Item 149024 - View of Van Buren, ca. 1906
- Item 149024 - View of Van Buren, ca. 1906
- Contributed by Acadian Archives
- Item 149024
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Image Info Acadian and French-Canadian families settled in the area of present-day Van Buren at the end of the eighteenth century. From its farming roots, Van Buren developed into an important regional milling center; thanks to the St. John Lumber Company, it could boast the "largest long lumber mill east of the Mississippi" in the first decade of the twentieth century.
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The town also momentarily became an educational center for the region. Priests from the Society of Mary established a college with grades ranging from high school to the baccalaureate. The first building (the three-story building with a dark mansard roof at center-left above) was completed in 1887. The church of Saint-Bruno is seen on the right.
The card bears a 1906 postmark. No person named Hackett is yet known to have lived in Van Buren at this time. The publisher may have been a member of the Hackett family who owned a department store in Caribou.