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Sisters of the Holy Humility of Mary

The Sisters of the Humility of Mary is a Roman Catholic religious congregation, founded at Dommartin-sous-Amance, France, in 1855. The community immigrated to the United States in 1864, and established themselves near New Bedford, Pennsylvania. This community is known as the Sisters of the Humility of Mary and is based at Villa Maria, Pennsylvania.

Sisters of the Humility of Mary
Humility of Mary Center in Davenport, Iowa
AbbreviationH.M./C.H.M.
Formationc. AD 1854; 170 years ago (1854)
FounderJohn Joseph Begel
Mary Magdelen Poitier
TypeCatholic religious order
HeadquartersUnited States of America
Websitehumilityofmary.org

A separate congregation developed from the Sisters of the Humility of Mary when around 1884, five sisters founded a convent in Ottumwa, Iowa. That community is known as the Congregation of the Humility of Mary and is based in Davenport Iowa.

History edit

The founder was John Joseph Begel (b. 5 April 1817; d. 23 Jan., 1884), pastor of the two villages of Laitre and Dommartin. In 1854, three pious women offered their services for the work of teaching poor children: Marie-Antoinette Poitier, Marie Tabourat, and Mary Joseph. Begel conceived the idea of establishing a religious community, and the following year he drew up a rule which was adopted by the women and approved by the Bishop of Nancy on 29 August 1858. Poitier, who founded the society alongside Begel, took the religious name of Mary Magdelen; Tabourat took the name Mary Anna.[1]

The object of the new congregation was the education of youth in country districts and small towns, the training of orphans, the care of the sick, and incidentally the decoration of altars in parish churches. The association increased in numbers. Soon, however, Begel's open condemnation of the policy of Napoleon III towards the Catholic church and especially towards religious institutes, brought him into disfavour with the civil authorities, and the sisters of the community were refused diplomas and prevented from opening schools.[1]

Sisters of the Humility of Mary (HM), Pennsylvania edit

In 1862, Louis Hoffer, a priest of Louisville, Ohio, U.S.A., applied for four sisters to teach in his school. Bishop Louis Rappe of Cleveland not only gave his approval, but invited the whole community to settle in his diocese. The sisters, accompanied by Begel, set sail 30 May 1864, and on their arrival took possession of a farm of 250 acres (1.0 km2) near New Bedford, Pennsylvania,(which had been transferred to the Cleveland diocese from the Diocese of Pittsburgh). The brought with them a statue of Mary from the convent garden at Dommartin-sous-Amance.

The farm had recently been vacated by the Sisters of Charity of St. Augustine, and to which they gave the name Villa Maria. It was far from a railroad, and the land was uncultivated, undrained, overgrown with brush, and dotted with sloughs, the buildings being surrounded by a marsh. Moreover, the community was destitute of resources and burdened with debt.[1] The sisters in Ohio wore a blue woolen habit, a black veil being worn by the professed, and a white one by novices. A silver medal was suspended from the neck on a blue band, and a rosary from the girdle, which was also of blue.

The "blue nuns" went to farmhouses to protect children from contagious disease and cared for injured railroad workers in a small clinic at their motherhouse.[2] They undertook the care of orphans and the work to which they had pledged themselves, and were soon able to enlarge the buildings (1869 and 1878), and shortly afterwards a chapel was built. The year 1884 was marked by the death of Father Begel, the venerable founder. In 1899 ground was purchased at Cleveland, Ohio, for an academy, which was chartered a few years later, in 1892, under the title of Lourdes Academy, named for Our Lady of Lourdes, and empowered to confer degrees. In 1897 it was removed to a more suitable location. In 1897, the Holy Humility of Mary Sisters (the “Blue Nuns”) took charge of St. John's parish school in Ashtabula. From 1900 to 1922 they taught at Most Pure Heart of Mary parish in Shelby.

Since Villa Maria was far from railroad facilities, a tract of sixty-three acres between Canton and Massillon, Ohio, was purchased in 1904 for the purpose of erecting a new mother-house, to be known as Mount Maria, and a college, which was opened in 1908 under the title of College of the Immaculate Conception.

In 1955, they opened Magnificat High School in Rocky River, Ohio. In 1987 the sisters started Humility of Mary Housing, Inc. (HMHI). Ten sites covering a five counties provide housing for low income seniors and single parents in transition. can find hope, independence, and self-worth. In 2009, in conjunction with the Ursuline Sisters of Youngstown, the Sisters of the Humility of Mary sponsor Dorothy Day House, a hospitality house offering meals, showers, and respite for the poor and unemployed. Opened in 2010, Opportunity House in Garfield Heights, houses young men with diagnosed disabilities who have aged out of foster care.[2]

In 1991, the "Heartsbeats" program was begun, selling items made by women in the United States and developing world countries to provide a market to help them support themselves through their skills.

Today, the Sisters of the Humility of Mary work in education, healthcare and social service primarily in the diocese of Cleveland, Youngstown and Pittsburgh. Through the Catholic Migrant Farmworkers Network they raise awareness about human trafficking. There is also a member working in Haiti. The community is based at the Villa Maria Education & Spirituality Center in Villa Maria, Pennsylvania.[3] As of 2014, there were 154 vowed members and 63 associates.[4]

Healthcare edit

The sisters entered health care in 1879 when St. Joseph's Infirmary was built, the first Catholic hospital in the Mahoning Valley, which functioned until 1910 when the sisters given charge of St. Elizabeth Hospital in Youngstown, Ohio.[5] In 1922, undertook the staffing of the Rose-Mary Home, a home for crippled children. Two more Ohio hospitals came under the direction of the sisters - St. Joseph Health Center in Warren in 1924 and St. Joseph in Lorain in 1927. By 2011, Humility of Mary Health Partners was formed to oversee the administration and management of St. Elizabeth Hospital and St. Joseph Health Center and several other area health-care services.[6] By 2014, the hospitals were run by Catholic Health Partners.[4]

Congregation of the Humility of Mary (CHM), Iowa edit

 
Mary Helene ven Horst and students at Marycrest College

Twenty years after they established themselves in Pennsylvania, five sisters settled in southeastern Iowa where they eventually established a motherhouse in Ottumwa. The Iowa sisters wore a black habit, that featured a shoulder cape, and veil. They wore a crucifix suspended on a cord around their neck and a rosary suspended from their belt.

The sisters founded St. Joseph Junior College, later renamed Ottumwa Heights College, in 1925. It was a normal school that trained young women to teach in Iowa's rural schools. They created the first religious "vacation schools" that educated children in rural Montana in their Catholic faith.[7] They brought the same program back to Iowa, and then extended it to other parts of the Midwest. In 1939 they opened Marycrest College, a four-year Liberal arts college, in Davenport, Iowa.[8]

The sisters are active in a variety of ministries. The congregation is a participating supporter of the Sister Water Project, a program of the Sisters of St. Francis of Dubuque, Iowa which has completed/restored over 140 well projects in Tanzania and 20 water systems in Honduras, providing a clean and safe source of water for residents.[9] They run Our Lady of the Prairie Retreat near Wheatland, Iowa in Clinton County.

Housing edit

The congregation sponsors Humility Homes and Services, Inc., founded in 1990 as Humility of Mary Housing, Inc, to provide services and assistance with housing to the homelessness. In 2008, they opened the Humility of Mary Shelter, Inc. emergency shelter. In 2018 the two programs merged administrative and service operations to form Humility Homes and Services, Inc.[10]

In 1983 the congregation's headquarters in Iowa was transferred to Davenport. CHMs and their associates are active in 20 states as well as Mexico and Canada.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c "Institute of the Sisters of the Holy Humility of Mary." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 7. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1910. 30 January 2020  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  2. ^ a b "Humility of Mary Health Partners, Youngstown", Progress & Promises
  3. ^ Villa Maria Education & Spirituality Center
  4. ^ a b Zlatos, Bill. "Sisters of the Humility of Mary in Lawrence County celebrate 150th anniversary", Tribune-Review, July 20, 2014
  5. ^ "Humility of Mary Sisters", Encyclopedia of Cleveland History, Case Western University
  6. ^ Humility of Mary Health Partners
  7. ^ "Heritage". Congregation of the Humility of Mary. Retrieved 2015-05-06.
  8. ^ Marlys A. Svendsen. "Marycrest College Historic District". National Park Service. Retrieved 2015-05-06.
  9. ^ "Sister Water Project", Sisters of St. Francis of Dubuque, Iowa
  10. ^ Humility Homes and Services, Inc.

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainHerbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Institute of the Sisters of the Holy Humility of Mary". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links edit

  • Sisters of Humility of Mary, Pennsylvania
  • Congregation of the Humility of Mary, Iowa
  • Sadowski, Dennis. "Vatican II is 'wind behind sails' of Humility of Mary order's work', Catholic News Service, October 1, 2010[dead link]

sisters, holy, humility, mary, sisters, humility, mary, roman, catholic, religious, congregation, founded, dommartin, sous, amance, france, 1855, community, immigrated, united, states, 1864, established, themselves, near, bedford, pennsylvania, this, community. The Sisters of the Humility of Mary is a Roman Catholic religious congregation founded at Dommartin sous Amance France in 1855 The community immigrated to the United States in 1864 and established themselves near New Bedford Pennsylvania This community is known as the Sisters of the Humility of Mary and is based at Villa Maria Pennsylvania Sisters of the Humility of MaryHumility of Mary Center in Davenport IowaAbbreviationH M C H M Formationc AD 1854 170 years ago 1854 FounderJohn Joseph BegelMary Magdelen PoitierTypeCatholic religious orderHeadquartersUnited States of AmericaWebsitehumilityofmary wbr orgA separate congregation developed from the Sisters of the Humility of Mary when around 1884 five sisters founded a convent in Ottumwa Iowa That community is known as the Congregation of the Humility of Mary and is based in Davenport Iowa Contents 1 History 1 1 Sisters of the Humility of Mary HM Pennsylvania 1 1 1 Healthcare 1 2 Congregation of the Humility of Mary CHM Iowa 1 2 1 Housing 2 See also 3 References 4 External linksHistory editThe founder was John Joseph Begel b 5 April 1817 d 23 Jan 1884 pastor of the two villages of Laitre and Dommartin In 1854 three pious women offered their services for the work of teaching poor children Marie Antoinette Poitier Marie Tabourat and Mary Joseph Begel conceived the idea of establishing a religious community and the following year he drew up a rule which was adopted by the women and approved by the Bishop of Nancy on 29 August 1858 Poitier who founded the society alongside Begel took the religious name of Mary Magdelen Tabourat took the name Mary Anna 1 The object of the new congregation was the education of youth in country districts and small towns the training of orphans the care of the sick and incidentally the decoration of altars in parish churches The association increased in numbers Soon however Begel s open condemnation of the policy of Napoleon III towards the Catholic church and especially towards religious institutes brought him into disfavour with the civil authorities and the sisters of the community were refused diplomas and prevented from opening schools 1 Sisters of the Humility of Mary HM Pennsylvania edit In 1862 Louis Hoffer a priest of Louisville Ohio U S A applied for four sisters to teach in his school Bishop Louis Rappe of Cleveland not only gave his approval but invited the whole community to settle in his diocese The sisters accompanied by Begel set sail 30 May 1864 and on their arrival took possession of a farm of 250 acres 1 0 km2 near New Bedford Pennsylvania which had been transferred to the Cleveland diocese from the Diocese of Pittsburgh The brought with them a statue of Mary from the convent garden at Dommartin sous Amance The farm had recently been vacated by the Sisters of Charity of St Augustine and to which they gave the name Villa Maria It was far from a railroad and the land was uncultivated undrained overgrown with brush and dotted with sloughs the buildings being surrounded by a marsh Moreover the community was destitute of resources and burdened with debt 1 The sisters in Ohio wore a blue woolen habit a black veil being worn by the professed and a white one by novices A silver medal was suspended from the neck on a blue band and a rosary from the girdle which was also of blue The blue nuns went to farmhouses to protect children from contagious disease and cared for injured railroad workers in a small clinic at their motherhouse 2 They undertook the care of orphans and the work to which they had pledged themselves and were soon able to enlarge the buildings 1869 and 1878 and shortly afterwards a chapel was built The year 1884 was marked by the death of Father Begel the venerable founder In 1899 ground was purchased at Cleveland Ohio for an academy which was chartered a few years later in 1892 under the title of Lourdes Academy named for Our Lady of Lourdes and empowered to confer degrees In 1897 it was removed to a more suitable location In 1897 the Holy Humility of Mary Sisters the Blue Nuns took charge of St John s parish school in Ashtabula From 1900 to 1922 they taught at Most Pure Heart of Mary parish in Shelby Since Villa Maria was far from railroad facilities a tract of sixty three acres between Canton and Massillon Ohio was purchased in 1904 for the purpose of erecting a new mother house to be known as Mount Maria and a college which was opened in 1908 under the title of College of the Immaculate Conception In 1955 they opened Magnificat High School in Rocky River Ohio In 1987 the sisters started Humility of Mary Housing Inc HMHI Ten sites covering a five counties provide housing for low income seniors and single parents in transition can find hope independence and self worth In 2009 in conjunction with the Ursuline Sisters of Youngstown the Sisters of the Humility of Mary sponsor Dorothy Day House a hospitality house offering meals showers and respite for the poor and unemployed Opened in 2010 Opportunity House in Garfield Heights houses young men with diagnosed disabilities who have aged out of foster care 2 In 1991 the Heartsbeats program was begun selling items made by women in the United States and developing world countries to provide a market to help them support themselves through their skills Today the Sisters of the Humility of Mary work in education healthcare and social service primarily in the diocese of Cleveland Youngstown and Pittsburgh Through the Catholic Migrant Farmworkers Network they raise awareness about human trafficking There is also a member working in Haiti The community is based at the Villa Maria Education amp Spirituality Center in Villa Maria Pennsylvania 3 As of 2014 there were 154 vowed members and 63 associates 4 Healthcare edit The sisters entered health care in 1879 when St Joseph s Infirmary was built the first Catholic hospital in the Mahoning Valley which functioned until 1910 when the sisters given charge of St Elizabeth Hospital in Youngstown Ohio 5 In 1922 undertook the staffing of the Rose Mary Home a home for crippled children Two more Ohio hospitals came under the direction of the sisters St Joseph Health Center in Warren in 1924 and St Joseph in Lorain in 1927 By 2011 Humility of Mary Health Partners was formed to oversee the administration and management of St Elizabeth Hospital and St Joseph Health Center and several other area health care services 6 By 2014 the hospitals were run by Catholic Health Partners 4 Congregation of the Humility of Mary CHM Iowa edit nbsp Mary Helene ven Horst and students at Marycrest CollegeTwenty years after they established themselves in Pennsylvania five sisters settled in southeastern Iowa where they eventually established a motherhouse in Ottumwa The Iowa sisters wore a black habit that featured a shoulder cape and veil They wore a crucifix suspended on a cord around their neck and a rosary suspended from their belt The sisters founded St Joseph Junior College later renamed Ottumwa Heights College in 1925 It was a normal school that trained young women to teach in Iowa s rural schools They created the first religious vacation schools that educated children in rural Montana in their Catholic faith 7 They brought the same program back to Iowa and then extended it to other parts of the Midwest In 1939 they opened Marycrest College a four year Liberal arts college in Davenport Iowa 8 The sisters are active in a variety of ministries The congregation is a participating supporter of the Sister Water Project a program of the Sisters of St Francis of Dubuque Iowa which has completed restored over 140 well projects in Tanzania and 20 water systems in Honduras providing a clean and safe source of water for residents 9 They run Our Lady of the Prairie Retreat near Wheatland Iowa in Clinton County Housing edit The congregation sponsors Humility Homes and Services Inc founded in 1990 as Humility of Mary Housing Inc to provide services and assistance with housing to the homelessness In 2008 they opened the Humility of Mary Shelter Inc emergency shelter In 2018 the two programs merged administrative and service operations to form Humility Homes and Services Inc 10 In 1983 the congregation s headquarters in Iowa was transferred to Davenport CHMs and their associates are active in 20 states as well as Mexico and Canada See also editCatholic Health PartnersReferences edit a b c Institute of the Sisters of the Holy Humility of Mary The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 7 New York Robert Appleton Company 1910 30 January 2020 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain a b Humility of Mary Health Partners Youngstown Progress amp Promises Villa Maria Education amp Spirituality Center a b Zlatos Bill Sisters of the Humility of Mary in Lawrence County celebrate 150th anniversary Tribune Review July 20 2014 Humility of Mary Sisters Encyclopedia of Cleveland History Case Western University Humility of Mary Health Partners Heritage Congregation of the Humility of Mary Retrieved 2015 05 06 Marlys A Svendsen Marycrest College Historic District National Park Service Retrieved 2015 05 06 Sister Water Project Sisters of St Francis of Dubuque Iowa Humility Homes and Services Inc nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Institute of the Sisters of the Holy Humility of Mary Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company External links editSisters of Humility of Mary Pennsylvania Congregation of the Humility of Mary Iowa Sadowski Dennis Vatican II is wind behind sails of Humility of Mary order s work Catholic News Service October 1 2010 dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sisters of the Holy Humility of Mary amp oldid 1193432018, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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