Born: 17 September 1858, Canada
Died: 14 June 1932
Country most active: Canada
Also known as: Marie-Clara Dorimène Roy Desjardins
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Dorimène Desjardins (1858–1932) played a key role in the functioning of the caisses populaires (credit unions) established by her husband, Alphonse Desjardins. From 1903 to 1906, while he worked as a stenographer in Ottawa, she acted as caisse manager and also looked after their household in Lévis, Que. After Alphonse’s death in 1920 she participated in a number of discussions to ensure that the future direction of the caisses would be faithful to her husband’s vision. As his collaborator, she was a model of engagement for women who contributed behind the scenes to the smooth operation of the Caisses Populaires Desjardins.
DESJARDINS, DORIMÈNE (Desjardins) (baptized Marie-Claire-Dorimène), homemaker and associate of a cooperative business; b. 17 Sept. 1858 at Sorel (Sorel-Tracy), Lower Canada, daughter of Joseph Roy, dit Desjardins, a seaman, and Rosalie Malhiot; m. there 2 Sept. 1879 Alphonse Desjardins* (1854–1920), and they had four daughters and six sons; d. 14 June 1932 in Lévis, Que., and was buried there three days later in Mont-Marie cemetery.
Childhood and youth
Dorimène Desjardins was born on 17 Sept. 1858 into a poor, uneducated family. Her parents, faced with adversity, entrusted her as an infant to her aunt and godmother Clarisse Malhot and Clarisse’s husband, Jean-Baptiste Theriault (Terriaut). The couple, who resided in Lévis, were already looking after one of Theriault’s nieces. By all accounts Dorimène’s foster parents provided a comfortable life and a good education at the convent of Notre-Dame-de-Toutes-Grâces, which was run by the Sisters of Charity of Quebec [see Marie-Anne-Marcelle Mallet*]. Shortly after finishing her studies, Dorimène began a relationship with Alphonse Desjardins, a young journalist who lived nearby. They married in Sorel in 1879 and settled soon afterwards in Lévis. Their marriage produced ten children, three of whom died at a young age.
In 1892 Alphonse Desjardins obtained a position as a French-language stenographer in the House of Commons in Ottawa. The job forced him to live away from his family for the entire duration of parliamentary sessions, about six months of the year. As a result, Dorimène had to attend to the smooth running of the household and her husband’s affairs on her own. This would be her daily life until Alphonse retired in 1917.
An invaluable partner
By the beginning of the 20th century, Alphonse Desjardins already had many years of experience in partnerships and local development in Lévis. In his search for a financial solution to the socio-economic difficulties confronting his fellow citizens, he could count on the unfailing support of Dorimène, who shared his ideals and vision to undertake a socially beneficial project. In promoting a cooperative model, he wanted to eliminate usury, better the lot of the working classes, and help improve economic conditions for French Canadians. After lengthy research he founded the first caisse populaire in Lévis on 6 Dec. 1900.
For the first six years the head office of the Caisse Populaire de Lévis was located in the Desjardins family home. In the absence of her husband, who was working in Ottawa, Dorimène took over from the volunteer directors and acted as the enterprise’s unofficial manager from 1903 to 1906. Her husband had delegated his authority, giving her the power to assume extensive financial responsibilities. As a gesture of thanks, she received from the board of directors an annual token compensation of $50. Under her direction, the young cooperative successfully weathered these years of uncertainty, during which it was still not legally recognized. A dedicated administrator, Dorimène had a methodical mind, sound and steady judgement, and an innate business sense, and she succeeded in establishing a lasting relationship of trust with caisse members.
After the Quebec government recognized the caisses populaires in 1906, Dorimène played a more discreet role alongside her husband. Freed from managing the Caisse Populaire de Lévis, she was now able to devote more time to parish work, especially with the Confrérie des Dames de Sainte-Anne, the Société de Tempérance, and the Patronage de Lévis.
In 1914, however, when Alphonse contracted uraemia, an incurable illness, Dorimène assumed responsibility for furthering his work and acted as the intermediary between him and his close associates. In 1918 and 1919 she took part in the deliberations of the committee charged with fine-tuning his plan for the creation of a federation of the caisses populaires and of a central caisse.
Guardian of her husband’s vision
On 31 Oct. 1920 Alphonse Desjardins died at the age of 65 without having provided for his succession. During the next four years regional alliances of caisses populaires would take up the torch in Trois-Rivières, Quebec City, Montreal, and Gaspé. As discrepancies appeared in the interpretation of the founder’s thinking, however, his widow was often called upon to help out, and she thereby acquired great moral authority. In 1921 she assisted in founding the Union Régionale des Caisses Populaires Desjardins du District de Québec, and in 1923 she became vice-patron of its board of directors, which gave her the status of honorary member.
Dorimène Desjardins’s key role in the caisses populaires emerged. Between 1924 and 1926 especially, she took part in several key discussions to ensure that the direction given to local caisses remained consistent with her husband’s views. In 1924 she supported the Union Régionale des Caisses Populaires Desjardins du District de Québec in its plan to establish a central caisse, which would serve as its financial arm. True to her husband’s vision, she feared that the state, by granting subsidies, would try to interfere in the internal affairs of credit unions. For this reason, in 1925 she criticized a provincial-government bill that would have forced credit unions to submit to an annual inspection supervised by regional organizations. She was also opposed to a government credit scheme for farmers, emphasizing instead the promotion of savings and the expansion of the caisses into rural areas. In 1926 the Union Régionale des Caisses Populaires Desjardins du District de Québec again sought her advice on the future course for local caisses and on the conduct of inspections.
Assessment
Dorimène Desjardins died on 14 June 1932 at the age of 73. The caisses organized an impressive funeral in Lévis. According to that day’s issue of L’Action catholique, her death was a “loss for French Canada” as Dorimène Desjardins had “certainly been one of the better-informed women on economic issue[s] from a social point of view.” The Quebec paper also paid her this glowing tribute: “Without her, we must admit, the Caisses Populaires Desjardins would probably not exist.” Dorimène Desjardins, as her husband’s collaborator, thus became a model of social engagement for all the women who, working in the background, have contributed to the smooth running of the Caisses Populaires Desjardins.
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Work cited
Guy Bélanger, “DESJARDINS, DORIMÈNE (Desjardins) (baptized Marie-Claire-Dorimène),” in Dictionary of Canadian Biography, vol. 16, University of Toronto/Université Laval, 2003–, accessed March 5, 2026, https://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/desjardins_dorimene_16E.html.