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‘French boy:’ Maine writer explores era of discovery and loss in the 1950s

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‘French boy:’ Maine writer explores era of discovery and loss in the 1950s


Author Denis Ledoux at his home in Lisbon Falls, where he wrote his latest book, “French Boy: A 1950s Franco-American Childhood.” Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal

Thousands of kids grew up in Lewiston and its surrounding towns in the years following World War II, but few had the time, skill or inclination to tell the story of what it was like.

Writer Denis Ledoux’s new memoir, “French Boy: A 1950s Franco-American Childhood,” is a valuable exception.

“It’s more than just a memoir,” said James Myall, who co-authored a history titled “The Franco-Americans of Lewiston-Auburn.”

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Ledoux called his new book “the story of my tribe at a time when so much that was dear to us was being lost.”

The cover of Denis Ledoux’s book. Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal

“It’s not all about me,” he said.

An award-winning writer and historian, Ledoux also teaches memoir writing, has taught Franco studies at the university level, and lectures on cultural diversity and North American Franco culture and history.

He said that writing a memoir is “a huge undertaking” and that a good one uses a life “as a sort of trellis” on which to hang a bigger tale.

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So Ledoux aimed to do two things: to tell readers “what it was like to be a boy who grew up in the 1950s” and what happened in the community in which he lived.

“The world that I grew up in was so different than today,” he said, and much of that is “just gone.”

Ledoux said he hopes that “French Boy” will speak to readers about their own experiences – no matter where or when they grew up – and also offer a guide for coping with “darkness that surrounds us.”

A memoir, he said, is inherently a heroic journey in which an author must pick out the things of value from his own life that offer enlightenment about the human experience more generally.

Plus, of course, it needs to be interesting.

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“You don’t want people to be bored stiff,” Ledoux said.

For Douglas Rooks, a Maine journalist with a penchant for history, Ledoux’s autobiography was anything but dull.

“It was just wonderful to hear so many French voices” in the volume, Rooks said.

THE FRENCH WAVE

In the last half of the 19th century, as Lewiston’s mills grew in size and number, French-Canadians began to pour into the city to snatch up the jobs the industry created.

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By 1900, more than half the people in the city could trace their roots to Quebec. French was heard everywhere, except in the rooms where civic and business decisions were made. That didn’t come until later.

The Franco community, though often mired in poverty, consisted of big families, a strong Catholic faith and hope.

A page from Maine writer Denis Ledoux’s most recent book. Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal

Ledoux’s grandparents came late to the game, arriving in in Lewiston in 1916 after spending two decades in Massachusetts.

Ledoux himself didn’t show up until 1947, when he was born at St. Mary’s Hospital and came home to live in a second-floor apartment at 49 Farwell St.

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His memoir details his first 12 years, initially in Lewiston and later in Lisbon, growing up in that tight-knit Franco world that was always distant from the rest of the community.

“We brought otherness with us,” Ledoux said.

Even youngsters like Ledoux could not help but stand out from the old Maine heritage. The very sound of their voices gave them away.

Ledoux writes about how “the library ladies” he heard while perusing the stacks conversed with a Yankee accent he could not match.

“We children were exposed to this accent but we were learning our English from Franco-Americans who spoke English in a Frenchified manner. That is how we, too, spoke.”

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A YOUNGSTER IN LEWISTON 

It’s more than a little fortunate that Ledoux survived to tell his story.

Not even a year old, baby Denis went into convulsions and began foaming at the mouth, apparently in reaction to his teeth coming in.

His mother scooped him up and raced up Farwell Street looking for help from his grandmother. Having little idea what to do, they put him under a faucet and let cold water run over him, which might even have helped.

Denis Ledoux’s grandparents, William and Marie Ledoux, are shown in their apartment upstairs in the family farmhouse in Lisbon Falls around 1955. “They were very much part of our lives,” says Ledoux. Submitted photo

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In any case, his doctor later suggested if it happened again to put him in a basin of lukewarm water and dry mustard. The physicians had no clue either.

He warned Ledoux’s mother it could happen again, perhaps because the stress of teething was overwhelming the baby’s system. It could kill him, the doctor said.

Though the baby was twice more afflicted, he came through it all, perhaps smelling a little of mustard.

As a toddler, Ledoux went with his family to a camp on Thompson Lake in Poland that belonged to a cousin of his grandfather. Some older boys were leaping off a dock repeatedly, having a blast.

“I walked down unnoticed to the end of the dock,” he wrote. “Just as the big boys were doing, I lined myself at the edge of dock, and big boy that I was, dove in.”

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“I faintly remember water coming over me and not being able to breathe. It was not, to put it mildly, what I had expected,” Ledoux wrote.

The next thing he remembered was lying on the beach nearby with a lot of excited people around him.

Ledoux, in short, has always been one to jump in, a good trait in a memoirist. Luck helps, too.

GROWING UP IN THE ’50s

For a child, discovering the world is always more than a little magical. It doesn’t matter who you are or where your family came from.

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But part of the magic is learning who your family is, what your community is like, and how all of it fits together – the necessary foundation for figuring out who you are.

For Ledoux, as he details in his book, it was a swirling mass of characters, most of them French, who told stories, took him places and somewhat unwittingly exposed him to the richness of his heritage.

Denis Ledoux and his siblings, clockwise from top: Bill, Denis, Claire and Rachel around 1953. Submitted photo

It was a world of Sunday Masses, fun-loving uncles, loving parents, school, devoted mothers, fathers working out of the home and a series of familiar places where a boy could feel safe.

In his book, though, Ledoux also tries to explore “what it meant to be born outside the dominant culture and language, to experience foreignness and a pervasive sense that we are not really Americans – not yet anyway.”

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“French Boy” captures a slice of that Franco-American life, which seems distant to the world we live in today but in some ways highlights an enduring piece of the nation’s story: how people from one place come here, rooted in their past and their faith, and gradually become American.

Part of it is, surely, that they broaden what it means to be an American.

But it has a price, as Ledoux makes clear.

He said his generation feels a shame over the way an ancestral culture has slipped away and at the loss of everyday French use, perhaps symbolized best by the closure of Lewiston’s French newspaper, Le Messager, in 1966.

“My generation’s experience is one of fashioning a new identity out of our loss,” Ledoux said. “This story is bigger than me.”

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“French Boy” can be purchased at Quiet City Books and at the Androscoggin Historical Society, both on Lisbon Street in Lewiston, as well as a number of other bookstores across Maine. It is also available from Amazon.

Author Denis Ledoux displays copies of his book “French Boy: A 1950s Franco-American Childhood” at his home in Lisbon Falls. Russ Dillingham/Sun Journal


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High bacteria advisories reported at multiple Maine swimming spots

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High bacteria advisories reported at multiple Maine swimming spots


PORTLAND (WGME) — Wednesday afternoon, Tassel Top Park officials posted on social media, reporting the beach was temporarily closed to swimming after routine testing found elevated levels of E. coli in the water.

Anna Goodnik, a visitor at the park, says she was disappointed to learn she could not swim.

“It’s a beautiful lake. I feel so sorry, it’s too bad this happened,” Goodnik said.

She says she drove from Portland to visit the park.

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“Very sad because I came from Portland, I drove 40 minutes,” Goodnik said.

Goodnik says she has been coming to Tassel Top Park for 15 years and that while the park remained open, she was hoping to get in the water.

“The water is so smooth right now, I would just like to swim in it,” Goodnik said.

Raymond Town Manager Glenn Michalowski said in a statement that the Portland Water District provides weekly test results for 18 locations around Sebago Lake. Tassel Top Beach was closed for swimming because E. coli levels exceeded state water quality standards.

Michalowski said testing indicated the presence of waterfowl in the area, which can contribute to elevated bacterial levels. The statement also noted that high E. coli counts after rain events and in areas with waterfowl activity are a normal occurrence across Maine beaches and recreational water areas.

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Ben Peierls, research director at the Lakes Environmental Association, says warmer water can lead to more bacterial growth.

“When water gets warmer, there’s more growth of bacteria,” Peierls said.

Peierls says E. coli can come from animals such as birds, dogs and other wildlife, or from human waste. He says this time of year can bring rain and runoff that carries contaminants into lakes.

“This time of year, there’s lot of rain and runoff materials coming into lakes, and it’s coming from sources where there may have been that fecal material, and it gets washed into lakes and it shows up in places people could be recreating,” Peierls said.

Tassel Top is not the only location reporting elevated bacteria levels. Ferry Beach in Scarborough and East End Beach in Portland also reported results above Maine’s safety threshold for enterococci in marine waters.

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Town officials say Tassel Top Beach will reopen once retesting confirms the water has returned to safe levels, and residents will be notified when the closure is lifted. Swimming can resume once weekly testing confirms water quality is back within safe limits.

To check the status of all beaches in the state, click here.



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Person hospitalized after shed fire in Harpswell

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Person hospitalized after shed fire in Harpswell


HARPSWELL (WGME) — The Maine State Fire Marshal’s Office says a person was hospitalized after a shed fire Wednesday night.

Firefighters were called to 23 Smokehouse Road in Harpswell for a shed fire around 7 p.m.

Crews quickly put out the fire and kept it from spreading into the woods.

An unhoused person who had been living in the shed suffered burns and smoke inhalation.

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They were taken to Maine Medical Center for treatment.

Investigators believe the fire may have been electrical in nature.

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The fire remains under investigation.

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Climate Chronicles: How many tornadoes does Maine see a year?

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Climate Chronicles: How many tornadoes does Maine see a year?


Three tornadoes have been confirmed across New England so far in 2026, and remarkably, all of them have occurred in Vermont.

Two of those tornadoes touched down during severe thunderstorms on June 18, when a potent weather system swept across the region.

Vermont tornadoes in 2026 (WGME).

The National Weather Service confirmed an EF-1 tornado in Lincoln with peak winds of 105 mph and another EF-1 tornado in Woodstock with winds reaching 100 mph.

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Earlier this spring, an EF-1 tornado struck Williamstown on April 16 with estimated winds of 90 mph.

This week’s Climate Chronicles question comes from Kate:

With severe weather last week, how often do we actually see tornadoes touch down in Maine?

Maine tornado activity (WGME).

Maine tornado activity (WGME).

Historically, Maine averages about two tornadoes each year, with most occurring between June and August.

Most storms develop during the late afternoon and early evening, typically between 3 and 9 p.m., when hours of sunshine have heated the ground and created the instability needed for thunderstorms to form.

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The last confirmed tornado to touch down in Maine was in 2023.

Average amount of tornadoes that touch down in each New England state per year (WGME).

Average amount of tornadoes that touch down in each New England state per year (WGME).

Massachusetts and Connecticut also average about two tornadoes per year, with many occurring across the flatter terrain of western portions of both states.

In Massachusetts, the broad Connecticut River Valley stretching through Springfield has earned the nickname “New England’s Tornado Alley” due to its history of tornado activity.

Vermont, on the other hand, typically averages just one tornado annually. With three confirmed tornadoes already in 2026, the state has already exceeded its yearly average by two, making this an unusually active year for tornadoes in the Green Mountain State.

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Maine's tornado history (GoSanAngelo, WGME).

Maine’s tornado history (GoSanAngelo, WGME).

Since 1950, Maine has recorded 140 tornadoes. None have been rated stronger than an EF2 on the Enhanced Fujita Scale, the system used to classify tornado intensity based on the damage they cause.

Unlike hurricanes, tornadoes are not assigned ratings while they are occurring. Instead, National Weather Service survey teams assess damage after the storm has passed, examining impacts to homes, buildings, trees, and other structures.

From that damage, meteorologists estimate the tornado’s wind speeds and assign an EF rating ranging from EF0 to EF5.

While Maine has experienced its share of tornadoes over the decades, the state has never recorded a violent EF4 or EF5 tornado.

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Do you have any weather questions? Email our Weather Authority team at weather@wgme.com. We’d love to hear from you!



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