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HUOT, MARIE-FRANÇOISE, named Sainte-Gertrude, sister of the Congregation of Notre-Dame, teacher, and superior of the community (superior general); b. 10 Oct. 1795 in L’Ange-Gardien, Lower Canada, daughter of Pierre-Michel Huot and Marie-Françoise Huot; d. 8 Nov. 1850 in Montreal.

Marie-Françoise Huot spent some time at the boarding-school run by the Congregation of Notre-Dame in Sainte-Famille on Île d’Orléans. In 1815, at the age of 19 years and 9 months, she entered the noviciate in Montreal. She took the habit on 26 June 1816, receiving the name Sainte-Gertrude, and then on 10 July 1817 made her vows. Subsequently she taught in various missions: Saint-Laurent on the island of Montreal, Saint-François (at Saint-François-Montmagny), Lower Town Quebec, Sainte-Marie-de-la-Nouvelle-Beauce (Sainte-Marie), Saint-Denis on the Richelieu, Terrebonne, and Berthier, as well as at the boarding-school of the mother house in Montreal. She was back in Lower Town when she was chosen to be assistant superior of the community in 1839. The next year she was elected superior, but only held the office for three years, being forced by illness to insist upon being relieved of it. She did, however, remain assistant to the superior, Marie-Catherine Huot*, named Sainte-Madeleine, until 1848. She then entered the infirmary, where she died of cancer two years later.

Sister Sainte-Gertrude’s superiorship came at the time when Ignace Bourget* assumed authority as bishop of the diocese of Montreal. The Congregation of Notre-Dame was affected in both its internal life and its external development by the zeal and the authoritarian style of Bourget, who declared himself “the principal pastor in the community.” On 30 April 1843, following a visitation during which he brought together all the sisters of the mother house and the missions, he issued a pastoral letter about their affairs. In it he dealt with many articles of the rule, from the religious training of novices to the wearing of “cotton and flannel bonnets, as well as linen ones,” and the employment of “dark-coloured handkerchiefs if [the sisters] use tobacco.”

Several amendments to the rule affected the teaching provided by the sisters. Bourget decreed, for example, that lay women teachers could be appointed to assist them in schools in the suburbs, especially for teaching English. He also ordered them to exchange their traditional method of instruction for that of the Frères de la Doctrine Chrétienne, and to admit into the missions as day pupils “young girls whose parents might be too poor to pay for their board at the convent.” The sisters accepted such changes reluctantly, and Sister Sainte-Gertrude spoke for them to the bishop, who, fearing “the serious inconveniences that occur, in religious communities as elsewhere, when the authorities are turned with the wind like a weathercock,” insisted on having the final word.

Under Sister Sainte-Gertrude’s superiorship, the Congregation of Notre-Dame decided in 1841 to move its Quebec mission to a site near the church of Notre-Dame-des-Victoires in Saint-Roch parish, in accordance with a wish expressed by Bishop Joseph-Octave Plessis* before his death. The community also founded a convent in the parish of Saint-Joseph, at Les Cèdres, which became its fifteenth mission in the countryside, despite the fact that there were only about 80 sisters all told.

Until that time they had had establishments only in the dioceses of Quebec and Montreal, and in French-speaking environments, even though they gave a class in English for the boarders and day boarders in Montreal. Late in 1841, yielding to pressure from Rémi Gaulin*, bishop of Kingston, and Bourget, they founded their Kingston mission. Three of the sisters who had volunteered for it were chosen and approved by Bourget. In Montreal the Mélanges religieux of 3 December commented upon the Kingston foundation: “It is time for the daughters of the admirable Marguerite [Bourgeoys*, named du Saint-Sacrement], to go and carry the spirit and the virtues of their founder elsewhere.” It was the Congregation of Notre-Dame’s first mission in the modern sense of the term. Speaking about it the sisters admitted “that on seeing their premises . . . they began to envy Mother Bourgeoys’s stable.” On 9 Jan. 1842 Abbé Jean-Charles Prince* wrote to the superior, “The work of founding your institute in Kingston seems to me important enough to be of interest later for the ecclesiastical and religious history of Canada.” While the boarding- and day-schools were being organized in Kingston, the sisters had agreed to set up a mission at Red River (Man.), where in Bishop Joseph-Norbert Provencher*’s view the Hudson’s Bay Company wanted Canadian priests and nuns rather than French missionaries. But the bishop of Quebec had already made arrangements with the Sisters of Charity of the Hôpital Général of Montreal [see Marie-Louise Valade*, named Mother Valade], and the Congregation of Notre-Dame “received a polite refusal until further notice.”

The life of the Congregation of Notre-Dame under Sister Sainte-Gertrude makes patent the community’s subordination to ecclesiastical authority. It thus contradicts the school of historiography which contends that the nuns were self-governing women and “the first feminists” in Canadian and Quebec history. Having taken the vow to renounce personal independence, these women showed no desire for collective independence. By conviction and by obedience they were clearly submissive to the hierarchical church.

Andrée Désilets

ACAM, RLB, IV–VI. ANQ-Q, CE1-3, 11 oct. 1795. Arch. de la Congrégation de Notre-Dame (Montréal), Reg. des baptêmes et sépultures. [D.-A. Lemire-Marsolais, dite Sainte-Henriette, et] Thérèse Lambert, dite Sainte-Marie-Médiatrice, Histoire de la Congrégation de Notre-Dame (11v. en 13 parus, Montréal, 1941–  ), 8: 177; 9: 234–41. Pouliot, Mgr Bourget et son temps, vol.3.

General Bibliography

Cite This Article

Andrée Désilets, “HUOT, MARIE-FRANÇOISE, Sainte-Gertrude,” in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 7, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003–, accessed March 29, 2024, http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/huot_marie_francoise_7E.html.

The citation above shows the format for footnotes and endnotes according to the Chicago manual of style (16th edition). Information to be used in other citation formats:


Permalink:   http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/huot_marie_francoise_7E.html
Author of Article:   Andrée Désilets
Title of Article:   HUOT, MARIE-FRANÇOISE, Sainte-Gertrude
Publication Name:   Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 7
Publisher:   University of Toronto/Université Laval
Year of publication:   1988
Year of revision:   1988
Access Date:   March 29, 2024