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Villa Maria Motherhouse Complex, or Felician Sisters Immaculate Heart of Mary Convent Chapel and Convent, is a historic Roman Catholic convent located at Cheektowaga in Erie County, New York. It is included in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Buffalo .
Blessed Mary Angela, foundress of the Felician sisters Chapel (1936) of the Felician sisters in Livonia, Michigan. The Felician Sisters, in full Congregation of Sisters of St. Felix of Cantalice Third Order Regular of St. Francis of Assisi (abbreviated CSSF), is a religious institute of pontifical right whose members profess public vows of and live in common.
The women, aged 69 to 99, were all members of a Felician Sisters convent in Livonia, Michigan 13 Religious Sisters Have Died From COVID-19 at a Single Convent in Michigan Skip to main content
The Felician Sisters originated in Poland and came to the United States in 1874, which became its main base. The sisters provided social mobility for young Polish women. Although the congregation was involved in the care of orphans, the aged, and the sick, teaching remained its primary concern. [37]
The Felician Sisters have run their convent and other operations on a roughly 27-acre property along Enfield Street for 90 years but now want permission to dedicate much of it for housing. They ...
Felician Sisters convent – 46 Cornell Street, built 1934, now the Saint John Paul II Parish Center; and; rectory – 73 Reid Street, built 1940–41, Georgian style. [2] The church is a T-shaped brick building on a foundation of cut limestone. A transept was added in 1912. It features an engaged bell tower with pyramidal roof and finials. [4]
Fr. Zmijewski made a heartfelt appeal to Mother Cajetan, Mother Provincial of the Felician Sisters in Detroit, to have the sisters oversee the school. His request was granted, and in September 1901, the Felician Sisters launched Our Lady of Mount Carmel School by opening two classrooms in the basement for first and second-grade students.
In 1921, a convent was built for the Felician Sisters who ran the school; seven years later, a high school was constructed. [2] By the late 1940s, St. Stanislaus was the largest Polish parish school in Michigan. [2]