In Lewiston, Maine, there’s a neighbourhood that old-timers still call Little Canada. The French-language newspaper is gone. The Grey Nuns’ hospital closed decades ago. The textile mills that drew nearly a million French Canadians across the border stand mostly silent.
But the descendants are still here. And under a law that took effect in December 2025, many of them have been Canadian citizens their entire lives without knowing it.
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The numbers
Maine has the highest percentage of residents with French ancestry of any state — roughly one in five. In Androscoggin County, where Lewiston sits, it’s one in three. New Hampshire is nearly identical. Vermont isn’t far behind. Massachusetts alone has more than 235,000 residents who specifically identify as French Canadian — and the true number with Canadian roots is almost certainly far higher than what the census captures.
The reason these numbers are so concentrated in one region comes down to a chapter of history that most Americans have never heard of.
The million who crossed the border
Between 1840 and 1930, nearly 900,000 French-speaking Canadians left Quebec for the northeastern United States. Historians call it La Grande Hémorragie—the Great Hemorrhage.
They came by train to work in the textile mills along New England’s rivers: Lewiston and Biddeford in Maine. Manchester and Nashua in New Hampshire. Lowell, Fall River, and Worcester in Massachusetts. Woonsocket in Rhode Island. The border, in that era, was barely a border at all.
They settled in dense neighbourhoods called Petit Canadas and built entire self-sustaining communities. French-language newspapers. Catholic schools that taught in French. Hospitals staffed by French-speaking nuns. The first credit union in the United States, founded by Franco-American millworkers in Manchester, New Hampshire. In Woonsocket, workers built St. Ann’s Church and painted it with frescoes so magnificent it was nicknamed “the Sistine Chapel of Woonsocket.”
They called their cultural doctrine la survivance — survival. For decades, you could be born, educated, married, and buried in Little Canada without speaking a word of English.
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Then they disappeared — or seemed to
The textile industry declined. The mills moved south. The younger generation moved to the suburbs and assimilated. The French parishes closed. In the 1960s, urban renewal programs literally bulldozed several Little Canada neighboiurhoods.
And the names changed. La Rivière became Rivers. Leblanc became White. Boisvert became Greenwood. Roy became King. Families that had been fiercely French-Canadian for generations became, within a generation or two, simply American.
The most famous example: Jean-Louis Lebris de Kérouac, born in Lowell’s Little Canada, who didn’t speak English until he was six. He became Jack Kerouac — the most American writer of his generation. He later said Canada “brooded in the air and haunted me.”
His story is the story of millions of Franco-American families. The Canadian roots are there. They’re just buried under a few generations of assimilation.
What the new law changes
Until December 2025, Canadian citizenship by descent was limited to one generation born abroad. For the descendants of the Great Hemorrhage — most of whom are three, four, or five generations removed from their Canadian ancestor — this meant citizenship was out of reach.
Bill C-3 eliminated that limit.
Under the new law, if you were born before December 15, 2025, and can trace an unbroken line of descent to a Canadian ancestor, you are eligible for Canadian citizenship — regardless of how many generations have passed. Your ancestor doesn’t need to have held a passport or ever applied for proof of citizenship. If they qualified under the law, their citizenship flows through every generation to you.
There is no language test. No residency requirement. No citizenship exam. No oath. The fee is $75. You are not applying to become a citizen — if you qualify, you already are one. You are applying for the certificate that proves it.
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How to find out if this is you
If you grew up in New England — or if your parents or grandparents did — and your family has any connection to French-Canadian heritage, the odds are real. Look for clues: a surname that sounds French or was once spelled differently. Grandparents who attended a French-speaking Catholic church. Family stories about ancestors from Quebec or “up north.”
You can check your potential eligibility using CanadaVisa’s online citizenship by descent calculator.
One important detail: if you qualify, your siblings almost certainly do too — and so do your cousins, their children, and anyone else who descends from the same ancestor. Once the documentary proof is established, it can support applications from your entire extended family.
A heritage reclaimed
Since Bill C-3 took effect, Quebec’s archives have reported a 3,000% increase in requests for vital records — most from Americans. Processing times for citizenship certificates sit at roughly 10 months, and the queue is growing.
For many Franco-Americans in New England, this isn’t just about a passport. Generations of families suppressed their language, anglicized their names, and quietly let go of an identity that had once defined entire communities. Bill C-3 offers something those communities never imagined: legal recognition that despite the name changes, the closed parishes, and the forgotten French, the Canadian connection was never actually severed.
The law doesn’t care whether your family remembers being Canadian. It only cares whether the chain is unbroken. For a lot of people in New England, it is.
To check whether you may be eligible, visit CanadaVisa’s citizenship by descent calculator.
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