Category Archives: Finding Aids

Bibliography Page – new online resources

New online resources added to the Bibliography Page:

Maryland Digital Cultural Heritage
Maryland Digital Cultural Heritage (MDCH) is a collaborative, statewide digitization program headquartered at the Enoch Pratt Free Library/State Library Resource Center in Baltimore. Our program partners with Maryland libraries, archives, historical societies, museums, and other institutions to digitize and provide free online access to materials relating to the state’s history and culture. Since the program began in 2002, MDCH’s collections have grown to include over 5,000 items, such as maps, manuscripts, photographs, artwork, books, and other media.

Another fine resource for the history of photography, focusing on photographers in the Baltimore area, is the blog
Photographicus Baltimorensis. A direct link can also be found in the “Blogs we’re following” section of this site.

Leave a comment

Filed under Digitized Collections, Finding Aids

New resources added to Bibliography page

Links to some new resources have been added to the “Bibliography” page.

All Things Vincentian
Research portal bringing together digital Vincentian source material, journal articles, image collections, archives, exhibits and online conversation.

Charpy, Elisabeth D.C. (2010) “A Challenge to Napoleon: The Defiance of the Daughters of Charity,” Vincentian Heritage Journal: Vol. 30: Iss. 2, Article 3.

Metz, Judith S.C. (1999) “By What Authority? The Founding of the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati,” Vincentian Heritage Journal: Vol.
20: Iss. 1, Article 4.

Poole, Marie D.C. (1999) “Vincent In Translation,” Vincentian Heritage Journal: Vol. 20: Iss. 2, Article 1.

Vincent dePaul Image Archive

Vincentian History Research Network
An online forum designed for researchers and scholars on Vincentian topics broadly considered. This is a place to learn about Vincentian resources, share current research projects, ask questions about possible archival and bibliographic resources, announce publications or participation in conferences, and seek grant funding. Members of the VHRN can share in other ways that will support a community of “Vincentian” scholars.

Leave a comment

Filed under Announcements, Guides

Finding aid for World War I records now available

ww1-sisters-moynahan-sr-chrysostum
(Photo of Sister Chrysostom Moynahan used with permission of the Daughters of Charity Provincial Archives)
On April 2, 1917, the United States entered World War I. Hospitals served by the Daughters of Charity were quick to join the war effort. Only one group of sisters served with the American Expeditionary Forces: ten Daughters of Charity from the St. Louis Province under the leadership of Sister Chrysostom Moynahan (seen in the photo) as Chief Nurse. With about one hundred nurses recruited all over the country from hospitals served by the Daughters, they formed the nursing staff of Base Hospital #102 in Vicenza, Italy, the closest base hospital operating near the Italian Front. Sister Chrysostom, though past the preferred Red Cross age limit of forty, was well-equipped for her leadership role. She was the first registered nurse to serve in Alabama; her nursing experience included service in Portsmouth, Virginia, and Fort Thomas, Kentucky, during the Spanish American War. She had also built and administered Saint Vincent’s Hospital in Birmingham, Alabama, and laid the groundwork for Saint Margaret’s in Montgomery. The Loyola Unit returned to the U.S. in May 1919.

The Provincial Archives collections includes diaries kept by three of the Sisters, correspondence, artifacts, individual and group photos of the Sister, and a set of glass plate negatives showing the Sisters’ departure from the U.S., their journey overseas, scenes of the War, and views of post-war Europe. The glass plate negatives have been digitizd and are available for viewing in the Provincial Archives. A downloadable finding aid for the collection can be found on the Finding Aids page.

Leave a comment

Filed under Finding Aids, World War 1