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  2. Apr 8, 2024 · Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton, first native-born American to be canonized by the Roman Catholic Church. She was the founder of the Sisters of Charity, the first American religious society, which provided free education for poor girls. Learn about her life, conversion, and legacy.

  3. 1809 Elizabeth Seton begins the Sisters of Charity—the first religious community of women founded in the United States—in Emmitsburg, MD. She adapts their Rule from that of the Daughters of Charity in France, founded by Saints Vincent de Paul and Louise de Marillac. 1810 Elizabeth Seton opens St. Joseph Academy and a free school in Emmitsburg.

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  4. May 9, 2023 · Eight years prior, in Maryland, Seton had founded the Sisters of Charity — the first community for religious women in the U.S. In New York, their mission expanded to schools and hospitals. In 1846 the Sisters of Charity of New York spun off into a separate order.

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  5. The founder of the first American congregation of religious sisters, the Sisters of Charity, Elizabeth was many things to many people – a wife, mother, widow, nurturer, founder, educator. In the following article, S. Judith Metz takes a look at Elizabeth as friend.

  6. The Sisters of Charity of New York trace their roots to 1633, when St. Vincent de Paul and St. Louise de Marillac founded the Daughters of Charity to minister to the poor in the cities and villages of France. In 1809, their rule was adopted by Elizabeth Ann Seton, a widowed convert to Catholicism, for the Sisters of Charity, the order she began ...

  7. Seton, Elizabeth Ann (1774–1821) Catholic convert and founder of the American Sisters of Charity who was the first person born in the U.S. to be canonized a saint by the Roman Catholic Church. Name variations: Elizabeth Bayley Seton; Mother Seton; Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton.

  8. Beginning in 1817 in New York, Sisters conducted an orphanage for which Pierre Toussaint, a slave and hairdresser, solicited funds from his wealthy clients. . By 1823 they even ventured into health care, and by 1830 Sisters worked in Baltimore, Frederick, Washington, D.C., Harrisburg, Albany, St. Louis, and Cincinnati.

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