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"Women & Spirit: The Ursulines and Catholic Sisters in America." CNR1904 | October 13, 2010 "Women & Spirit: The Ursulines and Catholic Sisters in America." by Sr. Karen Kennelly, CSJ, The College of …More
"Women & Spirit: The Ursulines and Catholic Sisters in America."

CNR1904 | October 13, 2010 "Women & Spirit: The Ursulines and Catholic Sisters in America." by Sr. Karen Kennelly, CSJ, The College of New Rochelle
"Women and Spirit" exhibit at Ellis Island
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Ursulines in North America
The Ursuline Sisters were the first Catholic nuns to land in the new world. In 1639, Mother Marie of the Incarnation (née Marie Guyart, b. 1599), two other Ursuline nuns, and a Jesuit priest left France for a mission to Canada. When they arrived in the summer of 1639, they studied the language of the native peoples and then began to educate them. They taught reading and …More
Ursulines in North America
The Ursuline Sisters were the first Catholic nuns to land in the new world. In 1639, Mother Marie of the Incarnation (née Marie Guyart, b. 1599), two other Ursuline nuns, and a Jesuit priest left France for a mission to Canada. When they arrived in the summer of 1639, they studied the language of the native peoples and then began to educate them. They taught reading and writing as well as needlework, embroidery, drawing and other domestic arts. The Ursuline Convent established by Mother Marie of the Incarnation is still inhabited by Ursuline Sisters in Quebec.[citation needed]
By 1639, there were Ursulines in Canada who taught the catechism to aboriginal children. There is also an Ursuline convent in Quebec City that is the oldest educational institution for women in North America.[1] Their work helped to preserve a religious spirit among the French population and to Christianize aboriginals and Métis.
In 1727, other Ursuline nuns from France landed in New Orleans. These Ursulines were the first nuns in what is now the United States (though when they landed that property was still part of a French colony. They came under the jurisdiction of the United States with the Louisiana Purchase in 1803). They instituted a convent and school, both of which continue today.[citation needed] The old convent and school are located in the French Quarter and is the oldest building in the Mississippi River Valley. These Ursulines also worked in health care and established an orphanage.
Ursuline nuns, primarily from France and Germany, settled in other parts of North America including Boston (1820), Brown County, Ohio (1845), Cleveland (1850), New York (1855), Louisville (1858), Chatham, Ontario (1860), Bruno (1916) and Prelate (1919), both in Saskatchewan. These foundations spread to other parts of North America including Toledo, Youngstown, OH, Mount St. Joseph, Kentucky, Santa Rosa, Texas, and Mexico City.[2] In 1771, the Irish Ursulines were established at Cork by Nano Nagle.[citation needed]
Towards the beginning of the 18th century, the period of its greatest prosperity, the Ursuline order embraced some 20 congregations, with 350 convents and from 15,000 to 20,000 nuns. The members wore a black dress bound by a leathern girdle, a black sleeveless cloak, and a close-fitting headdress with a white veil and a longer black veil.
The founder was beatified by Clement VIII in 1768 and canonized as St. Angela Merici of Brescia by Pius VII in 1807.[citation needed]
Today, while some convents in Europe, Canada, and Cuba continue to observe strict enclosure, most convents have adopted less restrictive forms.[citation needed]
[edit] Role in education
[edit] Colleges and universities
In the United States, the Ursulines have founded two well-known Catholic women's colleges. Ursuline College in Pepper Pike, Ohio was founded in 1871 by the Ursuline Sisters of Cleveland. It was followed in 1904 by College of New Rochelle, which is located in New Rochelle, New York.
In 1919, the Ursulines founded a university-level liberal arts college for women in London, Ontario, Canada. Currently called Brescia University College (Brescia College at its foundation), it remains the only university-level college for women in Canada and is affiliated with the University of Western Ontario.
From 1922 to 1975 the Mary Manse College in Toledo, Ohio was operated by the Ursulines. It was a women's college until 1971, then was coeducational for its final four years.
In 1932, the Great Falls Junior College for Women was founded in Great Falls, Montana. Now the University of Great Falls, it has an open admission policy.
The Mount Saint Joseph Junior College for Women operated between 1925 and 1950 in Maple Mount, Kentucky, with the Ursulines offering co-educational extension courses at Owensboro. The Ursulines merged their extension courses with Mount Saint Joseph Junior College in 1950, creating the co-educational Brescia University still in operation today.
In 1966, the Ursulines established in Taiwan what became the Wenzao Ursuline College of Languages.
From 1968 to 2003 the Ursuline Order operated Ursula College at the Australian National University in Canberra, Australia. It is a co-educational residential college for approximately 200 undergraduates. In 2003 the college was sold to the University and was renamed Ursula Hall. The Ursuline tradition has been retained in the Hall's high educational standards, retention of Ursuline symbols and livery, and the observance of St Ursula's day in October. St Ursula's day is celebrated as Ursies Weekend and is a final opportunity to relax and party before final exams are held in early November.
[edit] Secondary education
Ursuline secondary education schools are found across the United States and other countries. The first school, Ursuline Academy, began in 1727 in New Orleans, Louisiana. It is the oldest all girl's school in the country. There is also an Ursuline high school in the Bronx, the Academy of Mount St. Ursula High School,[3] as which is the oldest all girls' Catholic high school in New York State. It was founded in 1855.
The Ursuline School in New Rochelle, New York is a school for girls in grades 6-12 and is closely affiliated with the nearby Iona Preparatory.
Other notable Ursuline secondary schools in the United States include the all-female Ursuline Academy of Dallas in Dallas, Texas and the all-female Ursuline Academy in Wilmington, Delaware.
Also in Newham, in London, UK, is the all-female girl school St. Angela's, named after the founder of the Ursulines. The sixth form centre of the school allows males while the school does not. The same applies to the Ursuline High School in Wimbledon. The Ursuline College, (Westgate-on-Sea), is also part of the order, and is open to male and female students.
The British philosopher and author Celia Green has written extensively about her time at the Ursuline High School in Ilford, London[4]..
Like their colleges, not all Ursuline secondary schools have remained single-sex. The aforementioned Ursuline Academy in Delaware permits male students in grades 1-3, and Ursuline High School in Youngstown, Ohio, founded in 1905, is fully co-educational.
Other Ursuline secondary schools in the United States include Beaumont School in Cleveland Heights, Ohio (founded in 1850); Ursuline Academy in San Antonio, TX (founded 1851 - closed 1992); Ursuline Academy in Cincinnati, Ohio (founded in 1898); St. Ursula Academy in Cincinnati, Ohio; Ursuline Academy in Saint Louis, Missouri (founded in 1848); the Ursuline Academy of Dedham in Dedham, Massachusetts; Ursuline High School in Santa Rosa, California (founded in 1880); Ursuline Academy in Springfield, Illinois (founded 1857), which was coed from 1981 until it closed in 2007; and St. Joseph's Ursuline Academy in Malone, NY (closed in 1977 and was also coed at least from the mid-1960s). There is also an Ursuline secondary school in Thurles, Co. Tipperary, Waterford, Blackrock, Co. Cork and Sligo, Ireland, which have remained fully single sex.

[edit] Notes
^ Catholic Encyclopedia link
^ "Follow the Spirit." Angela Merici and the Ursulines. Editions du Signe. Rome: Spada, 1998
^ Academy of Mount Saint Ursula
^ Green, Celia (2004). Letters from Exile: Observations on a Culture in Decline. Oxford: Oxford Forum.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain:Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (Eleventh ed.). Cambridge University Press.
[edit] See also

Catholicism portal
Ursulines of Quebec (includes Ursulines museum)
Ecole des Ursulines, Quebec
Dorothy Kazel
Ursuline Convent Riots
Congregation of the Ursulines of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus (Grey Ursulines)
Society of the Sisters of Saint Ursula of the Blessed Virgin
[edit] External links
The Ursuline entry in The Catholic Encyclopedia
Works by An Anonymous Ursuline at Project Gutenberg
The Ursuline convent in Beaugency France
Become a Nun The Ursulines Youngstown, Oh.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ursulines