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  1. Henriette Díaz DeLille, SSF (March 11, 1813 [1] – November 16, 1862) was a Louisiana Creole of color and Catholic religious sister from New Orleans. She founded the Sisters of the Holy Family in 1836 and served as their first Mother Superior .

  2. -Henriette Delille is the first United States native-born African American whose cause for canonization has been officially opened by the Catholic Church.-Henriette Delille, born in New Orleans, Louisiana in 1812, was a real-life person like you and me. She lived all of her life in New Orleans and had family and friends.

  3. Jan 14, 2020 · Henriette Delille was born in New Orleans between 1810 and 1813, most sources agree on 1812. Her father was a White man and her mother a multiracial "free person of color." Both were Roman Catholics. Her parents could not be married under Louisiana law, but the arrangement was common in Creole society. Her great great grandmother was among ...

  4. Nov 28, 2023 · Sister Henriette Delille during a tumultuous period in American history marked by slavery and racial discrimination, making her journey on the road to sainthood an inspiring testament to her dedication to faith, service and her community. Born in 1813 in New Orleans, Louisiana, Sister Henriette was a free woman descended from slaves.

  5. Discover the inspiring story of Henriette Delille, a pioneer of social justice and a candidate for sainthood in the Catholic Church.

  6. Nov 4, 2016 · Henriette Delille died in 1862, at age 49. On March 27, 2010, Pope Benedict XVI declared that Henriette Delille had led a life of “heroic virtue” and declared the Creole woman from New Orleans ...

  7. Dec 22, 2017 · Henriette Delille died in 1862 at the relatively young age of 50, probably of tuberculosis. At the time of her death, the order had 12 members, but it would eventually peak at 400 members in the ...

  8. Henriette Delille died on November 17, 1862. Her obituary was a modest paragraph, printed in New Orleans's Catholic newspaper, the Propagateur Catholique.It describes Delille as the founder of the House of the Holy Family, devoted to the education of the ignorant and enslaved.

  9. Declared Venerable by Pope Benedict XVI on March 27, 2010. Henriette Delille, a free woman of color, lived in New Orleans in the early 19th century. She affirmed the God-given dignity of persons of African descent during the era of slavery. With immense love and courage, she confronted the dehumanizing conditions that the Black population ...

  10. On Oct. 15, 1851, in the city of New Orleans, Henriette Delille professed her vows as a religious sister. Although the walk to St. Mary’s Chapel was only a few blocks, her journey to religious life had been a long one. Henriette was a femme de couleur libre (“free woman of color”), the daughter of a free Black mother and a White father.

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