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Paul Chaloux

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Memories & Candles

“We are sorry to hear of your loss. We send our heartfelt condolences to the family. We wish you all well. Your brother (Gene) was my best friend and...Read More »
1 of 7 | Posted by: Garfield Adams - Huntington Beach, CA

“Paul and family, so sorry for your loss, you are in our thoughts and prayers in this difficult time. ”
2 of 7 | Posted by: Justin Janaro - Essex Junction, VT

“Mr.Chaloux's family life very much paralleled my family. We grew up along-side his and Dolly's family.We first met them when they moved into their...Read More »
3 of 7 | Posted by: Michelle Pointon - Silver Spring, MD

“We started life as you being my little brother. A little competition but much love. I'm sure that God has welcomed you already. I will always miss...Read More »
4 of 7 | Posted by: Marcel Chaloux Sr - Lewiston, ME

“Having known the Chaloux family, through Janet, for over 37 years, it's wonderful to now know so many things about Mr. Chaloux's life. I chuckled...Read More »
5 of 7 | Posted by: Lisa Bartell Pomerantz - MD

“Thanks for being such a wonderful grandpa. I really appreciated you coming up to visit us in New York and watching all of our sports and going to our...Read More »
6 of 7 | Posted by: Kathy Chaloux - Ithaca, NY

“Dad, I miss you greatly, Love, Paul ”
7 of 7 | Posted by: Paul Chaloux, Jr - NY


Updated: October 29, 2011 by Paul Chaloux, Jr Paul Normand Chaloux was born on February 25, 1932 in Lewiston, Maine, at home on Orange Street as was the custom of the day. His father, Andre W. Chaloux was 29 at the time and his mother, Leona was 26. He was the middle child in a family of five, each born at approximately two year intervals. Marcel, the eldest, was born on September 3, 1928, followed by Claire who was born on January 14, 1930. After Paul, Andre L. was born January 20, 1934 and Irene was born January 21, 1936. Family was always very important to the Chalouxs. Paul’s father Andre was the youngest of 23 children. Because Andre’s father passed away when he was only one, much of his raising was done by his siblings. In fact, when he had traveled to Lewiston for the first time, he stayed with his brother Silva and helped take care of his children after his first wife died. Andre kept in contact with all his relatives and very rarely missed a family event. There was a lot of extended family in the Lewiston area and they visited them often. Andre also frequently took the family to visit his brothers, sisters and in-laws all around New England and to his hometown in East Hereford Quebec. When he was there, he often bought maple syrup and butter from them to help them out because many of his siblings were not doing well financially. Because of this, Paul grew up with a strong sense of family and the desire to be supportive. Paul’s father was intelligent but uneducated, having less than one year of formal schooling. He had many jobs in his early life, working as a laborer, a carpenter and training as a barber. In about 1934, Paul’s father opened a combination barbershop and corner store on Sabattus Street in Lewiston, while the family still lived on Orange Street opposite St. Mary’s hospital. The family was a typical French-Canadian family, speaking French at home and practicing the Roman Catholic faith. Andre was very active in the Knights of Columbus and Leona was from a very religious family. Several of Paul’s cousins entered the religious life. The family was generally financially stable, although never very well off. Andre was very handy and fixed up tricycles and pedal cars for the children. On a few occasions, they would make a parade of them. Through age 6, Paul’s life was happy and very much like those around him. Shortly after Irene’s birth in 1936, Paul’s mother contracted Tuberculosis which fundamentally changed everything in their lives. By 1938, as Leona’s illness intensified to the point where she needed full time care he could not provide, Andre placed her in the Hebron Sanitorium, a facility specializing in tubercular care. To create a more steady income, Andre sold his business and took a job at one of the local shoe factories. Because he was unable to work and care for his young children, Andre placed his sons in the Healy Asylum, a nun-run, state-funded orphanage and his daughters in the similarly run Marcotte Home for young girls. Paul lived the next six years in this arrangement, staying in the Asylum during the week with his brother Andy and spending some weekends at home with the rest of the family. Because he was older, his brother Marcel was placed with the older children at the Asylum for two and a half years before going back to live with his father to help out around the house. The Asylum was an all inclusive home. School was on the grounds, taught by the Grey Nuns and the children lived in barrack style dormitories. The children were well fed and besides school attendance and related activities such as choir and band, they played sports like baseball and hockey for amusement. There were annual picnics and holiday celebrations since some of the children had no homes to go to. In those days there were no frills. Paul’s brother (Andre L) remembered the nuns feeding them warm toast for lunch which was a rare treat. Paul would see his mother on rare occasions at the sanatorium until she was released to come home. His time at the orphanage certainly had an effect on Paul, many of them positive. The Asylum routine included going to daily mass. Paul was an altar server and for a while, many of his relatives thought he might become a priest. He also learned a love of music, learning to play the guitar at the age of 12 or 13. In 1940, Paul’s father moved the family to a house on Webber Avenue and then again to 231 Ash Street before finally moving to their final destination, a home at 52 Sabattus Street. During most of the war period, his father was working multiple shifts in a shipyard 30 miles away in Portland. In 1944, Paul’s time at the Healy Asylum came to an end. Because his mother was not improving at the Hebron Sanitarium, Andre brought her home and at the same time brought home the older children to help care for her. Paul helped out the family finances by delivering the Lewiston Daily Sun each morning before school. Finally, on June 14, 1945, the last day of seventh grade, his mother died at home. Unfortunately, his father was away at the shipyard working at the time. By special arrangement, his mother was laid out in the parlor of their Sabattus Street home, where they prayed over her for three days prior to her burial in Saint Peter’s cemetery. They had a high funeral mass for her at St. Peter and Paul Church. After the funeral, Andre took the entire family on a week long vacation to New York City to start the recovery process. The next year was a year of transition for the family. With the war over, Andre returned home from the Shipyard without a job. He supported

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