As the REBELLIONS OF 1837 approached, Louis-Joseph PAPINEAU was becoming more radical; Parent, a clearheaded pragmatist, abandoned him in 1835 and preached moderation for both parties. Denounced as a traitor by many Patriotes, he was nonetheless imprisoned by the English governor in 1838-39 for "seditious schemings." With the establishment of the PROVINCE OF CANADA in 1841, the polemicist resigned himself to fight only for the equality of "the two populations and the two countries."
He was elected to the Assembly in 1841 but soon had to withdraw because of his deafness, developed in prison. Appointed clerk of the Executive Council 14 October 1842, he resigned from the management of Le Canadien, although he continued to contribute to it occasionally (1847, 1851-54). He became assistant secretary for Lower Canada in 1847 and federal undersecretary of state from 1868 to his retirement in 1872. After 1840 he was often consulted by political figures, and between 1846 and 1852 he gave 8 important lectures including 5 at the INSTITUT CANADIEN of Montréal. In these he invited his compatriots to become involved in industry and business and to study political economy; he proposed ways to improve education and ameliorate the lot of the working class; and he stressed the importance of the intellectual and spiritual, and of the priest in society. Nourished by the best American and European sources, his strong-minded originality was rooted in Canadian soil. He was called the Nestor of the Canadian press and the Victor Cousin of America.
Author RENÉ DIONNE
Links to Other Sites
Étienne Parent
Watch the Heritage Minute about Étienne Parent from the Historica-Dominion Institute. See also related online learning resources.
Étienne Parent
A biography of Étienne Parent from the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online.


The story of the founding of Montreal is perhaps unique in history....
INSIDE TCE
