Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On June 15, 1915, James Alberione established the women's workshop from which the Daughters of St. Paul developed began: the women religious were to teach women work skills, train catechists and run stores selling books and religious articles. Alberione entrusted the leadership of the group to Teresa Merlo (1894-1964), in religion Sister Thecla.
Dedham: Historic and Heroic Tales From Shiretown. The History Press. ISBN 978-1-59629-750-0. Slafter, Carlos (1905). A Record of Education: The Schools and Teachers of Dedham, Massachusetts 1644-1904. Dedham Transcript Press. 1642-3. Worthington, Arthur Morton (1958). History of St. Paul's Episcopal Church in Dedham (PDF). Worthington, Erastus ...
The first group of Anglicans in Dedham began meeting in Clapboardtrees in 1731. [1] A few decades later, Samuel Colburn [a] died in the Crown Point Expedition of 1756. [2] Though he was not an Anglican, he left almost his entire estate to the Anglican community in Dedham to establish St. Paul's Church.
He was an incorporation of St. Paul's Church [3] and a member of a number of Dedham's civic and social organizations. [1]After a prayer service to celebrate Dedham's Bicentennial, 600 people then processed to a pavilion erected to host a dinner on the land of John Bullard a few rods to the west. [4]
19 Court Street is an historic building in Dedham, Massachusetts that was originally built in 1801 as a two-story, Federal-style single-family home. [1] It was soon thereafter converted into a tavern, and hosted John Quincy Adams, Andrew Jackson, and the Marquis de Lafayette.
The parish was founded in 1960 due to overcrowding at St. Mary of the Assumption Church in Dedham. [3] By the 1930s St. Mary's was one of the biggest parishes in the Archdiocese with over 6,000 parishioners and 1,300 students in Sunday School. [4] During the middle of that decade there were four priests and six nuns ministering to the ...
Maria Teresa Merlo (20 February 1894 – 5 February 1964) – in religious life "Tecla" – was an Italian Roman Catholic professed religious and the co-founder of the Daughters of Saint Paul that she established alongside Blessed Giacomo Alberione.
Moseley's on the Charles, located on the banks of the Charles River in Dedham, Massachusetts, was the oldest continuous-running ballroom in the country. [1] [2] Founded in 1905 by Elisha Moseley, [2] it originally functioned as a summer canoe house in addition to the ballroom.