"Échos de Mont-Carmel"
published 9 July 1903 in the Moncton newspaper L'Évangéline
Après la magnifique église en brique qui a été bâtie comme par enchantement, le Père Arsenault a fait bâtir un presbytère qui est sans contredit le plus magnifique de ce genre qu'il y ait dans tout le diocèse. Cette structure en brique est de 45 x 40 pieds, à deux étages. La façade offre un coup d'oeil des plus charmants. On arrive à la porte principale en franchissant plusieurs degrés. En entrant on trouve, à la droite, une magnifique chambre finie dans les derniers goûts. Cet appartement occupe la moitié du premier étage. À gauche se trouvent une autre chambre spacieuse et la salle à manger.
Arrivé au second étage on rencontre un corridor qui traverse la bâtisse d'un côté à l'autre. Du côté qui donne sur le détroit est la chambre épiscopale. Un balcon érigé en dehors s'élève jusqu'au 2me étage, d'où l'on obtient un magnifique coup-d'oeil sur le détroit et les rives opposées.
Deux tourelles, une chaque côté de la porte d'entrée, s'élèvent à la hauteur du toit. Entre ces deux tourelles est un balcon, ainsi qu'un autre qui est plus spacieux du côté qui donne sur l'église.
Le presbytère est chauffé à la vapeur et contient tous les appareils en usage selon le système moderne. De tout en tout, le presbytère et l'église de Mont-Carmel sont des monuments qui font honnneur à l'énergique pasteur et aux braves paroisisens.
Presbytère Mont-Carmel, vers 1903
( The Acadian Museum has the original
framed picture of the presbytery - this image
was scanned from the 1998
publication for the 100th anniversary of the church. )
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The following is a translation to English of the above article by Google Translate...
"Échos de Mont-Carmel"
July 9, 1903 L'Évangéline, Moncton
After the beautiful brick church was built as if by magic, Father Arsenault has built a rectory which is arguably the most beautiful of its kind there throughout the diocese. This brick structure is 45 x 40 feet, with two floors. The front offers a look more charming. We arrive at the main gate by crossing several degrees. On entering there is to the right, a beautiful finished room in the latest tastes. This apartment occupies half of the first floor. At left is another spacious room and dining room. Arriving on the second floor a corridor through the building from one side to the other are encountered. Side overlooking the strait is the Episcopal room. Balcony erected outside rises to 2nd floor, where a magnificent sight obtained of the strait and opposite sides.
Two towers, one on each side of the front door, stood at the height of the roof. Between these two towers is a balcony, and another that is larger on the side that faces the church.
The rectory is steamed and contains all devices in use according to the modern system. All in all, the rectory and the church of Mount Carmel are monuments that honor the energetic pastor and brave parishioners.
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Here also is a picture of father Pierre-Paul Arsenault (1867-1927)
who had the church and the presbytery built at Mont-Carmel.
( thanks Georges Arsenault for this information )
ARSENAULT, PIERRE-PAUL (baptized PeterArseneaux),
Roman Catholic priest, educator, farmer, and folklorist; b. 18 May 1867 in
Tignish, P.E.I., son of Sylvain Arsenault and Tharsile Bernard, d. 22 Nov. 1927
in Mont-Carmel, P.E.I.
Pierre-Paul Arsenault was one of the prime
movers of the Acadian community in Prince Edward Island early in the 20th
century. One of ten children in a family of modest means, he grew up on a small
farm and attended the local school. In 1884, through a bursary established in
1877 by Father Sylvain-Éphrem Perrey*, he was able to enrol at the Collège
Saint-Joseph in Memramcook, N.B. While there, he distinguished himself not only
by academic brilliance, but also by participation in sports and cultural activities.
He was in turn treasurer, president, and secretary of the Société
Saint-Jean-Baptiste, which promoted French language and culture within the
bilingual institution. Having completed the classical program in 1889, he
stayed on at the college, teaching and studying theology. He finished his
theological course at the Grand Séminaire de Québec, where he was ordained on 5
Nov. 1893.
Immediately after his ordination,
Arsenault returned to his native parish, where he remained for nearly a year as
assistant priest. He then moved to St Dunstan’s parish in Charlottetown; his
service as assistant priest there lasted until October 1896, when he was
appointed curé of the small Acadian parish of Notre-Dame-du-Mont-Carmel. He
held this charge for the rest of his life. Because of his appealing and dynamic
personality, he soon succeeded in bringing the parishioners together and
carrying out major projects, including the erection of one of the most
remarkable churches in the province, a neo-gothic structure designed by Quebec
architect René-Pamphile Lemay.
Like many parish
priests of the day, Arsenault worked a farm where he put into practice the best
techniques of the day, and it served as a model for the farmers of his parish.
To promote the agricultural movement, Arsenault also took part in local
organizations. He played a key role, for example, in setting up the Prince
Edward Island Co-operative Egg and Poultry Association in 1914, and was its
first president. This cooperative, which brought together the many Egg Circles
throughout the Island, sought to maintain the quality of the produce and to
obtain a good price for its members, for whom the sale of eggs represented an
important supplementary income.
The causes
dearest to Father Arsenault’s heart were education for Acadians and promotion
of the French language. At the local level, he ensured that the schools were
well run and he personally helped the most promising students prepare for the
provincial Board of Education examinations and continue their studies at
college. In 1900 he set up a library of French books and, in order to emphasize
the importance of speaking the language well, he produced plays.
Arsenault also
was active as an educator within the Association des Instituteurs Acadiens de
l’Île-du-Prince-Édouard [see Joseph-OctaveArsenault*]. From 1897 to 1927 he took part in its
annual conventions, in particular by giving lectures on teaching methods, the
benefits of reading, the art of public speaking, and the importance of having a
thorough grasp of Acadian and Canadian history. Several times he served on its
committee for choosing school textbooks in French, which then had to be
submitted to the Board of Education for approval.
Father Arsenault
is said to have been the chief founder of the Société Saint-Thomas d’Aquin,
which was established in 1919 on the occasion of the annual convention of the
Association des Instituteurs Acadiens. The new organization’s primary aim was
to raise money for promising candidates to study at college or university.
Arsenault served as vice-president (1919–20) and president (1920–25) of this
society, which played a preponderant role for the Island’s Acadian and
francophone community, becoming its chief institutional voice.
As a student at
the Collège Saint-Joseph, Arsenault had associated with a few professors who
were trying to make the history of the Acadians better known and who advocated
the preservation of their oral and material heritage. One of these was Father
Philéas-Frédéric Bourgeois*. It was probably through his influence that
Father Arsenault, with the help of Father Théodore Gallant, a musician,
collected traditional songs from older people in the Acadian community,
including versions from the French repertoire as well as local compositions.
These 130 pieces constitute the earliest collection of Acadian folksongs. In
1924 Senator Pascal Poirier*, to whom Arsenault had given his collection,
turned it over to Marius Barbeau* of
the Victoria Memorial Museum in Ottawa.
Arsenault also
drew up the genealogies of the founding families of the parish of
Notre-Dame-du-Mont-Carmel and published them in 1912. He preserved a number of
farm implements and domestic appliances which are now part of the collection of
the Acadian Museum of Prince Edward Island at Miscouche.
Pierre-Paul
Arsenault’s health had been deteriorating for several years and he died at the
age of 60. An enlightened leader and pragmatist with widely varied interests,
he was one of the outstanding leaders of the Acadian community in Prince Edward
Island. With his engaging personality, he was able to win the respect and
admiration not only of his compatriots, but of all Islanders. The Summerside
Pioneer, announcing his death on its front page, commented, “The whole province
has sustained a heavy loss.” In the Mount Carmel cemetery, where he was buried,
parishioners erected a magnificent monument in the form of a chapel, a fitting
memorial for this man “of far-ranging and lofty ideas.”
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