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Communities

Carondelet, a Fathers’ Rendez-vous

Carondelet is a residential area in the city of St. … Lire la suite

Categories Communities, Traveling up the Missouri River

St. Louis and its champion traders

The city of St. Louis, Missouri, is located on the … Lire la suite

Categories Communities, Traveling up the Missouri River

Little Rock is more than a name, it’s a famous landmark

The city of Little Rock, Arkansas’ state capital, is located … Lire la suite

Categories Communities, Traveling up the Arkansas River

The peace pipe was first smoked in Tulsa in 1719

It is generally unknown that the French explored Oklahoma in … Lire la suite

Categories Communities, Traveling up the Arkansas River

The strength of the French-Quapaw alliance was key to Arkansas Post (south of Gillett)

A few miles south of the city of Gillett, Arkansas, … Lire la suite

Categories Communities, Traveling up the Arkansas River

Grand Forks (North Dakota) on the northern Red River

From 1770 the site known as “Les Grandes Fourches” was … Lire la suite

Categories Communities, Traveling up the Red River

In the Opelousas country trade was harmed by fear

The city of Opelousas is the seat of St. Landry … Lire la suite

Categories Communities, In Louisiana's Bayou Country

In the Attakapas district everyone could set up his own vacherie (Saint Martinville)

The city of Saint Martinville is the seat of St-Martin … Lire la suite

Categories Communities, In Louisiana's Bayou Country

Saint-Denis and his Caddo friends (Natchitoches)

On the west bank of the Red River of the … Lire la suite

Categories Communities, Traveling up the Red River

A perfume of France in Louisville

The city of Louisville in Kentucky State is situated on … Lire la suite

Categories Communities, From lake Erie to the Ohio River
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Historical Capsules

Authors

Jean-Marc Agator
is a French former engineer passionate about the history of Canada and of francophone communities throughout North America in all of their cultural diversity. He lives in Paris region.

/

Jean-Pierre Bernier
is a retired executive from the financial sector with a burning passion for America’s Francophonie and its fraternity. A Québec City native, he now lives in Aurora, Ontario.

/

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©Chemins de la Francophonie - Jean-Marc Agator 2026 | Réalisation du site Dominique Martigne

Communities

  • “La Petite Nuit”, Dubuque’s Native American Name
  • A memorable trip to Paris for Sergeant Dubois (Brunswick)
  • A perfume of France in Louisville
  • Among the Shawnee Nation (Lexington)
  • At Burnt Sugarcane (Kenner), the sweet sugar will wait
  • At Natchez, poppies are part of the landscape
  • At Pointe Coupée, the dead arm is alive and well (New Roads)
  • At West Lafayette, resisting is not surmounting
  • Baton Rouge, a name with multiple origins
  • Bellevue, the cradle of Nebraska
  • Biloxi, an aboriginal word meaning First Nation
  • Boisé or Woody (Boise), a distinctive name of French origin
  • Cahokia, one of the largest Native communities
  • Cape Girardeau, an ever-mysterious name
  • Carondelet, a Fathers’ Rendez-vous
  • Chez les Cansès, Kansas City‘s original name
  • Chicago where French is spoken since 1673
  • Daniel Greysolon Dulhut, the peacemaker at Fond du Lac (Duluth)
  • Dauphin Island, Alabama, where it all began
  • Detroit, a strategic location between two Great Lakes
  • Discovery of the Aransas Channel near Rockport
  • Discovery of the Falls of St. Anthony (Minneapolis)
  • Downtown Milwaukee, first visited in 1674
  • Epes, a stronghold never attacked
  • Florissant and its beautiful flowery valley
  • Fort Assumption led to Memphis’ location
  • Fort Cavagnial (Leavenworth), the French Connection to Santa Fe
  • Fort Crèvecoeur, a 1680 French-Peoria Agreement
  • Fort de Chartres and Prairie du Rocher go hand in hand
  • Fort Duquesne (Pittsburgh), the beginning of the end
  • Fort Maurepas (Ocean Springs), the cradle of Colonial French Louisiana
  • Fort Saint-Pierre in Vicksburg is 300 years old in 2019
  • Fort St. Louis (Inez-Victoria), a lost but well recognized effort
  • Fort Wayne, a providential portage at Kekionga
  • Fortification of Metropolis’ first economy in Southern Illinois
  • French artefacts found in Niles dating back to the 17th century
  • French was spoken in Tennessee as far back as 1682 (Randolph)
  • From Boucherville to Nashville, a story link that speaks volumes
  • From Concile’ Banks to Council Bluffs in 100 Years of History
  • From Tallow to Dream in New Madrid
  • From the City of the Gauls to New Bourbon (Ste. Geneviève)
  • Frontenac (Minnesota), directly linked to France’s royalty
  • Gift of King Louis XV of France to Kaskaskia (Chester)
  • Grand Forks (North Dakota) on the northern Red River
  • Green Bay named after the greenish color of a nearby ocean
  • If only the mountains at Sheridan could talk
  • In early American history Dupo was Prairie du Dupont on the King’s Highway
  • In Maumee, a fort can hide another
  • In the Attakapas district everyone could set up his own vacherie (Saint Martinville)
  • In the Opelousas country trade was harmed by fear
  • La Balise (Pilottown) against all odds
  • La Charrette (Marthasville), on the western frontier of Colonial Louisiana
  • La Salle’s mission was accomplished in Venice
  • LaPorte on the Cache la Poudre River near LaSalle
  • Little Rock is more than a name, it’s a famous landmark
  • Marquette, a highly esteemed and honored character
  • Maurice LeDuc’s General Store in Wetmore
  • Mine au Breton (Potosi) and its “lead soldier”
  • Mobile, the first Catholic parish in Colonial French Louisiana
  • New Orleans celebrates its 300th anniversary in 2018
  • Once upon a time in the West, “The Junction” became Watrous
  • Portage des Sioux, a bypass worthy of use and colonisation
  • Prairie du Chien, pronounced “prairie doo sheen”
  • Quebec in Big Sky State, with love
  • Racine’s name rightly chosen from early American history
  • Renault, a name from Picardie
  • Saint-Denis and his Caddo friends (Natchitoches)
  • Sainte Geneviève, a new national historical park
  • St. Louis and its champion traders
  • Surprising stories from North-East Texas (Wood County)
  • Texarkana, at the heart of Texas’ reputation
  • The “Petites Côtes” of St. Charles, an amazing story
  • The Eagles of Columbia remember L’Aigle in Normandy
  • The first metropolis in the western Great Lakes (Mackinaw)
  • The monsters of Alton (Cap-Rouge) according to Father Marquette
  • The peace pipe was first smoked in Tulsa in 1719
  • The strength of the French-Quapaw alliance was key to Arkansas Post (south of Gillett)
  • The surprising French history of Fort Pierre
  • The Three Notch Road leads to Fredericktown
  • The wonderful secrets of Fort La Boulaye (Phoenix)
  • Vincennes, a colony in a remarkable surviving mode
  • Waterloo, formerly La Belle Fontaine in the Illinois Country
  • Wetumpka, where great Alabama families were born
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