A
Short History of the Sisters of Charity
(From the program marking the
beatification of Elizabeth Ann Seton)
The beatification of
Elizabeth Ann Seton manifests
one of the striking ways in which Divine Providence
extends the Kingdom of God upon earth. Usually, when the foundress of a religious congregation is accorded the
honors of the Church, the good works of that one
community give glory to her name and add conviction to
impression in the record of her sanctity. In the case of
Elizabeth Seton, however, there are six communities of
which she is the acknowledged Foundress and Mother.
Tracing their origin to her first establishment,
these six communities, in God's good time and tinder
various circumstances, were formed by His Hand to be the
branches of a wide-spreading tree in whose branches
millions of His children would find the shelter of His
charity. Today these communities total eleven thousand
living members.
In 1809, Mother Elizabeth Ann Seton founded her
community at Emmitsburg, Maryland. The nucleus of the
little community was comprised of five Sisters who were
soon joined by others. Her desire to consecrate her life
to works of charity led Mother Seton to request the
Rules of the Daughters of Charity founded by St. Vincent
de Paul in 1633. Bishop Benedict J. Flaget presented the
request to superiors in Paris and in 1810 brought to
Mother Seton the Rules by which she guided her community
during her lifetime. At the time of her death in 1821,
the community numbered fifty Sisters.
In 1850 the community at Emmitsburg affiliated with
the Mother House of the Daughters of Charityat Paris and
at that time adopted the blue habit and the white collar
and cornette. The community grew steadily. Today it has
1,246 Sisters in eighty-six establishments in the United
States and in Bolivia, South America. Schools,
hospitals, homes for the aged, child-caring
institutions, day nurseries, social service centers,
catechetical works, and the visiting of the poor in
their homes are the primary works of the Sisters. They
are located in twenty-one dioceses of the United States.
In 1910 the jurisdiction of Emmitsburg was divided
into two Provinces with the Eastern Provincial House in
Emmitsburg and the Western Provincial House in Normandy,
Missouri, a suburb of St. Louis. At the present time
1,266 Sisters comprise the Western Province and oversee
eighty-seven establishments in twenty-six dioceses of
the United States, Puerto Rico, Japan, and Formosa.
In 1817, Mother Seton sent three Sisters to New York
at the invitation of Bishop Connolly to open a home for
dependent children. Their services were urgently needed,
for many parents were victims of the epidemics that
frequently invaded the young metropolis, where there was
as yet no system of sanitation. By 1846 the Sisters of
Charity had staffed three child-caring homes, four
academies and four parochial schools in New York City
and Brooklyn.
To meet the increasing need of expanded educational
and social welfare facilities in New York, a separate
Mother House known as Mount St. Vincent was founded in
1847. At present the New York community numbers 1,482
members engaged in one hundred twenty centers of zeal.
Their works include colleges and schools on all levels,
hospitals, child-caring homes, educational units for the
retarded, lay retreats, and missions in the Bahama
Islands. The Sisters have retained the rule, customs,
and spiritual exercises established by Mother Seton, and
her costume consisting of a black habit, cape and cap.
In 1829 at the request of Bishop Edward Fenwick, four
Sisters from Emmitsburg opened a free school, orphanage
and academy in Cincinnati in the Cathedral parish of St.
Peter, and thirteen years later a boys' orphanage. At
the time of the Emmitsburg affiliation, the Cincinnati
Sisters formed, a separate Mother House under the
direction of Archbishop John B. Purcell. As the
community grew in numbers anti missions, the Sisters
entered new areas of work for the Church: hospital
service, secondary and college education, catechetics,
social service and missionary works. The sixteen hundred
members now pursue apostolic labors in Ohio, Michigan,
Illinois, Mary land, Colorado, New Mexico and Texas;
Rome, Italy, Lima and Huancane, Peru.
In 1849, two years after the New York Mother House
was opened, Archbishop William Walsh of Halifax, Nova
Scotia, applied there for Sisters to organize in his
diocese. Four Sisters were given him with the
understanding that, if the work succeeded and became
self-sustaining, the Halifax community could become
independent. The conditions were fulfilled and a new
Mother House, later known as Mount St. Vincent, came
into being in 1856 in Halifax.
Over the years, by the Providence of God, the
community mission houses spread throughout Canada, the
United States, and Bermuda. The Sisters conduct schools
in the States of Washington, Massachusetts, New
Hampshire, New Jersey and Now York, close to the
community from which they had emanated. Today, over 1700
Sisters of Charity of Halifax, in ninety-seven missions
bring the spirit of Mother Seton to students on the
elementary, secondary, and college level; hospital
patients; the aging and orphans.
The story of the New Jersey Sisters of Charity comes
next in sequence. The diocese of Newark was created in
1853 with the Most Reverend James Roosevelt Bayley, a
nephew of Mother Seton, as its first Bishop. Finding it
impossible to procure a sufficient number of Sisters to
staff his schools and orphanages, the Bishop decided to
establish it branch of the Sisters of Charity in his own
diocese. Accordingly, he recruited five young women from
his diocese and sent them to the Sisters of Charity in
Cincinnati in 1858 to make their novitiate under the
ttitelage of Sister Margaret Cecilia George, a former
companion of Mother Seton.
When these novices returned to Newark in September
1859, Sister Mary Xavier Mehegan and Sister Mary
Catherine Nevin where loaned by Mount St. Vincent to
organize and head the new community. The Sisters had the
option of returning to the New York community at the end
of three years, but at the expiration of that period,
they elected to remain with the New Jersey foundation.
In 1860 the Mother House was transferred to Madison, now
known as Convent Station, and was called Saint
Elizabeth's.
The New Jersey community now numbers eighteen hundred
Sisters in on hundred twenty-four missions. The rule of
Mother Seton has been retained, but the black cap has
been replaced by a veil and coif. Immediately after the
Civil War, Bishop Domenee, the second bishop of
Pittsburgh, asked the superiors of the Cincinnati
foundation to establish an independent branch of Mother
Seton's Sisters in Pennsylvania. In 1870 five Sisters
from Cincinnati opened the first Mother House in
Altoona. The Altoona house soon proved too small, ind in
1882 the two hundred acre farm in Greensburg, now known
as Seton Hill, became the permanent Mother House. The
community has from that date been identified as the
Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill.
The apostolates of the youngest community in direct
descent from Mother Seton parallel those of the earlier
foundations. Eight hundred Sisters in fifty-seven
convents from the Archdiocese of Washington, D. C., to
the Vicariate Apostolic of Kwanju in Korea are engaged
in teaching, nursing, catechetical instruction, social
service, and missionary work. The Sisters retain the
black cap of Mother Seton as their distinctive
headdress.
'Be children of the Church." Mother Seton's last
words to the Sisters who were gathered around her
deathbed on January 4, 1821, sums up the history of the
American Sisters of Charity. From the begin, their role
in the Church was clearly understood by the great
missionary bishops who laid the foundations of Catholic
life in the thirteen States of the Union and in the
endless stretches of rolling prairie that lay beyond the
Alleghenies. Scope for limitless opportunities of
apostolic labor "in distant parts of the United
States" was written into the Constitution of the
Sisters of Charity by Archbishop John Carroll, founding
father of the Church in America. As religious teachers
and social workers, they pioneered in education and
clarity in the United States.
If the United States had been a compact,
self-contained little country in the European tradition,
everything would have been much simpler. But it was a
mission country in which prelates and priests traveled
miles on horseback to offer Mass and administer the
Sacraments once a month in distant sections of their
Dioceses, often embracing one or two States. And year by
year the frontier pushed westward as immigration
provided laborers to hew forests, cut through roads,
canals and finally roadbeds for the "iron
horse" that, before tile chugged its across 3,000
miles of farmland, mountains and desert to the Pacific
Coast.
"We want our children educated in the Catholic
faith," pleaded thousands of immigrants as they
began a new life in the one nation that promised equal
opportunities to all its citizens. In response to their
appeal, one bishop after another wrote to superiors in
Emmitsburg to beg for Sisters.
Beginning in 1814, the Sisters of Charity opened
orphanages, parish free schools and academies in the key
cities along the Atlantic seaboard, Philadelphia, New
York, Boston, Baltimore, Washington and Wilmington. In
1823 they were introduced to hospital work in the
Baltimore Infirmary, established that year by the
facility of the Medical Department of the University of
Maryland.
In 1828 Mother Seton’s daughters crossed over the
Alleghenies for the first time and sailed down the Ohio
to the bustling river town of St. Louis, where they
opened in turn a hospital, an orphanage, and an
industrial school. In 1829 they staffed an orphanage, an
academy and a free school in Cincinnati. Pioneers in the
accepted American tradition, they traveled by stage
coach, covered wagon, canal and river boat, sharing the
physical dangers of a journey through unsurveyed
wilderness, the hardships and grinding poverty of the
frontier.
Davy Crockett and Kit Carson would have envied the
adventures of these fearless women who carried the
message of Christ's love to tile most remote corners of
the United States and Canada. In Nova Scotia, Sisters of
Charity from Mount St. Vincent, New York, begin in 1849
an apostolate that has been carried on since 1856 by the
independent congregation of Sisters of Charity of
Halifax. Traveling often by sleigh, the Sisters carried
the spirit of Mother Seton to the rural areas of the
Maritime Provinces and to Western Canada, in such varied
fields of the apostolate as the mining towns of Cape
Breton, the fishing villages of Nova Scotia, and the
foothill of the Rockies.
In 1852 seven Daughters of Charity left Emmitsburg
for California, and two died along the way, one of
exhaustion, the other of cholera contracted on the
fever-ridden Isthmus of Panama. In 1865, Sisters of
Charity of Cincinnati crossed the desert by stagecoach
to open a hospital in Santa Fe, a military outpost in
the Territory of New Mexico. A second contingent of
Sisters, traveling by wagon train in 1867, nursed
members of the caravan who were dying of cholera while
the arrows of attacking Kiowa Indians whirred through
the encampment. Frontiersmen, miners, railroaders,
notorious gunmen with a price on their heads - respected
the Sisters for their courage , utter realism and humor,
no less than for their Undiscriminating charity.
The two decades that preceded the Civil War doubled
tile Catholic population of the United States. Harried
bishops throughout tile country pleaded for Sisters or
for Mother Houses in their own dioceses that would
multiply as quickly as possible the courageous,
resourceful women who extended the charity of Christ to
thousands of souls
During these years hospitals, schools and orphanages
were opened by Mother Seton's Sisters in Detroit,
Milwaukee, New York City, Buffalo, Troy, Washington,
Norfolk and Mobile. Additional orphanages and schools
were staffed in Natchez, Syracuse, and Utica; hospitals
were founded in New Orleans, Rochester, and
Philadelphia. Throughout the Metropolitan area of
Greater New York and up the Hudson, Parochial schools
and academics were opened in nearly every parish. In the
turbulent industrial cities of the North, in Mississippi
and Alabama in the heart of the deep South, Sisters of
Charity taught lessons in social justice that, had they
been needed, might have spared the nation the bitter
experience of Civil War.
When Fort Sumpter was fired upon in April of 1861,
there were Sisters of Charity on both sides of the
Mason-Dixon Line. Union and Confederate officials asked
for Sisters to nurse the sick and wounded in army
hospitals, transport ships and barracks, and in
improvised field hospitals set up along the shifting
battle fronts. On the blood-stained field of Gettysburg,
ten miles from Mother Seton’s grave in St. Joseph’s
Valley, at Antietam, Frederick, Point Look- out, Holly
Springs, Natchez, Richmond, and Harpers Ferry, white
winged Daughters of Charity nursed the wounded with deft
hands and compassion that knew no distinction between
the Blue and the Grey.
In the Midwest, Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati gave
service beyond the call of duty at Camp Dennison, at
Shiloh, Cumberland, Culpepper, and Galliopolis. Sister
Anthony O'Connell, "Angel of the battlefield,"
whose portrait hangs in the Smithsonian Institute in
Washington, was revered by Lincoln and Jefferson Davis,
Grant and Lee for her devoted care of their wounded and
dying men. In New York City, the original Mother House
of the Sisters of Charity of Mount St. Vincent was
converted into a military hospital, staffed by Black Cap
daughters of Mother Seton. In Newark and Trenton
hospitals, Sisters of Charity of New Jersey contributed
generous nursing service until the close of the war.
Beginning with the cholera epidemic that swept tile
country in 1832, Sisters of Charity cared for the sick
and dying during constantly recurring epidemics of
cholera, typhus, yellow fever, and smallpox. In the
great Charity hospital of New Orleans, in Philadelphia's
"old Blockley," in the Cholera hospital on
Ward's Island and the Smallpox Hospital on Randall’s
Island, New York City, in an improvised Cholera hospital
on McNab's Island in Halifax Harbor, and in the National
Leprosarium in Louisiana, Mother Seton's daughters
risked their lives - and in many instances sacrificed
themselves - in the care of the sick. In 1840 they
introduced in the United States St. Vincent de Paul's
revolutionary concept of compassionate care for the
mentally ill. By 1879 they had staffed seven
institutions, the first Catholic psychiatric hospitals
in the country.
In such major disasters as the San Francisco and
Chicago fires, the Johnstown and Pittsburgh floods, the
sinking of the Titanic, the chemical explosion that
wrecked one third of the city of Halifax, the Sisters of
Charity were there, ready with doctors, nurses,
ambulances and medical supplies to relieve human
suffering. Through good times and bad times, with
worthless "greenback" currency and without it,
on the gold standard or on "free silver,"
through bank panics and dreary depression years, they
fed and clothed the poor, found work for the unemployed,
and prepared future American and Canadian citizens to
make their way in a highly competitive society.
During the 1880s and 1890s, schools, hospitals and
social welfare services were multiplied. Then came the
Spanish-American War and a warm invitation to re-enter
military service. In Cuba and Puerto Rico, on army
transports on the high seas, in naval bases and in their
own community-staffed hospitals, Mother Seton’s
daughters cared for soldiers stricken with malaria and
yellow fever.
The twentieth century expanded horizons in every
field. Education, nursing, and social welfare became
exacting professions that required specialized training.
A nation-wide epidemic of influenza and two World Wars
brought new opportunities for Sisters of Charity to give
every service in their power to all in need. There was
literally no human problem from which they could remain
aloof.
Because they can look back so far, Mother Seton's
daughters can look ahead with confidence to the totally
unpredictable challenges of a nuclear era. The nations
of the free world look to America for leadership; the
enslaved for deliverance. The beatification of a native
born citizen of the United States is in itself a sign
that the American Catholic Church has attained spiritual
maturity. It is the prayer of the Sisters of Charity
that millions of American Catholics will be inspired by
the example of Blessed Elizabeth Ann Seton to enter
deeply into the spirit of the Church, which is the soul
of Christ.