Ernestine Poulin has seen Anticosti go through the ages, from the hunting territory of a rich foreign chocolatier to a national park with world-renowned heritage. Now 100 years old, it tells the story of a multi-faceted island, isolated, but populated by “grandiose” deer. An island she will never abandon.
At 100, I don’t feel like I did at 50
says Ernestine Poulin, adjusting her hearing aid.
After more than a century of life, his steps are slow, hesitant, and his hearing is no longer what it used to be.
Despite everything, to the great dismay of her daughter Ginette Gagnon, she sometimes climbs the three floors of her century-old house to access her many memories, piled up in the attic.
She takes out little nuggets, including photos of her parents dating from the end of the 19th century.
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In the photo, we can see Ernestine Poulin in front of Château Menier. The villa, built for French chocolatier Henri Menier in 1899, burned down in 1953.
Photo : Radio-Canada
That’s me! I was 23 years old there, in front of the Menier castle which was still standing
she says.
An island with a unique destiny
Ernestine Poulin was born in Port-Menier in 1924. At the time, the island was still the property of the French chocolatier Henri Menier who had made Anticosti his private hunting ground, by introducing white-tailed deer.
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Ernestine Poulin remains marked by the death of her mother who succumbed to complications linked to her fifth birth.
Photo: Radio-Canada / Alban Normandin
Two years later, the island was bought by Wayagamack Pulp and Paper which later became Consolidated Bathurst, commonly called the Console
by the residents of the island.
The arrival of the forestry industry heralds an era of economic development on the island.
At the dawn of the Second World War, Ernestine Poulin remembers well being at the side of her father, Ernest Poulin, when he went to meet Germans
who landed on the island by boat.
At the time, the mysterious group of investors wanted to buy the island.
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The expeditions of German investors to Anticosti Island are the subject of a book entitled “The German Expedition to Anticosti Island” by Hugues Théorêt. (Archive photo)
Photo: Éditions Septentrion
In the 1940s, while the war was in full swing, Ernestine Poulin met Gérard Gagnon, originally from Saint-Fabien, near Rimouski.
The latter visited Anticosti after returning from the front.
The couple married in 1947. They had two children and adopted a third.
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Ernestine Poulin resided in the former village of Anse aux Fraises on Anticosti Island. Today, you can see some ruins there.
Photo: Radio-Canada / Alban Normandin
My mother is a force of nature. Its roots are truly anchored in the island
says their daughter Ginette Gagnon, now in her seventies.
Although Ginette Gagnon left Anticosti Island at the age of 20 to settle in the Quebec region, the memories from the cradle of his childhood
never left her.
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According to Ginette Gagnon, Ernestine Poulin’s residence is also a hundred years old.
Photo: Radio-Canada / Alban Normandin
[L’île] I still miss it. […] I was raised in nature, by the sea
she said.
For her part, Ernestine Poulin says: I wasn’t bored on the island
.
In the 1950s, according to Ms. Gagnon, the village of Port-Menier was particularly dynamic.
There were large families of around ten children, a school full of people and the lush wildlife allowed the families to feed themselves. to their hunger
.
AndClub
also existed. There was a bowling alley, a pool hall, a restaurant, a cinema
lists Ginette Gagnon.
At that time, his father and mother ran a small inn and hosted tourists.
Residents even received deliveries from former retail giant Eaton’s, which delivered goods by boat and plane to the island.
Between 1926 and 1974, the island reached its demographic peak with more than 800 residents and 3,000 employees.
In 1974, the island was sold to the Quebec government and Consolidated Bathurst ended its operations.
The post-“Console” era
With the departure of the island’s main employer, the families left
says Ms. Gagnon.
Several families moved to Saguenay or Haute-Côte-Nord, where the forestry industry is still alive and profitable.
It fell quieter
she judges.
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The town of Port-Menier only has 175 residents. (Archive photo)
Photo: Radio-Canada / Alban Normandin
Although she is saddened by the demographic decline of the island, she salutes the inhabitants of the island whom she describes as resourceful
et valiant
.
Even those who left the island, they still have the island in their hearts. You don’t take the island out of the islander.
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Ernestine Poulin is a fervent Catholic.
Photo: Radio-Canada / Alban Normandin
His mother now lives alone, surrounded by crosses and statuettes of Saint-Joseph and Saint-Frère-André.
Asked if she wants to leave the island one day, Ernestine Poulin answers in the negative.
The idea of leaving your pink house facing the sea for a seniors’ residence in Sept-Îles or Quebec City does not doesn’t interest him
.
A fervent Catholic, Ernestine Poulin recites her prayers every day.
I said to him: O God Almighty, make me live again. And he keeps me alive, huh?
replies the centenarian.
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