This is a list of notable Acadians, and people of Acadia origins.

thumb|Present-day Acadian communities (in yellow).

To be included in this list, the person must have a Wikipedia article showing they are Acadian or must have references showing they are Acadian and are notable.

Actors

  • Matt LeBlanc – actor, known for TV show Friends. Both of his father's parents are of Acadian ancestry. Descendant of Daniel LeBlanc.
  • Robert Maillet – actor, professional wrestler from Sainte-Marie-de-Kent, New Brunswick
  • Patricia McKenzie – actress born in Les Îles-de-la-Madeleine (Painchaud family)
  • Philip Bourneuf – actor born in Somerville, Massachusetts. His parents, Ambrose Bourneuf and Josephine Comeau, are of Acadian ancestry. His mother was born in Clare, Nova Scotia as were his paternal grandparents.
  • Ryan Doucette – actor from Clare, Nova Scotia

Law and politics

  • Aubin-Edmond Arsenault – former Premier of Prince Edward Island (1917–1919)
  • Joseph-Octave Arsenault – first Acadian Prince Edward Island member of the Canadian Senate
  • Télesphore Arsenault – Canadian politician, business manager and farmer
  • Marcel Arsenault – philanthropist billionaire, donated all his wealth to charity
  • Guy Arseneault – Provincial MLA and former Member of the House of Commons of Canada (1988–1997)
  • Michel Bastarache – Supreme Court of Canada (1997–2008)
  • Léopold Belliveau – first Acadian mayor of Moncton, New Brunswick
  • Edmond Blanchard – chief justice of the Court Martial Appeal Court of Canada, former politician
  • Gérald Clavette – New Brunswick politician
  • Ambroise-Hilaire Comeau – first Acadian from Nova Scotia to be a member of the Canadian Senate
  • Gerald Comeau – former member of the Canadian Senate
  • Chris d'Entremont – Nova Scotia MLA and MP
  • Ray Frenette – former Premier of New Brunswick (1997–1998)
  • Brian Gallant – former Premier of New Brunswick (2014–2018)
  • Arthur J. LeBlanc – former Justice of the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia (1998–2017) and Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia (2017–2024)
  • Dominic LeBlanc — Canadian MP and cabinet minister (son of Roméo LeBlanc)
  • Neil LeBlanc – Consul General to Boston, Massachusetts, and former Nova Scotia MLA, Minister of Finance
  • Roméo LeBlanc – politician and journalist, former Governor-General of Canada (1995–1999)
  • Viola Léger – former senator and actress
  • Pascal Poirier – first Acadian member of the Canadian Senate (1885–1933)
  • Louis Robichaud – former Premier of New Brunswick (1960–1970)
  • Camille Thériault – former Premier of New Brunswick (1998–1999)
  • Robert Thibault – Canadian Liberal MP
  • Peter J. Veniot – former Premier of New Brunswick (1923–1925)

Military veterans

  • Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste
  • Alexandre Bourg
  • Joseph Broussard (Beausoleil)
  • Charles de Saint-Étienne de la Tour
  • Bernard-Anselme d'Abbadie de Saint-Castin
  • Jean-Vincent d'Abbadie de Saint-Castin
  • Joseph d'Abbadie de Saint-Castin
  • François Dupont Duvivier
  • Joseph-Nicolas Gautier and his wife
  • Joseph Godin dit Bellefontaine, Sieur de Beauséjour – Commander of the Acadian Militia of the St-John River valley (St. John River Campaign)
  • William Johnson (Guillaume Jeanson) – Battle of Bloody Creek (1757)
  • Bernard Marres 'Marc' dit La Sonde – fought the British at Canso, Nova Scotia (1718)
  • Abel LeBlanc – Petit de Grat, NS, West Nova Scotia Regiment, wounded while in combat in Italy.
  • Joseph LeBlanc, dit Le Maigre
  • Pierre II Surette
  • Joseph Winniett – supported the British; grandchild of Pierre Maisonnat dit Baptiste

Musicians

  • Angèle Arsenault – singer-songwriter, media host
  • Marcel Aymar – singer
  • Édith Butler – singer-songwriter
  • Zachary Richard – singer-songwriter
  • Yvette d'Entremont - singer-songwriter
  • Julie Doiron – singer-songwriter
  • Patsy Gallant – singer and actress
  • Boozoo Chavis – singer-songwriter
  • Wilfred Le Bouthillier – singer
  • Lisa LeBlanc – singer-songwriter
  • Anna Malenfant – contralto and composer
  • Natasha St-Pier – singer
  • Radio Radio – hip hop group; Jacques Doucet, Alexandre Bilodeau, Gabriel Malenfant
  • Fayo – singer-songwriter
  • Yvette Tollar – jazz singer, composer
  • Roch Voisine – singer-songwriter
  • P'tit Belliveau – singer-songwriter, guitarist, composer
  • Clarence White – guitarist

Sports

  • Louis Cyr – weightlifter, "Strongest Man in the World"
  • Eric Cyr – MLB player
  • Paul Cyr – NHL player
  • Jean Béliveau – Hockey Hall of Fame, Montreal Canadiens
  • Luc Bourdon – NHL player
  • Leo Burke (Leonce Cormier) – wrestler
  • Jean-Louis Cormier (Rudy Kay) – wrestler
  • Rhéal Cormier – Major League Baseball pitcher
  • Yvon Cormier (The Beast) – wrestler
  • René Duprée – wrestler
  • Yvon Durelle – boxer
  • Suzanne Gaudet – curler
  • Ron Guidry – Major League Baseball pitcher
  • Lance Cormier – Major League Baseball pitcher
  • Bobby Hebert – NFL Quarterback New Orleans Saints
  • Camille Henry – NHL player, winner of the Lady Byng Trophy and the Calder Memorial Trophy
  • Bobby Kay (Romeo Cormier) – wrestler
  • Jacques LeBlanc – boxer
  • Robert Maillet – wrestler
  • Roland Melanson – NHL goalie
  • Chad Ogea – Major League Baseball pitcher
  • Dustin Poirier – Mixed martial arts fighter
  • Henri Richard – Hockey Hall of Fame, Montreal Canadiens
  • Maurice Richard – Hockey Hall of Fame, Montreal Canadiens
  • Ryan Theriot – Major League Baseball infielder

Visual artists

  • Elizabeth Lefort – tapestry artist, Order of Canada
  • Anne-Marie Sirois – visual artist, writer and film director

Writers

  • Gilbert Buote – educator, publisher and author
  • Anselme Chiasson – Catholic priest, educator, writer
  • Herménégilde Chiasson – writer, ex-lieutenant-governor of New Brunswick
  • Joey Comeau – writer, comic creator
  • France Daigle – writer and playwright
  • Andrea Doucet – sociologist and writer
  • Clive Doucet – writer
  • Placide Gaudet – historian, educator, genealogist and journalist. His research and papers play an important role in the preservation of the Acadian history.
  • Valentin Landry – journalist and educator
  • Émilie Leblanc – Acadian activist and educator
  • Gérald Leblanc – poet
  • Louis Haché – writer, translator, historian
  • Antonine Maillet – writer and playwright; Prix Goncourt 1979
  • Alden Nowlan – poet, novelist, and playwright
  • Marie-Colombe Robichaud – writer and playwright

Media

  • Phil Comeau – film and television director; 92 film awards, Order of Canada, Order of New Brunswick
  • Lyse Doucet – news correspondent and presenter, BBC World
  • Sami Landri – Drag artist and social media personality

Pre-deportation

  • David Basset – trader and privateer
  • Joseph Broussard (Beausoleil)
  • Noel Doiron – leader of the Acadians; died in the single greatest tragedy of the Expulsion, the sinking of the Duke William
  • Joseph-Nicolas Gautier – merchant trader and Acadian militia leader
  • Daniel LeBlanc – immigrant and progenitor of the LeBlanc family, the largest Acadian family at the time of the deportation
  • Pierre LeBlanc – early settler of Pointe-de-l'Église, Nova Scotia
  • Bernard Marot (fl. 1590–1650) – French surgeon and ship's captain.
  • Philippe Mius d'Entremont – lieutenant-major under Charles de Saint-Étienne de la Tour, who, in 1653, awarded him the first fief in Acadia, the Barony of Pobomcoup (currently Pubnico, Nova Scotia). He later became the King's Attorney in Acadia.
  • Joseph d'Abbadie de Saint-Castin – military officer and Abenaki chief
  • Pierre II Surette – Acadian resistance leader and co-founder of Ste. Anne du Ruisseau, Nova Scotia
  • Jeanne Dugas – wife of Pierre Bois, one of the co-founders of Chéticamp, Nova Scotia

See also

  • List of First Nations peoples
  • List of Cajuns
  • List of Louisiana Creoles
  • List of people by nationality

References