Leloutre, Jean Louis
LELOUTRE, JEAN LOUIS
Missionary; b. Morlaix. France, Sept. 26, 1709; d. Nantes, France, 1772. After ordination at the seminary of the Paris Foreign Mission Society in 1737, he was sent to Canada to the parish of Annapolis, Nova Scotia, but he was detained in Louisbourg, Cape Breton Island. He was named as missionary to the Acadian Micmacs (Nova Scotia) and arrived in Schubenacadie in 1738. In 1745 he returned to Louisbourg as military chaplain. Following a trip to France, he resumed his missionary work among the Micmacs in 1749. In 1754 he was named vicar-general of Quebec. He was taken prisoner by the English after the fall of Ft. Beausejour and was deported to the Island of Jersey (1758–63). After the Treaty of Paris he was released; he returned to France, where he became involved in arrangements for the settlement of the Acadians at Belle-isle-en-mer, Canada.
Bibliography: n. m. roger, "The Abbé Le Loutre," Canadian Historical Review 11 (1930): j. b. brebner, New England's Outpost (New York 1927). j. c. webster, The Career of Abbé Le Loutre (privately printed; Shediac, N.B. 1933).
[g. carriÈre]