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The Dominican Sisters of the Immaculate Conception Province were founded by Mother Maria Rose Kolumba Białecka in 1861. She was born on August 23, 1838, in eastern Poland. Utilizing her many natural and supernatural gifts, Mother Białecka, at the age of 19, followed the dictates of her heart and entered the novitiate of the Dominican Sisters ...
The Dominican, Cloistered, Contemplative Nuns of the Perpetual Rosary monastery was founded by the one in Catonsville, Maryland (now closed). On June 10, 1925, Mother Mary of the Crown, O.P., as Prioress , together with eight other Sisters began a new house in South Enola, close to Harrisburg, Pennsylvania .
Dominican Teaching Sisters of the Holy Name of Jesus in Brignoles with schools [10] Dominican Teaching Sisters in Wanganui, New Zealand [11] Contemplative dominican sisters in Avrillé [12] - France; Franciscan sisters: Les Petites Sœurs de saint François – Le Trévoux; Sisters of Transfiguration
The Dominican priest Marie-Dominique Philippe founded the Brothers of Saint John in 1975, the Contemplative Sisters of Saint John in 1982, and the Apostolic Sisters of Saint John in 1984. The Saint John Family is a Catholic religious order which draws heavily from the writings of John the Evangelist .
Mary Augustine Niehierl (d. 1877), Founder of the Dominican Sisters of the Most Holy Rosary of Newburgh (now part of Dominican Sisters of Hope) (Germany–United States) James Whelan (1823–1878), Professed Priest of the Dominicans; Bishop of Nashville; Founder of the Dominican Sisters of Saint Cecilia (Ireland–United States)
The Dominican Sisters of the Heart of Jesus are located in Lockport, Louisiana. This group is not in any way associated with, approved, or recognized by the Diocese of Houma-Thibodaux, nor is it listed in the diocesan Directory, as per Fr. P. J. Madden, Diocesan Administrator (9 September 2022). [1]
The Collettines are a branch of the Poor Clares. The community of Poor Clare Colettine Nuns in Cleveland, Ohio is made up of both cloistered contemplative nuns dedicated to a life of prayer, and extern sisters who minister to the community's external needs. [10] The Redemptoristines are the female counterpart to the Redemptorists.
A Fitting Response: The History of the Sisters of St. Joseph of the Third Order of St. Francis (2 vol. 1992) Quinonez, Lora, and Mary Daniel Turner. The Transformation of American Catholic Sisters (1993) excerpt and text search; Schneider, Mary L. "American Sisters and the Roots of Change: the 1950s." US Catholic Historian (1988): 55-72. JSTOR ...