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Grace Cowardin Dammann, RSCJ (1872–1945) was a member of the Society of the Sacred Heart (RSCJ) and a president of Manhattanville College. [1] She was a long time civil rights activist. Under her leadership, Manhattanville College admitted its first African American student in 1938. [2]
In 1948, when Montgomery was 22 years old, she entered the Society of the Sacred Heart (RSCJ) in Albany. She made her first vows in 1951 and her final vows in 1956 in Rome. During the period of her novitiate she received news of her brother's death in a military training exercise for jet fighter planes. [5]
The Society of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (French: Religieuses du Sacré-Cœur de Jésus; Latin: Religiosae Sanctissimi Cordis Jesu), abbreviated RSCJ, is a Catholic centralized religious institute of consecrated life of pontifical right for women established in France by Madeleine Sophie Barat in 1800.
Madeleine Sophie Barat, RSCJ, (12 December 1779 – 25 May 1865), was a French saint of the Catholic Church who founded the Society of the Sacred Heart, a worldwide religious institute of educators. Early life and family
Mary Hardey was born in Piscataway, Maryland, United States.Both her parents (Frederick Hardey and Sarah Spalding) were descended from old Maryland Catholic families. While she was a child, the family moved to Opelousas, Louisiana, and she became in (1822) one of the first pupils of the Sacred Heart Convent in Grand Coteau.
Network of Sacred Heart Schools; International Society of the Sacred Heart; Associated Alumnae and Alumni of the Sacred Heart Archived May 14, 2008, at the Wayback Machine; Catholic Online – St. Rose Philippine Duchesne This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Philippine ...
Some groups who find the Ignatian "way of proceeding" helpful include the Society of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (RSCJ), the Faithful Companions of Jesus (FCJ), the Loreto Sisters (IBVM), the Religious Sisters of Charity (RSC), the Oblates of the Virgin Mary, and the Christian Life Communities (CLC). [18]
Manhattanville University traces its origins to an Academy of the Sacred Heart founded over 175 years ago on the Lower East Side of New York City.In August 1841 the Society of the Sacred Heart (RSCJ), a Catholic religious order dedicated to the education of young women, established an academy at 412 Houston Street, near the corner of Mulberry Street, in the tightly packed warren of narrow ...