Bothwell Bob 2007 Penguin History of Canada Penguin Canada p 171 ISBN 978 0 14 318126 2 Ouellet Fernand 1972 Louis Joseph Papineau A Divided Soul Canadian Historical Association p 17 Gough Barry M 28 October 2010 Historical Dictionary of Canada Scarecrow Press p 67 ISBN 978 0 8108 7504 3 Retrieved 6 July 2013 Ouellet Fernand 1972 Papineau Louis Joseph In Hayne David ed Dictionary of Canadian Biography Vol X 1871 1880 online ed University of Toronto Press Louis Joseph Papineau Canadian Register of Historic Places Retrieved August 1 2011 Manoir Papineau Canadian Register of Historic Places Retrieved August 1 2011 Parks Canada Agency Government of Canada 2017 06 21 The Papineau family Manoir Papineau National Historic Site www pc gc ca Retrieved 2020 03 23 a b 1 13972 French website on M Papineau s family Archived from the original on 2016 03 04 Retrieved 2014 12 06 Pickering Leblanc J Normand 1989 Le memorial Papineau in French Montreal Editions du Fleuve ISBN 978 2 89372 028 9 OCLC 21447143 Louis Joseph Papineau beau pere de l artiste Bourassa Napoleon Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau D apres une photographie Boisseau Alfred Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau D apres une photographie Boisseau Alfred Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Fassio Gerome d apres Antoine Maurin Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Hebert Louis Philippe d apres Napoleon Bourassa Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Hebert Louis Philippe Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Bourassa Napoleon Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Bourassa Napoleon Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Bourassa Napoleon Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Bourassa Napoleon Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Bourassa Napoleon Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Bourassa Napoleon Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Bourassa Napoleon Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Photographie d un tableau de Theophile Hamel Livernois Jules Isaie Benoit dit Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau de l album Eugene Hamel Inconnu Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau de l album de collection dit de Napoleon Garneau Grenier Henri Napoleon Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Le Musee du manoir Papineau a Montebello Inconnu Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Louis Joseph Papineau Bourassa Napoleon Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 La Chapelle funeraire Papineau Montebello Paradis Jobson Collections MNBAQ Retrieved 2021 06 04 Papineau family collection Library and Archives Canada Retrieved September 17 2020 Papineau family fonds Bibliotheque et Archives nationales du Quebec Retrieved September 17 2020 External links Edit Biography Dictionnaire des parlementaires du Quebec de 1792 a nos jours in French National Assembly of Quebec W P M Kennedy ed 1930 The Ninety Two Resolutions of 1834 Statutes treaties and documents of the Canadian Constitution 1713 1929 Toronto Oxford University Press pp 270 290 Les 92 Resolutions PDF in French Unofficial English translation of the Political Testament of Louis Joseph Papineau Ancestry of Louis Joseph Papineau in French Historica s Heritage Minute video docudrama about Hart and Papineau Adobe Flash Player Louis Joseph Papineau The Demi God a 1961 National Film Board of Canada dramatization Adobe Flash Player Political officesPreceded byFrancois Viger MPP District of Kent1809 1814 Succeeded byNoel BreuxPreceded byEtienne Nivard Saint Dizier MPP District of Montreal West1814 1837 Succeeded bynonePreceded byFrancois Lesieur Desaulniers Moderate Reformer MLA District of Saint Maurice1848 1851 Succeeded byJoseph Edouard Turcotte Moderate Reformer Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Louis Joseph Papineau amp 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