René-Charles de Breslay

René-Charles de Breslay (June 1658 – 4 December 1735) was born and educated in France where he spent a number of years as “gentleman in waiting of the privy chamber of the king”. Following this period, he entered the order of Saint-Sulpice and became a Sulpician in 1689.

Life

Montreal

Breslay came to New France in 1694 and was stationed in Montreal; first as a curate and then as a parish priest at Notre-Dame. He became fluent in Algonquin and in March 1703, moved as parish priest to the Saint-Louis Mission in Sainte-Anne-du-bout-de-l'Ile, succeeding priest François-Saturnin Lascaris d'Urfé. This parish was initially located at the western end of Montreal Island at Pointe-Caron (at the site of the present-day Baie-d'Urfé yacht club).[1] He was able to establish an Algonquin mission at Île-aux-Tourtres, a project much promoted and planned for by another Sulpician, Michel Barthélemy. Around 1703 Breslay moved the mission from Baie d'Urfé to Isle aux tourtes, for the Nipissing Indians.

Around 1712, Breslay (1658–1735) got caught in a fierce snowstorm. He fell from his horse, broke his leg on the ice, and lost the horse. Breslay invoked Saint Anne, after which he built a chapel dedicated to her at the westernmost point of Montreal Island next to Fort Senneville and Tourtes Island (Île aux Tourtes). Two years later, the parish was reestablished and took the name Sainte-Anne-du-bout-de-l'Isle.[1] He also served the mission church Saint-Joachim de la pointe Claire.

Breslay spent 16 years serving that area during which he was involved in three important events: the first saw the establishment of a new parish of St. Anne, the second was his interactions with Governor Philippe de Rigaud Vaudreuil regarding the brandy question and the third involved his assistance to François Dollier de Casson with the canal project to bypass Sault-Saint-Louis.[2]

Île Saint Jean

Father Breslay went to France in (1719–20) to discuss his missions and the brandy problem. There he met the Comte de Saint-Pierre who had been granted the lands then known as Île Saint Jean and Breslay was recruited to be the first parish priest on Île Saint Jean (Prince Edward Island), which also involved serving at Beaubassin as a missionary priest to the Miꞌkmaq.[2][3]


At the same time he was made vicar general of the bishopric of Quebec. In 1721 he arrived with another Sulpician, Marie-Anselme de Metivier on Île Saint Jean and together they began the structure of what became the Roman Catholic Diocese of Charlottetown. They arrived at Port-LaJoye in early spring and built a small church dedicated to St. John the Evangelist. After two years they handed over the parish on St. John's Island to the Franciscans of Louisbourg.[4]

After another voyage to France in 1723 Father Breslay, served as a parish priest at Louisbourg (Île Royale), and subsequently was appointed to Annapolis Royal. A good beginning under Lieutenant-Governor Doucett turned to fleeing from Lieutenant-Governor Armstrong to a Miꞌkmaq camp. When Governor Richard Philipps returned to Annapolis in 1729, he was restored to his parish. He retired the next year to France.[2]

Breslay contributed significantly to the New World during his various postings. However, he appears to have had frequent conflicts with a variety of colonial authorities.

gollark: It has one, though.
gollark: That's not the same thing...
gollark: But they're nice people, hopefully, and also someone would probably notice.
gollark: Also, if I remember correctly, taxing externalities.
gollark: Politely asking citizens to pay some of their income to it.

References

  1. "History", City of Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue
  2. Chard, E. A. (1979) [1969]. "Breslay, René-Charles de". In Hayne, David (ed.). Dictionary of Canadian Biography. II (1701–1740) (online ed.). University of Toronto Press.
  3. Macmillan, J.C. (1908). "Diocese of Charlottetown" . In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. 3. New York: Robert Appleton Company. p. 632.
  4. Macmillan, John C. (1905). The Early History of the Catholic Church in Prince Edward Island. Quebec: Evenement Printing Company. p. 10.
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