World War I materials included on new research site

The Provincial Archives is proud to share with you the fruits of our participation in a new research initiative, a consortium of various institutions that document the history of women religious. We’re especially pleased because this introduces to the scholarly community the Daughters beyond what is widely known — their service as nurses during the Civil War. These World War I images came from the collection of glass negatives from St. Louis that documents the history of the Loyola Unit, a group of sisters stationed with miles of the front in Vicenza, Italy in 1917.

Here is the link to “our” page.

If you click on each photograph, you’ll get a larger image. If you look closely at the photograph of the unit landing, you’ll see the “cornettes” on deck to the very right.

Leave a comment

Filed under Digitized Collections, World War 1

Birthday of Elizabeth Ann Seton – August 28

Seton display

Elizabeth Ann Seton birthday display in Gallery 1, August 28, 2013

(Photograph of Simon Bruté’s letter to Elizabeth Ann Seton used with permission of the Provincial Archives of the Daughters of Charity)
The Provincial Archives today celebrates the 239th birthday of the foundress of the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph’s, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton. In honor of the day, we’ve assembled a small exhibit of materials including three letters in her hand written on Aug. 28 of various years. One is from 1805; one is from 1807. The third is a wonderful letter to Mother Seton from her friend and spiritual mentor, Fr. Simon Bruté, penned in French on Aug. 27, 1820, as the top right of the text translates, the “Eve of the birthday of such an excellent heart.” Stop by and visit if you’re in the area – the Archives exhibit gallery is open to the public Wednesdays from 1 to 4:30 p.m.

Letter of Brute to Elizabeth Ann Seton

Letter, Simon Brute to Elizabeth Ann Seton, August 27, 1820

Leave a comment

Filed under Announcements, Elizabeth Ann Seton, Emmitsburg, Exhibits

Birthday of Elizabeth Ann Seton

Filicchi portrait of Elizabeth Ann Seton

A version of the “Filicchi Portrait” of Elizabeth Ann Seton


(Image used with permission of the Daughters of Charity Archives. Text based on research done by Sister Betty Ann McNeil, DC)

This week we will mark the birthday of Elizabeth Ann Seton, who was born August 28, 1774. The image seen here is based on the well-known Filicchi portrait of Elizabeth Ann Seton. The Filicchi family, of Livorno Italy, were business associates of Elizabeth Ann Seton’s husband, and it was the Filicchi who introduced Mother Seton to the Catholic faith following her husband’s death.

The Filicchi Portrait is based on a left-profile engraving of Elizabeth Bayley Seton by Ceroni about 1868. Ceroni based his engraving on a right-profile one by Charles Balthazar Julien Fevret de Saint-Mémin in 1797, which the Setons gave as gifts to friends and family, including the Filicchi, about 1798. Sometime after the death of Elizabeth Ann Seton’s husband, William Magee Seton, the Filicchi family commissioned a portrait of the Widow Seton based on the face but with a left profile and adding the traditional mourning garb of a black cap and cape, which became the habit of the American Sisters of Charity. Amabilia Filicchi may have provided the grieving Elizabeth with the customary dress of “widow’s weeds” worn in Tuscany at that time.

In response to a request from the Daughters of Charity for a copy of the Filicchi portrait, Patrizio Filicchi sent reproductions of her painted portrait to Emmitsburg in 1888, noting that he kept the painting “always before my eyes.” One is now exhibited in the museum of the National Shrine of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton.

The original painting no longer exists; it was destroyed during World War II.

At the first meeting of the Conference of Mother Seton’s Daughters in 1947 those attending agreed on the style of the Filicchi portrait as the official one to be used for Elizabeth Ann Seton’s cause for canonization. The Conference of Mother Seton’s Daughters is known today as the Sisters of Charity Federation.

1 Comment

Filed under Elizabeth Ann Seton, Sisters of Charity Federation, World War 2