Category Archives: Albany

Sister Elaine Wheeler’s Notebooks

This post is in celebration of Archives Month 2025.  American Archives Month is celebrated every October and is meant as a time for archivists to advocate for themselves, their profession, and for the importance of historical records and documentation as a mechanism of organization, shared history, and accountability.

When we give special tours to visitors, we will sometimes pull out a few special items from the collections that we think will impress them.  When other archivists visit, it becomes harder to impress.  We could pull out, say, a Christmas card from Teddy Roosevelt, but they would respond with something like, “So what, we all have something like this.”

Something that we can pull out to impress are Sister Elaine Wheeler’s notebooks.

Sister Elaine Wheeler's notebooks

In 1978, Sister Elaine was temporarily on mission in St. Louis, taking a course on Spirituality and Scripture Study, when she received a call from Sister Mary Basil Roarke, Visitatrix of the former Northeast Province at the time.  Sister Mary Basil asked her to “spend six months to a year setting up the archives for the Northeast Province [her home province in Albany, NY]?”  As a Daughter of Charity does, Sister Elaine accepted the ministry and then apparently said to herself, “You idiot, you don’t know a thing about archives.”

But, taking Sister Mary Basil’s advice to visit archives and take some workshops, she called upon her oldest sister, Sister Mary Cecelia Wheeler, archivist for the Religious Sisters of the Sacred Heart, conveniently also located in St. Louis.  Sister Mary Cecelia gave Sister Elaine her first lesson on archives, a lesson that Sister Elaine would pass on to many others – that there is the theoretical and the perfect in the archives, which is something to attain to, and that there is the practical and the real.

The five Wheeler Sisters
The five Wheeler Sisters: Sisters Elaine, Madeleine, Mary Cecilia (R.C.S.J.), Zoe, and Jean Marie

By Sister Elaine’s tally, she visited 17 repositories, took 16 workshops, and attended the Society of American Archivists conference 21 times over her 26 years as Archivist.  Her notebooks document not only her research, but a chapter of archival history in the late 1970s and early 1980s when communities of women religious began to establish formal archives for their communities and for outsiders. 

Sister Elaine Wheeler's description of what an archivist is and is not
What an Archivist is and is not, according to Sister Elaine

At the time, there were five provinces of the Daughters of Charity in the United States.  Not only did Sister Elaine help establish the archive for her home province, but she also worked with the other four provinces (the Southeast in Emmitsburg, MD; the East Central in Evansville, IN; the West Central in St. Louis, MO; and the West in Los Altos, CA) to help set up their own archives, establishing cataloging guidelines and starting an oral history project for sisters in the Northeast.  The archives of the different provinces met routinely for many years. Her work continues to exert influence on us here in Emmitsburg every single day!

Draft of Sister Elaine's acquisition policy
Draft of Sister Elaine’s acquisition guidelines

In addition to the Daughters’ collections, Sister Elaine took what she learned and applied it elsewhere.  She traveled to different hospitals under the Daughters’ orbit – usually the ministries that created the largest amounts of records – and provided workshops to ensure that the hospitals themselves were keeping records accurately to better administer patient care. 

Sister Elaine's diagram of religious archives
The world of religious archives, according to Sister Elaine

The reason that these notebooks remain a fascination to other archivists is because they reflect the same training that we all went through.  Sister Elaine learned about what an archival facility ideally would look like, how to determine what to accession and add to the collections, the importance of weeding collections to preserve space, and the necessity of good policies and procedures to ensure privacy where appropriate and yet still make the materials available.  Certainly, Sister Elaine’s training was a little less dependent on computer systems than ours today, but we still see the makings of all of our mentors and mentees in the field, and can see the place of Sisters going forth into the world reflected in the ministry of the Archives!

Sister Elaine Wheeler at her desk in the Archives
Sister Elaine processing in her office in 1990. You can see the steps in the archival process on her board behind her.

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Our Four Campuses: Albany, New York

This is part two of a four-part series on the history of the four primary campuses in the Province, which correspond to the locations where the four provinces that formed the Province of St. Louise had their provincial houses:  Emmitsburg, MD; Albany, NY; Evansville, IN; and St. Louis, MO.  Part one on the Emmitsburg campus can be found here.

January 4, 1969 would be a momentous day for the American Daughters of Charity; two U.S. provinces – one in Emmitsburg, MD and the other in Normandy, MO – were to be re-organized into five provinces.  Among them, a new Northeast Province was to begin to create its own history.

Preparations for the change had been taking place for months.  In October 1968, Sister Mary Basil Roarke accepted her position as the first Visitatrix of the new province and in December travelled to Jamaica, Queens, New York City to begin establishing a temporary Provincial House at the DePaul House of Study. 

The Dorchester Place Provincial House in Queens, New York City
The Dorchester Place Provincial House, Queens, first provincial house of the Northeast Province

In 1970, the question of a permanent Provincial House was discussed, and Albany, New York was selected as the best site due to its central geographic point within the province with a long history with the community.  The property in Menands was purchased from the Missionary Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, who were looking to downsize their infrastructural footprint due to declining numbers.  The final contracts for the purchase were signed on April 19, 1971.  Sisters Margaret Finnegan and Caroline Mooney oversaw the preparations of the new home, and the first moving vans left New York City for the Capital Region on July 3.

Sister Mary Basil Roarke receives a blessing from Father Joseph Tinnelly, C.M., 1971
Sister Mary Basil Roarke, Visitatrix, receiving the blessing of Father Joseph Tinnelly, C.M., Provincial Director, at the opening of the new Provincial House, 1971

The house was comprised of Sisters serving in Provincial governance and Sisters who served in the Ministry of prayer (who lived in the area that became known as St. Louise House).  The campus was also home to the Seminary for sisters in Formation until 1990, when an interprovincial Seminary was established for the Northeast and Southeast Provinces in Emmitsburg. 

In 1995, a new office building was constructed for the Provincial Council’s and Visitatrix’s work in governance so that the St. Louise sisters could have a larger oratory and activity space.  In 1998, the community saw their merger with the Canadian province of the Daughters of Charity, creating a truly binational province.   Both flags fly on campus to this day.

The American and Canadian flags on the Albany campus
The binational flags on campus

In 2011, the Northeast province became part of the new Province of St. Louise, along with three other provinces in North America.  Facing their own declining numbers, the Albany campus began a process of transition, as the Daughters partnered with Franciscan Ministries to continue to care for the Sisters who live and serve in Albany, as well as to provide senior living space in a faith-based environment to those living in upstate New York. 

The campus has been home to the Daughters for over 50 years, and to the sisters who originally came from that province, remains a deeply important place in their lives and ministries.

Aerial view of the Albany campus in autumn facing west southwest, 1988
Campus in autumn, facing west southwest, 1988

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