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St. Elizabeth of Hungary Catholic School (Dallas) St. Joseph Catholic School ; St. Joseph Catholic School ; St. Mark Catholic School (Plano) St. Mary Catholic School ; St. Mary of Carmel Catholic School (Dallas) St. Monica Catholic School (Dallas) - The school was established on February 1, 1954.
Elizabeth Ann Bayley Seton SC (August 28, 1774 – January 4, 1821) was a Catholic religious sister in the United States and an educator, known as a founder of the country's parochial school system. Born in New York and reared as an Episcopalian, she married and had five children with her husband William Seton.
In March 1805, Elizabeth Bayley Seton was received into the Catholic Church by Father Matthew O'Brien in St. Peter's Church, Barclay Street, New York. For a time she attempted to support herself by opening a school for boys, but the widely circulated report that this was a proselytizing scheme forced the school to close.
Basilica of the National Shrine of St. Ann; in Scranton, Pennsylvania; The Shrine of St. Bernadette; in Albuquerque, New Mexico [38] St. Elizabeth Ann Seton: National Shrine of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton; in Emmitsburg, Maryland [39] Shrine of St. Elizabeth Ann Bayley Seton; in Manhattan, New York; St. Frances Xavier Cabrini (Mother Cabrini):
Bayley had three children by his first wife, among whom was Elizabeth Ann Seton, who was canonized in 1975 as the first American-born Catholic saint. [1] After his first wife's death, Dr. Bayley married Charlotte Amelia Barclay, a member of the Roosevelt family , and the couple had seven children, the sixth of whom was Archbishop Bayley's ...
Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton (1774 - 1821) In the United States, St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, a recent convert to the Catholic Church, had hoped to establish a community of Daughters of Charity. Unable to do so because of the political situation during the Napoleonic Wars, on 31 July 1809 she founded the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph at Emmitsburg ...
The National Shrine of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton is a U.S. religious site and educational center in Emmitsburg, Maryland, that pays tribute to the life and mission of Elizabeth Ann Seton (August 28, 1774 – January 4, 1821), the first native-born citizen of the United States to be canonized by the Roman Catholic Church.
In 1806, [4] DuBourg was in New York City to sell lottery tickets as a fundraiser for St. Mary's University, where he met the future saint Elizabeth Ann Seton, who he urged to travel to Baltimore to establish a school for girls. [34] Seton opened her school in June 1808, where women from around the country joined her.