Category Archives: Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill

Johnstown Flood – DC Provincial Annals, 1889

(Passage from the Provincial Annals of 1889 used with permission of the Daughters of Charity Provincial Archives)

On May 31, 1889, heavy rains and failure of a neglected dam led to the Johnstown Flood, in which 2,209 people died. While the Daughters of Charity were not directly affected by the flood, the Provincial Annals have an account of how the same torrential rains that contributed to the disaster in Johnstown also affected Emmitsburg. The Annals also tell of the Sisters in Emmitsburg receiving the news of the devastation in Johnstown.

(Provincial Annals, 1889)
Thursday, May 30. Ascension day: rain. Archbp. Gross on the noon train came with his brother & sister-in-law to see his niece in the Academy …
Friday, May 31. “The rain it raineth everyday.” …
Sat., June 1. Torrents of rain! and last night the flood gates were opened wider than ever. Not since 1844 has Toms Creek been so high; higher by two inches this time than that. The devastation & loss of property thro the Co. said to be very great, no afternoon train from Balt. last evening no could that from Rocky Ridge have crossed our bridge had it come, for the trestle work is washed away. Our staunch little foot bridge, which seemed such a model of strength in its way washed off & it isn’t even known where it is, the rails of the fences washed away … Uneasy about Father & can’t help being so travelling at this dangerous time. However the telegraph is in operation and if there had been bad news it would have come.
Sunday, June 2. Retreat Sunday, clear, bright day … A telegram this evening from Father, in Baltimore, got as far as Harrisburg on his journey, & in consequence of flood, returned & was en route for Washington. Safe! Deo gratias!
Monday, June 3d. Our loss is estimated at about $800. Our neighbor had his barn washed away, disasters on all sides. A terrific one at Johnstown, PA.
Tuesday night: Telegram. Father at Mt. Hope & will be home tomorrow. And home he came on Wednesday’s 11 o’clock train. R. Roads so unsafe & travel so precarious he tho’t it better to postpone his trip and return home & now that communication with the outside world has been resumed & papers come in, Father brought a lot, the terrible disaster of Johnstown comes to be understood & hearts sink as detail after detail is unveiled. Now we comprehend too why it was that such a feeling of unrest pervaded the house on Father’s account. He left here Thursday for Chicago, paused at Mt. Hope, determined to take his Chicago ticket over Penn. R.R. (which passes right thro Johnstown). A few hours earlier he would have been in the devastated district …

The Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill had two convents in Johnstown, St. John Gaulbert Convent and St. Columba’s Convent. Our next few posts will feature stories taken from the Seton Hill archives about the flood’s impact on the Seton Hill congregation. Special thanks to Sr. Louise Grundish, archivist for the Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill, for sharing her community’s stories with us.

Learn more about the Johnstown Flood at the website of the Johnstown Flood Museum

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“Change of Habit” – documentary from WQED Pittsburgh

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Sr. Louise Grundish, archivist for the Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill, PA, shared with us this wonderful video about Catholic sisters in Western Pennsylvania. She’s featured prominently in it as our other members of her congregation who have a wonderful tale to share. Having aired on Pittsburgh’s WQED, the program will enlighten you about the women religious in this area and, by extension, across the United States. What a beautiful celebration of their work!

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A Tribute to Mother Aloysia Lowe, S.C.

Guest post by Sister Louise Grundish, Archivist, Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill, Greensburg, PA

Seton Hill - buildings

Mother Aloysia Lowe

Mother Aloysia Lowe, S.C. (Seton Hill)


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mother, did you dream
As you opened the door
Of a “home for the Sisters,”
That your fifty spiritual daughters
Would one day number Fifty score and more?

Did your vision see the towers
Rising atop the Hill
A Litany of Homes:
Administration, Saint Joseph,
Marian, Lowe, and Ennis;
Sullivan, Reeves, Lynch,
Brownlee, Canevin, Doran,
Maura, Regina, DePaul,
Bayley and Assumption,
Housing generations
Who followed your footsteps
Up the Hill?

Could your faith, your hope,
Follow Elizabeth Seton’s counsel
To “be children of the Church,”
As seven parish schools
Spread out across the land
To Arizona, California,
Then back again to Maryland
Where it all began?

Did your compassion
In Elizabeth and Vincent’s spirit
Point the way to ministry to His poor,
In health and social needs
Until the charity of Christ
Urged your daughters Across the sea
To Korea?

On that hope-filled day,
Did your visition sense the peace
Of the blessed ground
Where you lie
Encircled by your daughters,
While their sisters come
To pray and ponder
Your courage and perseverance?

Do you, today,
With all our sisters gone ahead,
Look down on this Centennial year
With pride, and joy, and thanksgiving,
For all the wonders
God has wrought
Through your daughters?

–Sister M. Thomasine Steel, S.C.

This tribute to Mother Aloysia Lowe was printed in the Community Newsletter the summer of 1970 as the Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill celebrated the 100th year of their foundation. Now as we approach Christmas 2013, we pause to remember this valiant woman whose legacy we cherish. Christmas is the anniversary of her death and each year we pause at evening prayer to pray for this woman who left all that was familiar to travel to the Allegheny mountains and establish a Community for the people of Western Pennsylvania and beyond.

Maria Lowe was born in 1836, entered the Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati in 1852 at the age of 16,was sent to establish a new foundation in Altoona, Pennsylvania then part of the Pittsburgh Diocese in 1870 at the age of 34.

As the Community grew, Mother Aloysia searched for property to provide a home for the sisters.
In August, 1882 at the age of 46 she purchased 193 acres of property in Greensburg, Pa.
Wasting no time, Mother Aloysia took possession of the property, established the Novitiate in Greensburg, opened an Academy and began planning for construction at the top of the Hill given the appropriate name, Seton Hill. Ground was broken and the cornerstone laid in 1887 and in the spring of 1889 at the age of 53 the Motherhouse building was complete. With that work completed Mother Aloysia resigned as superior in August, 1889.

Mother Aloysia had little time to enjoy a somewhat lighter load of responsibility, the years of care and concern for the sisters and their works had taken a toll of the courageous woman. On Christmas Day, 1889 as the Angelus was ringing at noon, with her sisters at her bedside, Mother Aloysia died peacefully. She left very few personal possessions and keepsakes. However, in the Archives of the Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill a small paint box is displayed.

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