Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ursuline Convent, Dallas, Texas (postcard, circa 1901–1907) Ursuline Convent, Toledo, Ohio. Ursuline secondary education schools are found across the United States and other countries. The first school was Ursuline Academy, began in 1727 in New Orleans, Louisiana. It is the oldest all-girls school in the country.
During the German occupation of Warsaw, Górska saved the lives of many Jewish children by smuggling them out of the ghetto, and transferring them to institutions belonging to the Ursuline Sisters, which had branches throughout occupied Poland. [2] The first convent in North America was established in Windsor, Ontario in 1965.
Stevenson University (Stevenson, Maryland) – formerly Villa Julie College; founded by the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur in 1947; renounced affiliation with the Catholic Church in 1967 University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey ( Newark, New Jersey ) – sold by Seton Hall University to the State of New Jersey in the 1960s
Sisters of St. Joseph Merged Sisters of St. Joseph of Rhode Island C.S.J. 1974 Sisters of St. Joseph Sisters of St. Joseph of Rutland, Vermont C.S.J. 1873 2001 Sisters of St. Joseph Merged Sisters of Saint Joseph of Susa (Italy) C.S.J. 2006 Sisters of St. Joseph Merged Sisters of St. Joseph of Tipton, Indiana C.S.J. 1888 2007 Sisters of St. Joseph
She is the founder of the Ursuline missions in Montana and Alaska. [3] In 1884 the founding Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Helena, Montana, Jean-Baptiste Brondel, invited the Ursulines to work with the Jesuits at St. Peter's Mission Church, and Mother Mary Amadeus came with five Ursulines she had chosen. They founded a boarding school ...
Spanish Plateresque style church completed 1931 Christ the King 4100 Harvest Ln, Toledo Corpus Christi 2955 Dorr St, Toledo University of Toledo Gesu 2049 Parkside Blvd, Toledo Good Shepherd 550 Clark St, Toledo Closed Immaculate Conception 434 Eastern Ave, Toledo Little Flower 5522 Dorr St, Toledo Most Blessed Sacrament 2240 Castlewood Dr ...
In December 1854, four Ursuline nuns arrived in Toledo, Ohio. Several days after their arrival from nearby Cleveland, Ohio, they began to operate classes on Cherry Street in downtown Toledo. These classes were offered roughly 200 students, ranging in grade level.
A postcard from the Ken Levin Toledo Postcard Collection, donated by Toledo resident, Ken Levin. The collection contains picture postcards about the Toledo area. Mr. Levin’s collection was published by the Toledo Blade in a book entitled “You Will Do Better in Toledo: From Frogtown to Glass City”, edited by Sandy and John R. Husman.