Nearly one in six Woonsocket residents may already be Canadian

author avatar
Asheesh Moosapeta
Published: June 13, 2026

In Woonsocket, Rhode Island, the old nickname still holds: la ville la plus française aux États-Unis — the most French city in the United States.

A recent change to Canadian law has turned that legacy into something concrete.

A conservative estimate suggests nearly one in six Woonsocket residents — roughly 7,000 people — descend from French-Canadian families. Many of them may already be Canadian citizens without knowing it.

That's because of Bill C-3, which took effect on December 15, 2025. The law removed the old first-generation limit on Canadian citizenship by descent. Now, in most cases, anyone born outside Canada before that date who can trace an unbroken line to a Canadian ancestor is already a citizen. They simply need to apply for a certificate to confirm it.

Get a Free Consultation on Applying for Proof of Canadian Citizenship

Why 7,000 is almost certainly an undercount

That one-in-six figure comes from self-reported ancestry data. And self-reporting misses a lot.

Over the generations, many French-Canadian families in New England anglicized their names. Leblanc became White. Charpentier became Carpenter. La Rivière became Rivers. A family that has gone by "White" for a century may not check a French-Canadian box on any survey — even with a Quebec-born ancestor a few branches back.

The splitting of "dit names" was also a common occurrence, with only one half of a name preserved for the entire subsequent family tree.

Others simply lost the thread.

So the true number of Woonsocket residents with a Canadian ancestor is likely higher than the ancestry data shows, and the only way to know for certain is to trace the line back.

You can check where your family line stands using CanadaVisa’s citizenship by descent eligibility checker.

How Woonsocket became the most French city in America

Woonsocket's French story began in the 1840s, when mill owners recruited the first French-Canadian families from Quebec to work the looms.

They kept coming for decades. Between roughly 1865 and 1910, Quebecois migrants poured into the Blackstone Valley, drawn by steady factory wages they couldn't find on Quebec farms.

They built their own world once they arrived — French-language newspapers, Catholic schools, and parishes like Precious Blood, organized in 1872.

By 1900, French Canadians made up about 60% of Woonsocket's population, according to the Woonsocket Historical Society. By 1930, the figure had climbed to roughly 70% — about 35,000 of the city's 50,000 residents. A 1913 study ranked Woonsocket first among American cities by the share of residents who spoke French.

That density is why Woonsocket stands out. Few places in the United States concentrated French-Canadian settlement so tightly, for so long.

What this means for eligible residents

A Woonsocket resident who descends from a Canadian ancestor may already hold Canadian citizenship under the new law. But citizenship and the paperwork that proves it are two different things.

To confirm their status, an applicant must obtain a proof of Canadian citizenship certificate — an official document issued by Canada's citizenship department, which is needed to obtain a Canadian passport.

The application has to show a continuous chain of descent from a Canadian ancestor, with documents for every generation in between. The core records are usually birth certificates, baptismal records, marriage certificates, and death certificates.

Because most Woonsocket applicants will trace their line to Quebec, many will need records from the province's vital records registry. Demand there has surged: Quebec's national archives have reported a roughly 3,000% increase in requests since the law changed.

Applicants can file on their own or hire a representative authorized by the Canadian government, such as a Canadian immigration lawyer, to assemble the application and manage the process.

The current processing time for proof of citizenship certificates has continued to swell since Canada opened its doors, and is now about 15 months.

U.S.-Canadian dual citizens hold the full rights of both countries, including the right to live and work in Canada permanently and to vote in Canadian elections, subject to residency rules. Claiming Canadian citizenship adds no U.S. tax obligations.

Most applicants aren't packing their bags. Many are well-established professionals who simply want the option of a backup that their family can keep.

Where Woonsocket residents can start

Woonsocket residents have an unusual advantage: one of the country's best French-Canadian genealogy resources is in their own city.

The American-French Genealogical Society, at 78 Earle Street, holds more than 20,000 volumes of vital records, family genealogies, and historical material focused on French-Canadian descent.

For someone trying to trace a line back to Quebec, it's a rare head start.

The further back you can follow your family, the better your odds of finding the Canadian ancestor who makes the difference.

Get a Free Consultation on Applying for Proof of Canadian Citizenship

Methodology: The estimate of roughly 7,000 residents is based on American Ancestors' summary of U.S. Census Bureau ancestry data, which puts Woonsocket's French-Canadian ancestry share at 16.1%, applied to Census Reporter's 2024 American Community Survey five-year population estimate of 43,521.

Ancestry is self-reported and is not the same as citizenship or a documented chain of descent. Because many families anglicized their names or no longer identify as French-Canadian, this figure likely understates the number of residents with Canadian ancestry. It is a heritage estimate, not a count of confirmed citizens or eligible applicants.

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