"SHSI Certificate of Recognition"
"Best on the Web"


Encyclopedia Dubuque

www.encyclopediadubuque.org

"Encyclopedia Dubuque is the online authority for all things Dubuque, written by the people who know the city best.”
Marshall Cohen—researcher and producer, CNN

Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.




SISTERS OF CHARITY OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY (BVM): Difference between revisions

From Encyclopedia Dubuque
Jump to navigationJump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 19: Line 19:
Annually on December 8th, BVMs and associated renew their vows and commitments. In 2013 for the first time, the Sisters celebrated the reception of a new BVM novice and the commitment of a new BVM associate. The combined event symbolized the collaboration between BVM susters and associates as faith and ministry partners. (6)
Annually on December 8th, BVMs and associated renew their vows and commitments. In 2013 for the first time, the Sisters celebrated the reception of a new BVM novice and the commitment of a new BVM associate. The combined event symbolized the collaboration between BVM susters and associates as faith and ministry partners. (6)


In 2017 it was estimated that nearly five thousand women had entered the BVM sisterhood. (7)
Mount Carmel, the BVM motherhouse, in 2016 was the home of about 170 retired Sisters and the administrative center of the order. BVM Sisters served in seventeen states as well as Ecuador and Ghana in ministries including education, advocacy for immigrants' rights, parish ministry and hospital chaplaincy. (7) In 2017 it was estimated that nearly five thousand women had entered the BVM sisterhood. (8)




Line 38: Line 38:


6. "Sisters of Charity Note 2 New Designations," ''Telegraph Herald'', December 14, 2013, p. 27
6. "Sisters of Charity Note 2 New Designations," ''Telegraph Herald'', December 14, 2013, p. 27
7. Miska, Rhonda. "Sisters Take to the Airwaves," ''Telegraph Herald,'' March 12, 2016, p. 12


7. Lawlor, Kathryn BVM, "Teaching Without Seeming to Teach," ''Telegraph Herald,'' March 16, 2017, p. 47
7. Lawlor, Kathryn BVM, "Teaching Without Seeming to Teach," ''Telegraph Herald,'' March 16, 2017, p. 47


[[Category: Religious Order]]
[[Category: Religious Order]]

Revision as of 20:05, 23 December 2017

Being written

SISTERS OF CHARITY OF THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY (BVM). The order was founded in 1833 by Sister Mary Frances CLARKE and Father Terrence Donaghoe and was noted for promoting women in leadership roles and education. The first sisters to come to the ARCHDIOCESE OF DUBUQUE, the Sisters of Charity arrived in June 1843. Originally brought to the city to teach Native Americans, the Sisters one month later opened St. Mary's Female Academy to teach the children of the miners and shopkeepers. (1) This commitment to education eventually led to the BVMs opening 59 schools in the Archdiocese of Dubuque. (2) The sisters later moved to St. Joseph's Prairie near Key West and founded their motherhouse. The order continued to grow and provided teachers for communities throughout the Midwest.

Disaster struck the order on May 1849, when fire destroyed all the buildings around their motherhouse. All personal belongings were lost, and for a time the sisters had to accept clothing from friendly neighbors. The Mount Carmel motherhouse was started when 110 acres of pasture land was purchased by attorney William J. KNIGHT at the southern end of Grandview Avenue from Frank D. STOUT who had used the area as pasture for his race horses. First occupied in 1893, the motherhouse has been expanded to include an infirmary (1906), Marian Hall infirmary (1955), and Generalate (1963).

Announcement was made in 1866 that the Sisters of Charity would opened a school for girls on September 3. Piano, guitar and harp were being taught and "all branches of education qualifying young ladies for any position in public or in private life."

With the death of Terence Donaghoe in 1860, Mary Frances Clarke had the congregation incorporated and started the process of receiving papal approval. Pope Pius IX issued the Decree of Approbation in 1877 approving the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary (BVM) for six years. The Vatican gave final approval of the congregation's constitutions on March 15, 1885. The BVM sisters at that time asked that Clarke be allowed to remain the Superior General for life. That decision the Vatican left to the bishop of Dubuque who approved.

The BVM congregation continued its strong commitment to education. The first school in Dubuque grew into ST. JOSEPH ACADEMY and later expanded in Mt. St. Joseph College (later CLARKE COLLEGE in 1881. The Sisters also staffed Mundelein in Chicago, Illinois. The Sisters have also been affiliated with many schools in Dubuque including St. Anthony's, St. Patrick's, and WAHLERT CATHOLIC HIGH SCHOOL.

In 1982 the Sisters founded the Roberta Kuhn Center, named in memory of Sister Roberta KUHN, as a "ministry to older people." Initially free classes in art, bridge, foreign language, word processing, scripture, and crafts were held in a converted barn at Mount Carmel. As the program grew, classes were moved to the Motherhouse and other locations. (3)

Sister Helen Garvey of Dubuque and president of the Sisters, addressed Pope John Paul II on the role of women in the church. Speaking in San Francisco in September, 1987, she urged the pope to considered expanding women's roles in all areas of church life. (4)

In October 1995 the Sisters had to wait until almost Christmas for a change in city law to allow them to construct housing for twenty-eight members. The four buildings, according to the Sisters, were a convent which was allowed in the single family neighborhood near South Grandview. Neighbors, however, contended the buildings were apartments. The Zoning Board initially opposed the building permit, but later reconsidered the plan. Legal action and the zoning board's opposition to a new definition of convent, led to the need of the city council to pass the issue by a "super majority." The soonest this could be done was December 18th. (5)

Annually on December 8th, BVMs and associated renew their vows and commitments. In 2013 for the first time, the Sisters celebrated the reception of a new BVM novice and the commitment of a new BVM associate. The combined event symbolized the collaboration between BVM susters and associates as faith and ministry partners. (6)

Mount Carmel, the BVM motherhouse, in 2016 was the home of about 170 retired Sisters and the administrative center of the order. BVM Sisters served in seventeen states as well as Ecuador and Ghana in ministries including education, advocacy for immigrants' rights, parish ministry and hospital chaplaincy. (7) In 2017 it was estimated that nearly five thousand women had entered the BVM sisterhood. (8)


---

Source:

1. "The Sisters' School," The Herald, August 29, 1866, p. 4

2. Kundert, Rob. "Tri-State's Irish Heritage," Telegraph Herald, March 16, 2017, p. 51

3. "Center of Spirituality," Telegraph Herald, April 24, 1994, p. 9

4. "1987," Telegraph Herald, December 27, 1987, p. 26

5. "Delay Makes Nuns Wait," Telegraph Herald, October 17, 1995, p. 3

6. "Sisters of Charity Note 2 New Designations," Telegraph Herald, December 14, 2013, p. 27

7. Miska, Rhonda. "Sisters Take to the Airwaves," Telegraph Herald, March 12, 2016, p. 12

7. Lawlor, Kathryn BVM, "Teaching Without Seeming to Teach," Telegraph Herald, March 16, 2017, p. 47