Historically, the formal borders between New Brunswick and Quebec, and to some extent
Maine, did not matter much to the people of the area. This caused blending and commonalities and close relationships between people in the area, whether Acadian or Québécois or people from parts of northern Maine, forming a Brayon identity. This Madawaska region was part of a border dispute and was claimed by Quebec when it was called
Lower Canada. The view of uniqueness led (at least jokingly) to the founding of the
République du Madawaska during the
Aroostook War of 1838, wherein some Brayons, disgusted with the actions of both British and American interlopers on their historical lands, declared themselves allied with neither and independent. The
république was never formally recognized and was ultimately split by the
Webster-Ashburton Treaty into American and Canadian parts. Brayon French is not completely restricted to Madawaska County. Brayon is a
dialect of
Acadian French. ==Other uses==