's sculpture of Evangeline,
Grand-Pré National Historic Site,
Nova Scotia, Canada Prior to the influence of Longfellow's poem, historians generally focused on the founding of
Halifax (1749) as the beginning of Nova Scotian history. Longfellow's poem shed light on the 150 years of Acadian settlement that preceded the establishment of Halifax. The Expulsion was planned and executed by the British and
New England authorities. Longfellow omitted from the poem New England's involvement in the expulsion. Through his poem, Longfellow defines America as a place of refuge for the exiled Acadians. Longfellow's account was later challenged by historian
Francis Parkman, in his book
Montcalm and Wolfe (1884). Parkman claimed the real reason for the expulsion was the "influence" held by the French over the Acadians, particularly by Abbé
Jean-Louis Le Loutre. American historian John Brebner eventually wrote ''New England's Outpost'' (1927), which identified how instrumental New Englanders were in the expulsion of the Acadians. The poem had a powerful impact in defining both Acadian history and identity in the 19th and 20th centuries. More recent scholarship has revealed both the historical misconceptions in the poem and the complexity of the Expulsion and those involved, which the poem obscures. For example, Longfellow's poem depicts Acadia as a utopia and the Acadians as a homogeneous and passive people who are incapable of violence, which ignores the efforts of resistance leader
Joseph Broussard and the extensive
military history of the Acadians. The poem also allowed for generations of Protestant
Anglo-Americans to sympathize with the plight of the Acadians while maintaining
anti-Catholic viewpoints. The poem also provided a safe symbolic space for Acadians to develop arguments for more recognition and respect in the United States.
Landmarks and statues In 1920, at
Grand-Pré, Nova Scotia, Acadians reconstructed the French church with a statue of Evangeline in the courtyard. Almost a decade later, in 1929, a statue of Evangeline, posed for by silent Mexican film star
Dolores del Río, who starred in the 1929 film
Evangeline, was donated to the town of
St. Martinville, Louisiana, by the film's cast and crew. In 1934, the first state park in Louisiana was named the
Longfellow-Evangeline State Historic Site. Felix Voorhies wrote the book
Acadian Reminiscences: The True Story of Evangeline and other later works of fiction expanded upon the material of the poem, claiming the "real names" of the characters had been "Emmeline LaBiche" (in Longfellow, her full name is Evangeline Bellefontaine) and "Louis Arceneaux" (in the poem, Gabriel Lajeunesse)
Lafayette, Louisiana, which supposedly belonged to Gabriel, and the grave of Emmeline in the Perpetual Adoration Garden & Historic Cemetery in St. Martin de Tours Church Square, on Main Street,
St. Martinville (the site having been determined for its convenience by local boosters about the turn of the 20th century). "Evangeline Oak" trees in St. Martinville also lay claim to marking the original meeting place of Emmeline and Louis. Another site claiming to have relation to the historical figures that
Evangeline was based upon is the Arceneaux House in
Hamshire, Texas, which is marked by a Texas Historical Marker. The house was given to Mary Gadrac Arceneaux, great-great-granddaughter of Louis Arceneaux by her husband.
Place names Evangeline has also been the namesake of many places in Louisiana and the Canadian Maritime Provinces. It is also often used as a street name in Acadian communities.
Louisiana In Louisiana, places named Evangeline include: •
Evangeline Parish, Louisiana •
Evangeline, Louisiana, a community in
Acadia Parish where the first oil well in Louisiana was drilled • Evangeline Hall, a residence hall built in 1936 at
Louisiana State University Canada Places named Evangeline in Canada include, for example: •
Evangeline, Gloucester County, New Brunswick •
Evangeline-Miscouche, a rural community in
Prince Edward Island • Evangeline, a community within
Greater Moncton in
Westmorland County, New Brunswick The Evangeline Trail is a historic route in
Nova Scotia that traces the
Annapolis Valley, ancestral home of the Acadians. The scenic trail is lined by more than a dozen small Acadian villages, running from
Grand-Pré, site of the first expulsions, south to
Annapolis Royal near the
Habitation at Port-Royal, historic site of the original French settlement in North America. The Evangeline Trail ends in
Yarmouth, Nova Scotia on the southwest coast.
Film There have also been numerous film adaptations of the poem
Evangeline.
Evangeline was the first Canadian feature film, produced in 1913 by Canadian Bioscope of Halifax. It was shot in the Annapolis Valley and at Grand-Pré. In 1919,
Raoul Walsh made
a film based on the poem for
20th Century Fox. It was suggested by and starred his wife
Miriam Cooper. The film was one of the duo's biggest hits but is now
lost. In 1929,
Edwin Carewe made
a film version starring
Dolores del Río, shot in Louisiana and accompanied by a theme song written by
Al Jolson and
Billy Rose. The poem was mentioned in the 1987 film
Angel Heart, starring
Mickey Rourke and
Robert De Niro.
Evangeline is also referenced in the 2009 Disney film
The Princess and the Frog, wherein a Cajun firefly named Raymond falls in love with Evangeline, who appears as a star. Following his death, they are reunited and appear side by side in the night sky.
Music and musical theatre Evangeline has been the subject of numerous songs: • A popular song in French titled "Evangeline" was written in 1971 by
Michel Conte. Originally sung by Isabelle Pierre, a version performed by Annie Blanchard won the
ADISQ award for most popular song in 2006. •
Robbie Robertson of
The Band wrote the song "Evangeline", performed with
Emmylou Harris. In his lyrics, Evangeline is a girl from
the Maritimes who awaits her absent lover in Louisiana, but the storyline and time period differ from Longfellow's original. Another Robertson song, "
Acadian Driftwood" from 1975, was also influenced by Longfellow's poem. • A half-hour suite of guitar music by guitarist and composer
Loren Mazzacane Connors, based on scenes in the Longfellow story, was released as a compact disc titled
Evangeline (RoadCone, 1998), with a title track vocal by Suzanne Langille. • Indie folk artist Tony Halchak released an EP titled
A Tale of Acadie in 2011, based on the poem but told from Gabriel's point of view. The poem was first adapted into a theatrical musical in 1874, as
Evangeline; or, The Belle of Acadia, which was a
Broadway success through the late 19th century. The Canadian folk singer-songwriter
Susan Crowe mentions the "statue of Evangeline" in her song "Your One and Only Life", the first track on an album entitled
The Door to the River released in 1996. A 1999 adaptation by Paul Taranto and Jamie Wax,
Evangeline: The Musical, resulted in a 1999 cast album, and a
Shreveport, Louisiana production of this version was broadcast in 2000 by
PBS. A 2013 musical adaptation, by Canadian
Ted Dykstra, premiered in
Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, and was revived in 2015 in Prince Edward Island and in Alberta at
Edmonton's
Citadel Theatre. The production featured
Brent Carver as the father.
Otto Luening's three-act opera
Evangeline premiered at
Columbia University in New York City in 1948. An opera based on
Evangeline, composed by Colin Doroschuk, debuted in 2012 in reduced concert form, and was first performed in full in 2014 at Opéra-Théâtre de
Rimouski. Doroschuk had previously been a member, with his brothers, of the Canadian pop band
Men Without Hats. Additionally, there was once a
Via Rail train known as the
"Evangeline" that ran from
Halifax to
Yarmouth, but it ended in 1990. • VIA Rail's "Evangeline Park" a passenger dome / observation / sleeping car. All but one of these Park Cars can be traced to Canadian National or Provincial parks, except for Evangeline Park. Information from Ian Thom's book "Murals from a Great Canadian Train" suggest that it was named for the Evangeline Memorial Park established by the Dominion Atlantic Railway, which is now the Grand Pré National Historic Site in Nova Scotia. • ''L'Évangeline'' was also an important daily newspaper in New Brunswick, from 1887 to 1982. • Evangeline Downs is a horse racing track located near Lafayette, Louisiana. • The 1999 musical version of
Evangeline was performed in 2014 at the Conseil Acadien de Par-en-Bas theatre in
Tusket, Nova Scotia. An actor travelled from Louisiana to perform the role of Gabriel. • Historical flaws in the poem (and in the Voorhies work) are revealed, as there is no record of the surnames "LaBiche", "Bellefontaine", nor "Lajeunesse" in any of the censuses taken of the Acadians. •
Carrie Jenkins Harris's final novel
A modern Evangeline (1896) is a nod to the poem. • In the
Acadiana region of
Louisiana, the local governing council of
Scouting America is called the Evangeline Area Council, overseeing Scout troops in eight parishes. ==References==