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Ursuline College in Pepper Pike, Ohio, was founded in 1871 by the Ursuline Sisters of Cleveland. It was followed in 1904 by College of New Rochelle, now closed, but was located in New Rochelle, New York. In 1919, the Ursulines founded a university-level liberal arts college for women in London, Ontario, Canada.
Dorothy Kazel, OSU (June 30, 1939 – December 2, 1980), was an American Ursuline religious sister and missionary to El Salvador.On December 2, 1980, she was beaten, raped, and murdered along with three fellow missionaries – Maryknoll Sisters Ita Ford, Maura Clarke and laywoman Jean Donovan – by members of the military of El Salvador.
She joined the Ursuline Sisters of Cleveland after high school. [3] [2] She earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics, summa cum laude, from Ursuline College in 1973. [3] [2] De Vinne was a school teacher in parish elementary schools at Christ the King in East Cleveland, Saint Clare in Lyndhurst, and Saint Mary Magdalene in Willowick from 1973 ...
Sisters of St. Joseph of Cleveland C.S.J. 1872 2007 Sisters of St. Joseph ... Ursuline Sisters of Pittsburgh 1958 Ursulines: Merged V Vincentian Sisters of Charity:
Ursuline College (Pepper Pike, Ohio) Official site, maintains close ties to its founding religious congregation, the Ursuline Sisters of Cleveland; Wyoming Catholic College (Lander, Wyoming) Official site; Xavier University of Louisiana (New Orleans, Louisiana), the only Catholic HBCU, founded by the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament
Villa Angela Academy was founded in the mid-1870s, as a boarding school and academy for girls, by the Ursuline Sisters of Cleveland on property they had purchased on the southern shore of Lake Erie at the mouth of Euclid Creek. [7] The school moved into a new building in 1972.
Born June 30, 1939, in Cleveland, Ohio, Sister Dorothy Kazel [4] join the Ursuline order in 1960. After completing her bachelor’s degree in 1965, she spent nine years as a teacher, counselor, and missionary working in Cleveland and Arizona. In 1974, she joined a mission team in El Salvador, where she became known as Madre Dorthea.
When the school relocated to Cleveland Heights in September 1942, it was named in honor of the first Ursuline superior, Mother Mary of the Annunciation Beaumont. In January 2003, the Board of Directors of Beaumont School approved the construction of a new $5 million Spiritual Life Center destined to be the hub of student spiritual, academic and ...