Category Archives: Sisters of Charity Federation

DC mission in Virginia City, Nevada

Virginia City - walking Virginia City - Wagon

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

By Sister Margaret Ann Gainey, archivist, Daughters of Charity Province of the West, Los Altos Hills, CA. Images courtesy of Sister Estela Morales, D.C.

In October 1864, Sisters Frederica McGrath, Elizabeth Russell and Xavier Schauer left San Francisco and journeyed by steamer, train and stage to Virginia City, Nevada Territory. Sisters arrived in Virginia City five years after silver was first discovered and it was amid this young mining community that they opened St. Mary’s School and Orphan Asylum (and later, St. Mary’s Hospital).

It was with fondness that the Sisters remembered their days in Virginia City and with a sense of history that they preserved them for future generations through their writings. It is with gratitude and pride that we share an excerpt from the Annals describing the Sisters’ journey to Virginia City:

“On the fifth of October 1864, Sisters Frederica, Xavier and M. Elizabeth were missioned to Virginia City, Nevada Territory. . . . To describe the trip hither would exhaust more wit than I have at my command. Eastward from Sacramento there was then but thirty miles of the Central Pacific Rail Road complete, so that the principal part of the journey was made in stages. Our coach was a great swinging and swaging stage drawn by six handsome horses. Our journey was a remarkably safe one, for once only did the axle-tree snap in twain; and well for us it occurred on the level road, for had we been on or near the summit of the Sierras, we might never have seen Virginia City. It was nothing unusual in those days to hear of stages and their occupants being precipitated from the dizzy heights, hundreds of feet below.

When we reached Strawberry Station in California, we were obliged to remain there three hours in a dilapidated cabin. And passing from its entrance to the rear some two yards to partake of some refreshments, we stepped over three men who were sleeping soundly on the softest plank in the floor, wrapped up in their blankets. It gave us no very pleasant anticipations of mining life at our destined home!

We got into Virginia City about two o’clock. . . . . Virginia City is situated midway up the steep side of Mount Davidson, seven thousand two hundred feet above the level of the sea and in the clear Nevada atmosphere is visible for many miles. At the time of our arrival it claimed a population of some fifteen thousand; and all day long half or nearly half swarmed the streets, whilst the remainder was down among the drifts and tunnels of the Comstock hundreds of feet down. And often have we heard the faint boom of a blast down in the bowels of the earth.” . . . .

Over fifty Sisters served the people of Virginia City between 1864 and 1897. They were loved and respected in this mining community where they taught the children of the miners, nursed the men who were wounded in the mines and cared for the orphaned children when the miners died. Through the years, miners and their families generously supported the orphanage, school and hospital.

Virginia City - Rocks

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Filed under Education, Health Care, Ministries, Sisters of Charity Federation

Beatification of Sister Miriam Teresa Demjanovich, S.C.

Today the first ever beatification to occur on US soil will give the title “Blessed” to a member of the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth, Convent Station, New Jersey (SCNJ), Sister Miriam Teresa Demjanovich, S.C. Sister Miriam’s beatification will be held at 9:30am at the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart in Newark, New Jersey. In 2005 the Church adjusted the process by which saints are named. As part of this, it is now permitted for beatifications to occur in the native land of the person to be beatified.

Sister Rosemary Moynihan, General Superior of the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth, said of Sister Miriam Teresa:

“God makes saints out of the simple events of life. Holiness is not beyond any one of us in our daily, ordinary lives. Miriam Teresa made it clear that the grace of God is given to each of us freely. Each day we are given the invitation and strength to live in union with the Spirit of God found in each and every one we meet and in all creation.”

Our colleagues at the National Shrine of Saint Elizabeth of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton will be holding a special Mass in the Basilica today at 1:30pm to mark the beatification. The Mass is open to the public. For more information see the Shrine’s website

Learn more about Sister Miriam Demjanovich’s life and cause for canonization in this site from the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth.

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Filed under Announcements, Sisters of Charity Federation, Sisters of Charity of Convent Station

“A home for her sisters”

by Sister Louise Grundish, S.C., archivist, Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill, Greensburg, PA
(images courtesy of Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill)

Sketch of Stokes Mansion by Sister Fides Ruffner, S.C.

Sketch of Stokes Mansion by Sister Fides Ruffner, S.C.

Stokes Mansion

Stokes Mansion

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

August is a month of anniversaries for the Sisters of Charity. A major anniversary occurs on August 7 for the Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill.

On August 7, 1882 Mother M. Aloysia Lowe received the deed from the Bank of Commerce in Pittsburgh, PA for the Jennings Farm in Greensburg. Mother Aloysia with Sisters Adelaide Dunn, Raphael Kane, and Fidelis Ruffner took possession of the property. They were the first Sisters of Charity to reside at Seton Hill. Mother Aloysia had accomplished her task…she had “a home for her sisters.”

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Filed under Sisters of Charity Federation, Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill