New East Campus Exhibits Celebrate Lowell鈥檚 French Canadian Immigrants

A person reads a panel about Little Canada Image by Ed Brennen
A passerby reads about the history of Little Canada on the informational panel that the university recently installed in the Northern Canal overlook park.

12/03/2020
By Ed Brennen

Standing with her camera on the Northern Canal bridge on East Campus, Meagan Timmins 鈥20 couldn鈥檛 imagine someone cooling off on a hot summer day by leaping from the roof of a three-story tenement into the canal below.

But that鈥檚 one of the stories that Timmins heard while working on herHonors Collegecapstone project: a 鈥渢hen and now鈥 video about the Little Canada neighborhood that once stood on UML鈥檚 East Campus.

鈥淪tories like that really stuck out to me,鈥 says Timmins, a history and world languages double-major from Tewksbury, Massachusetts. 鈥淚t was so interesting to learn about the day-to-day lives of the people that were living right where students are today.鈥

One of the images Timmins used in her project 鈥 a 1964 photo of tenement buildings hugging the Northern Canal, where the Fox Hall parking lot now stands 鈥 is prominently featured in a series of new informational panels that the university recently installed to celebrate the life and times of Lowell鈥檚 French Canadian immigrants.

The four panels, which draw on the research of History Prof.Robert Forrantand several students, are a collaborative project between the university鈥檚Facilities ManagementandCommunity Relationsoffices, the,and the.

The wayside panels are located in the new Northern Canal overlook park (at the corner of University Avenue and Pawtucket Street), on the still-under-construction Northern Canal bridge, and outside the entrances of theCampus Recreation Complexand LeLacheur Park.

鈥淎s a historian, one of the things I鈥檓 always interested in is finding ways for people to bump into history in unlikely spaces,鈥 says Forrant, who began thinking about the project three years ago while working with students to create the onlineLibrary of New England Immigration. 鈥淚f they bump into something unexpected, it piques their curiosity. And hopefully they鈥檒l want to find out more.鈥
鈥淭he more we can understand and share immigrant stories, the better. People can see similarities in those stories and connect in ways they might not otherwise.鈥 -History Prof. Robert Forrant

From 1860 to 1900, around 31,000 French Canadians migrated to Lowell to work in the city鈥檚 textile mills, makingLe Petit Canadaone of the most densely populated neighborhoods in the United States. Residents preserved their Canadian Catholic culture through the tradition of鈥淟a Survivance,鈥participating in social clubs and civic and religious organizations.

鈥淭here was a strong sense of cultural identity in the French Canadian community,鈥 saysSophie Combs, a senior history major (and French language minor) who is writing a paper on the city鈥檚 Franco American Orphanage for her final Honors College project. 鈥淭here was a great sense of solidarity, of helping each other out and assisting your neighbor.鈥

Most of Little Canada鈥檚 buildings were lost to urban renewal projects beginning in the 1960s, although the culture has survived through social organizations such as Club Passe-Temps.

As a third-generation French Canadian born in Lowell in 1960, Dave Ouellette has faint memories of the old neighborhood. He was delighted to see the new Little Canada panels on campus.

鈥淭hey are absolutely incredible,鈥 says Ouellette, founding president of ACTION (Acre Coalition to Improve Our Neighborhood), a group that has worked with the university on projects like theDecatur WAYart space. 鈥淐hancellor (Jacquie) Moloney has always been a great partner, and this is another wonderful success by 51视频.鈥
A view of a Little Canada panel on the bridge over the Northern Canal Image by Ed Brennen
The new panel on the Northern Canal bridge, looking toward the Wannalancit Business Center, shows the Little Canada tenements that once lined the waterway.

Forrant, who leads neighborhood walks focused on immigration and labor for the Lowell National Historical Park, says it鈥檚 important for the university to invest time and resources into telling the stories of the city.

鈥淭he more we can understand and share immigrant stories, the better,鈥 he says. 鈥淧eople can see similarities in those stories and connect in ways they might not otherwise.鈥

Laurel Racine, chief of cultural resources for Lowell National Historical Park, agrees.

鈥淭hese panels will help us remember the people, stories and structures of Lowell's historic French Canadian neighborhood and the important role this community plays in our city,鈥 Racine says.

While they didn鈥檛 play a direct role in creating the panels, Combs and Timmins are happy to see that their research work with Forrant on the city鈥檚 diverse tapestry of immigrants can help enlighten future River Hawks as they walk to class from their East Campus residence halls.听

鈥淭he plaques are a great way to acknowledge that, hey, you鈥檙e on this historic land in a city that is easily one of the most important in industrial history,鈥 Timmins says. 鈥淎s a student, it鈥檚 nice to know the history of where you are.鈥

鈥淲e鈥檙e very lucky,鈥 adds Combs, an Andover, Massachusetts, native who will graduate in December. 鈥淣ot every undergraduate gets a chance to do this kind of in-depth research into something that鈥檚 so important.鈥