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The Presentation Sisters , officially the Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary , are a religious institute of Roman Catholic women founded in Cork , Ireland , by Honora "Nano" Nagle in 1775. The sisters of the congregation use the postnominal initials PBVM .

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66-727: The Presentation Sisters' mission is to help the poor and needy around the world. Historically, the Sisters focused their energies on creating and staffing schools that would educate young people, especially young women. Most of these schools are still in operation and can be found across the globe. As of 2023, the Presentation Sisters are active in 20 countries: Australia, Bolivia, Canada, Chile, Dominica, Ecuador, India, Ireland, Israel, New Zealand, Pakistan, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Philippines, Slovakia, Thailand, United Kingdom, United States, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. Honora (Nano) Nagle (1718–1784)

132-589: A Catholic girls school for Dublin's inner-city poor. In 1794, a group of women who had helped with Mulally's projects in Dublin joined with Nagle's Cork group who had been renamed the Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary in 1791. Today, congregations of the Presentation Sisters exist all over the world. In 1854, sisters travelled from Ireland to San Francisco , California, and within two weeks opened

198-502: A Presentation Convent, two primary schools and a secondary school. St. Carthage's Church Killina was built in the mid 1700s. During a reconstruction in 1966, traces of a previous church were found. Side aisles were added to the church between 1800 and 1817. The title was originally the Church of the Assumption but was later changed to that of St. Carthage. St Patrick's Church, The Island

264-522: A Saint. The second superior was Mary Angela Collins. Soon after her succession, a set of rules, adapted from that of Augustine of Hippo , was drawn up by Bishop Francis Moylan , and approved by Pope Pius VI in September 1791. This congregation of teaching Sisters itself was given formal approval by Pope Pius VII in 1805. Communities branching from Cork were founded at Killarney in 1793, Dublin in 1794, and Waterford in 1798. A second convent at Cork

330-614: A cargo ship. They finished their schooling and Nagle enjoyed a busy social life in Paris – "balls, parties and theatre outings, all the glamour of the life of a wealthy young lady." After one of these parties, "she noticed a group of wretched-looking people huddled in a church doorway" and was struck by the contrast with her privileged life. After her father's death in 1746, Nagle and her sister joined their mother in Dublin, witnessing further poverty. Their mother died soon after, and Nagle returned to Paris intending to enter an Ursuline convent, but

396-507: A great many parts of the world." In 1775, Nagle entered with some companions on a novitiate for the religious life. With them, she received the habit on 29 June 1776, taking the name of "Mother Mary of St John of God ". They made their first annual vows 24 June 1777. The foundress had begun the construction of a convent close to that which she had built for the Ursulines , and it was opened on Christmas Day , 1775. They adopted as their title

462-536: A group travelled in 1900 to the goldfields of Western Australia . This group formed a union with the Geraldton Congregation in 1969. The Presentation Sisters of Watervliet, New York established their community in 1881. They elected not to join the Conference of Presentation Sisters of North America, and Watervliet remains an independent congregation. [REDACTED]  This article incorporates text from

528-494: A living, workrooms were established at Cork, Youghal , and other places, where Limerick lace, Irish points and crochet were taught. In 1802, the Sisters' example inspired the formation of the Presentation Brothers . In 1833 a house was founded by Josephine Sargeant from Clonmel at Manchester , England, from which sprang two more, one at Buxton St Anne's and one at Matlock St Joseph's. The schools were well attended;

594-473: A network of Catholic schools in Cork. Not everyone in Cork welcomed the initiative: "She was insulted in the street on occasion, and her pupils were dismissed as 'beggars' brats'." Within nine months, she was educating 200 girls. Within a few years, she had opened seven schools, five for girls and two for boys. These provided pupils with a basic education and religious instruction. The French Petites Écoles provided

660-471: A pair of postage stamps for her order's 1975 bi-centenary, and with a 1985 footbridge across Cork's River Lee . Nano Nagle Place, surrounding her original 1771 convent in Cork city, includes her tomb, museum, and archive. The Roman Catholic Church officially opened Nagle's cause for canonization in 1984, the bi-centenary of her death. She was declared a Servant of God in 1994, and Venerable on 31 October 2013. A sculpture of Nagle, titled Nano and

726-1043: A postulant arrived in Melbourne from Limerick to found a convent and school at St Kilda, the summer resort for the growing capital of the newly established colony of Victoria. The party of Presentation women who arrived in Geraldton, Western Australia in July 1891 was made up of three Sisters and one postulant from Sneem, one Sister from Mitchelstown, one postulant from Tipperary and three from Cork. In May 1874, five Sisters arrived in Wagga Wagga from Kildare; and in August 1886, three Sisters and seven postulants from Lucan arrived in Lismore . Sisters from Wagga Wagga established new foundations in Elsternwick (1882), Hay (1883) and Longreach (1900). From Hay,

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792-460: A publication now in the public domain :  Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). " Order of the Presentation ". Catholic Encyclopedia . New York: Robert Appleton Company. Nano Nagle Honora "Nano" Nagle ( c.  1718 – 26 April 1784) was an Irish Catholic religious sister who served as a pioneer of Catholic education in Ireland despite legal prohibitions. She founded

858-477: A religious director advised her to help the poor of her own country instead. She returned to Cork, where her brother Joseph was living, and established her first school for the poor in 1754, "in a rented mud cabin in Cove Lane, in defiance of the law, and in complete secrecy at first, even from her brother." He discovered her secret when a poor man came begging for Nagle to accept his child into her school. "Her brother

924-551: A seminary there in the early 19th century (1818) and with the Presentation Sisters who founded a convent and school in the early 19th century (1818 also), both Convent and School have survived to this day. The Presentation Mission to India went out from here in the past. The monastic site in Rahan contains the remains of church buildings dating from the 11th and 12th centuries and both Protestant and Catholic cemeteries. In 1732,

990-458: A sound education in English; to these were added domestic economy , Latin , Irish , French , and German . The average attendance of children in each of the city convents of Dublin, Cork, and Limerick was over 1,200, and that in the country convents between 300 and 400, making a total of 22,200 who received an excellent education without charge. For girls who needed to support themselves by earning

1056-580: A younger cousin of Nagle who spent part of his childhood in her birthplace, described those laws: "Their declared object was to reduce the Catholics in Ireland to a miserable populace, without property, without estimation, without education." Nano Nagle was born in Ballygriffin, in the parish of Killavullen , County Cork , to Garrett and Ann ( née Mathew(s) or Matthew(s)) Nagle. Though her exact date of birth

1122-541: Is unknown, and the year of her birth disputed, Nagle is most likely to have been born in 1718. The name "Honora" given at baptism was soon replaced in the family circle by the affectionate name "Nano". She was the eldest of six or seven children, the others being Mary (omitted in many sources), Ann, Catherine, Elizabeth, David, and Joseph. Nagle was born in the Blackwater Valley in County Cork which possesses views of

1188-516: The Poor Clare Sisters arrived and in 1962 a new school block was completed.  When the Poor Clares withdrew in 1971, the Presentation Sisters agreed to return. Sister Mary Vincent Shelverton was Head Teacher from 1972 to 1981. In 1961, Our Lady Help of Christians school was begun at Newnham with 52 children. The first off-shore foundation was made in 1963 on King Island . By the end of

1254-719: The Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary , commonly known as the Presentation Sisters, now a worldwide Catholic institute of women religious . She was declared venerable in the Catholic Church on 31 October 2013 by Pope Francis . Nano Nagle lived during the period when the Catholic majority in Ireland were subject to the anti-Catholic Penal Laws . The Catholic Irish were denied political, economic, social and educational rights that would have lifted them from mass poverty. The parliamentarian and philosopher, Edmund Burke ,

1320-457: The UN Economic and Social Council . The Union of Presentation Sisters is a congregation of 1,300 women working internationally in thirteen Provinces or Units. Each Unit takes responsibility for its own life and mission in response to the direction of the congregation. (The United States Province is also a member of the Conference of Presentation Sisters of North America.) Presentation Sisters in

1386-469: The Blessed Virgin Mary. On 20 July 1866, four professed Sisters and five postulants set out from Fermoy , Ireland, to Tasmania , Australia. They boarded The Empress at Queenstown, Ireland , and arrived at Hobart three months later to open, at Richmond , the first Presentation convent and school in the Southern Hemisphere. The group was led by Francis Xavier Murphy, whose brother Daniel Murphy

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1452-562: The Children , was unveiled at her birthplace in Ballygriffin in 2009. It was created by sculptor Annette McCormack and depicts Nano as "The Lady with the Lantern". Rahan, County Offaly Rahan ( Irish : Raithean ) is a parish and village in County Offaly , Ireland . It is associated with medieval abbot Mochuda (also known as St. Carthage). The village is located on the banks of

1518-828: The Church of St Carthage at Rahan was repaired by the Church of Ireland community for use as a parish church. Mass is celebrated here once a year on Cemetery Sunday 15 August. Access can be gained through a farm gate. The parish of Rahan comprises 44 townlands: Agall, Aghadonagh, Aghalusky, Backsteel, Ballina, Ballincloghan, Ballincur, Ballindrinan, Ballybruncullin, Ballykeenaghan, Blackwood, Bohernagrisna, Brackagh, Cappaloughan, Castletown, Church Hill, Clonshanny, Corcush, Cornalaur, Currygurry, Deerpark, Derries, Derrinvullig, Derrooly, Derrycooly, Derryesker, Derrynanagh, Glasshouse, Goldsmiths Lot, Kilgortin, Killaranny, Killina, Kilpatrick, Loughroe, Mountarmstrong, Murragh, Newtown, Oldtown, Rabbitburrow, Rahan Demense, Roscore Demense, Tullybeg and Tullymorerahan. The parish contains three churches,

1584-631: The Convent houses of Launceston and Hobart amalgamated, led by Mother Mary Xavier Dooley . She was born in Tasmania to Alice and James Dooley , and she was educated at St Mary's College, Hobart. The Launceston foundation saw the development of a school at Invermay , and St Finn Barr's Church School was opened on 14 January 1894 under the leadership of Mary Patrick Hickey. The Launceston community made four more foundations: Beaconsfield , Karoola , Lilydale and Longford . St Francis Xavier's School at Beaconsfield

1650-451: The New York group took charge of St. Michael's Home, Greenridge, Staten Island , where soon hundreds of destitute children were cared for. This became the home of the newly established Sisters of the Presentation of Staten Island, which became its own congregation on 1 May 1890. (Others from the early New York community developed into today's Presentation Sisters of New Windsor.) In 1921–1922,

1716-862: The North American Conference included eight communities, and changed its name to CPS. Together the eight communities established a collaborative ministry project in New Orleans called "Lantern Light". The first Presentation Convent in the Americas was founded in Newfoundland in 1833 at the request of Bishop Michael Anthony Fleming , Vicar Apostolic of the island. The convent and a neighboring school were established in St. John's, Newfoundland , by Mary Bernard Kirwan , accompanied by Mary Xavier Molony , Mary Magdalen O'Shaughnessy, and Mary Xaverius Lynch. The motherhouse

1782-813: The Pakistan Province founded several notable schools, including Presentation Convent School, Jhelum ; Presentation Convent High School, Murree ; Presentation Convent School, Peshawar ; Presentation Convent Girls High School , Rawalpindi; and Presentation Convent High School, Sargodha . The Indian Province includes Presentation Convent Higher Secondary School , Srinagar , and Presentation Convent Senior Secondary School, Delhi . Presentation schools in Ireland include Cashel Community School (formerly Presentation Convent, Cashel); Our Lady's College, Greenhills ; Presentation College, Athenry ; Presentation College Headford ; Presentation Secondary School, Clonmel ; and Killina Presentation Secondary School, Rahan. In Ireland,

1848-484: The Presentation Sisters also founded Clann Credo , a social investment fund. The Conference of Presentation Sisters of North America began in August 1953 under the title of the "North American Conference", when several Presentation communities in North America began to collaborate and communicate on issues of ministry, spirituality and social justice. All of these communities claim their origins from Nano Nagle. In 2002,

1914-417: The Presentation Sisters to open a convent and school at George Town . In 1957 Sisters Gabriel and Bernadette opened Stella Maris, a Church-School with 64 pupils. In February 1959 the Presentation Sisters accepted the invitation to open St Anthony's school at Riverside, a suburb of Launceston. The Presentation Sisters were in charge of the school from its inauguration, with Clare as the first principal. In 1961

1980-443: The Presentation Sisters were asked to make a foundation there. By the end of 1935, Corpus Christi Church-School and convent had been erected. In 1938 the sisters taught at St Cuthbert's Church-School. On 13 March 1949, Archbishop Tweedy offered the Presentation Sisters a foundation at New Norfolk . St Brigid's School was opened on 4 January 1926 and taken over by the Presentation Sisters in 1950. In 1956 Archbishop Young approached

2046-519: The Sisters of the Presentation of Fitchburg, Massachusetts, and the Sisters of the Presentation of Newburgh, New York, united to form one congregation, now based in New Windsor, New York . A new wave of foundations from Ireland in the USA began in 1952. In 1976, in response to the invitation of Vatican II , a number of autonomous Presentation congregations came together as one congregation. This new congregation

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2112-654: The Society of Charitable Instruction of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, which was changed in 1791 to that of " Presentation Order" ( Ord na Toirbhirte ). Their habit was similar to that of the Ursulines. Ireland honored the Presentation Order with a pair of postage stamps for the 1975 bicentennial. The Roman Catholic Church declared Nagle a Servant of God in 1994, and Venerable in 2013, on the path toward possible canonization as

2178-700: The Southern Hemisphere in 1866 with a convent and school in Tasmania, Australia . In the 20th century, foundations were established in Africa (Zimbabwe, 1949; Zambia, 1970) and New Zealand (1951). The first of a new wave of foundations from Ireland in the USA began in Texas (San Antonio, 1952), followed by foundations in the Philippines (1960), South America (Chile, 1982; Ecuador, 1983; Peru, 1993); Slovakia (1992); and Thailand (1999). Communities of Presentation Sisters exist throughout

2244-611: The Staten Island congregation began educating young local students at St. Ann's Church, St. Clare's Church , and Our Lady Help of Christians . By the 1950s, a dozen locations were served by more than 125 Presentation Sisters of Staten Island, larger than any other Presentation community in their first two centuries. In the 1960s, they were instrumental in establishing Countess Moore High School. Founded in 1962 as an all-girls school, in September 1969 it became co-educational and later changed its name to Moore Catholic High School . In 1945,

2310-513: The Staten Island motherhouse moved from St. Michael's Home in Greenridge to the former " Horrmann Castle " atop Grymes Hill, and finally in 1965 to a new convent next to the old Greenridge property. As their numbers later dwindled, the Sisters downsized the convent and property in 2010, and began moving toward a long-term partnership with the New Windsor community. The Fargo, North Dakota community

2376-582: The city limits named Presentation High School, San Francisco, and one in Berkeley, California named Presentation High School, Berkeley. They also staffed schools in Gilroy and Sonoma, California . The Presentation Sisters opened San Francisco's School of the Epiphany in 1938, and Menlo Park 's Nativity Catholic School in 1956. Presentation High School San Francisco was an all-girls school. The most-recent main building

2442-571: The distant Nagle Mountains. Much of this region was once the property of the Nagle family. Originally known as "de Angulo" or "D'Angulo", they were connected to some of the most prominent local families, and their ancestors had lived in the area for hundreds of years. However, after the Williamite War in Ireland , the Nagle (as they were now known) family's loyalty to the exiled Catholic King James II led to many of their ancestral lands being confiscated by

2508-590: The first of many schools in the United States. In 1866, another group sailed from Ireland to Tasmania , establishing the first of many Presentation convents and schools in Australia. In 2000, Nagle was voted Irish Woman of the Millennium, "in recognition of her importance as a pioneer of female education in Ireland." In a 2005 radio poll, she was voted Ireland's greatest woman ever. She inspired Edmund Ignatius Rice ,

2574-525: The foundation of St Anne's Church, Lilydale, which was opened in January 1892. In 1903 St Monica's convent was opened at Longford. Attached to the convent was a large classroom that closed in 1911. In 1929 a holiday house was purchased by the Sisters at Blackmans Bay . The original farmhouse later became Maryknoll, a prayer House set up by Betty Bowes in 1979. In 1935 a new parish was established in Bellerive and

2640-540: The founder of the Christian Brothers , to bring education to the poor people. The Presentation Sisters became one of Ireland's prominent Catholic teaching orders along with the Ursulines, Sisters of Mercy, Christian Brothers, and Presentation Brothers . The Presentation order has spread to two dozen countries worldwide. Some of the schools founded by the Presentation Sisters are named after Nagle, and her teachings are still followed today. Ireland also honoured her with

2706-603: The founding pastor of St. Michael's Church as its school building neared completion, went to Ireland in February 1874 to invite the Presentation Sisters to take charge of the girls' department. Upon the Sisters' agreeing, Paul Cardinal Cullen , Archbishop of Dublin, applied to the Holy See for the necessary authorization for the Sisters to leave Ireland and proceed to New York, which was accorded by Pope Pius IX . In 1884, Mary Joseph Magdalen, Mary Teresa Reynolds, and four other Sisters from

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2772-820: The government. However, when Nagle's parents married, the family still owned considerable property at Ballygriffin, Killavullen. Garret's brother Joseph kept it in nominally Protestant hands so that the family could retain it under the Penal Laws. Nano Nagle is believed to have attended a local hedge school , like her cousin Edmund Burke, before she travelled to France to complete her education. The Education Act 1695 banned Catholic schoolteachers in Ireland, while also prohibiting overseas travel for Catholic education. Nagle relatives with strong connections in France arranged for Nagle and her sister Ann to travel to Paris, perhaps smuggled in

2838-415: The model on which to base her schools, but she was to develop her own system of education. She described in a letter her ideas for education, and how she wanted the spiritual and temporal welfare of her pupils to be interwoven and to flow naturally together. Nagle "began to visit the sick and the elderly after school, bringing them food, medicine and comfort." She went from hovel to hovel each day to gather

2904-688: The monastery of Mochuda. Saint Fiodhairle repaired the Rahan Abbey after a Viking raid. A mass rock (where mass was said while the Penal Laws were in effect) can be found near the Present Catholic Church in the Killina townland, approximately 1 km southeast of the ancient churches. The rock is dedicated to Saint Anthony. Rahan also has a long association with the Jesuit community who founded

2970-551: The neediest people to teach. Nighttime ministries to poverty-ridden elderly and sick in her hometown gave Nagle the nickname The Lady with the Lantern . The lantern later became the symbol of the Presentation Sisters worldwide. As her workload increased, Nagle realised that she would need help with her work. In 1767, she stayed with the Ursuline Sisters in Paris while visiting her cousin Margaret Butler, who had been professed

3036-645: The number of children, including those of an orphanage, being about 1,400. The year 1833 also brought the Presentation Sisters to Newfoundland Colony , establishing their first convent in the Americas. India received its first foundation in 1841, when Xavier Kearney and some Sisters from Rahan and Mullingar established themselves at Madras . Soon four more convents in the Madras presidency were founded from this, and in 1891 one at Rawalpindi . These schools comprised orphanages, and day and boarding schools, both for Europeans and local children. The Presentation Sisters entered

3102-572: The poor on every continent. The International Presentation Association was established in 1988 as a network of the various congregations of PBVM women, including the Union of Presentation Sisters, the Conference of Presentation Sisters of North America, and the Australian Society. The goal of the IPA is to foster unity and to enable collaboration for the sake of mission. The IPA has NGO consultant status with

3168-643: The poor without being enclosed. On Christmas Eve 1775, she founded the Society of Charitable Instruction of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, in Cork, the first convent of what would later be the Presentation Sisters . She resisted the local bishop when he expressed fears that the establishment of the convent might provoke a Protestant backlash. She received the habit on 29 June 1776, taking the name of "Mother Mary of St John of God". The sisters made their first annual vows on 24 June 1777. Nagle died from tuberculosis on 26 April 1784 in Cork city, at age 65. By then she had established links with Teresa Mulally , who had founded

3234-455: The previous year. In 1771, Nagle sponsored the first Ursuline convent in Ireland, a community of four women in Cork city who were professed in Paris, together with a reverend mother. However, they were unable to educate the poor widely, because at that time Ursulines were required to remain enclosed in their convents. Nagle and her assistants continued their work without becoming an established religious congregation, so they were free to work for

3300-402: The river Clodagh approximately 8 km from Tullamore. The parish of Rahan extends from The Island near Ballycumber in the north to Mucklagh in the south. The first monastery in Rahan was created by Camelacus in the 5th century and later re-founded in the 6th century by St Carthage. The ancient monasteries and churches located here are known as the church of St Carthage or St Carthach, and

3366-504: The small community, Clare Duggan and Augustine Keane. The remaining Sisters were Mary Teresa Comerford, who assumed the role as new superior, Xavier Daly, and their first postulant , Mary Cassian. The Sisters had great difficulties in their early founding years, but succeeded in interesting prominent Catholics of the city in their work. By 1900, the San Francisco Presentation foundation established two convents and schools within

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3432-507: The world. However, historical and legal factors caused these communities to develop and operate as autonomous groups. Each community is independent of the motherhouse, and subject only to its own superioress and the bishop of its respective diocese. A large proportion of these communities are today more closely united within the Union of Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary, created by papal decree on 19 July 1976. Today, more than 1,600 Sisters pursue work in education and relief of

3498-697: The year, the sisters were giving religious instruction to 200 children all over the island. In 1962 a request was made by the Franciscan missionaries to make a foundation in the Aitape Vicariate, Papua New Guinea . In 1988 the Presentation Sisters requested to minister on Flinders Island and Cape Barren Island . In 1981 Sister Mary Ursula Grachan received the Order of Australia Medal for "service to education", personally awarded by Queen Elizabeth II at Albert Hall, Launceston . On 21 December 1873, six Sisters and

3564-476: Was Bishop of Hobart and later its first Archbishop. The Presentation Sisters' Tasmanian presence expanded over the following years. In 1871 they opened St Mary's College, Hobart , the first Catholic boarding school in Australia. In 1873 Hobart established its first foundation in Launceston . Led by Francis Xavier Beechinor, the founding sisters were four Irish-born and two born in the colony. Gabriel (Teresa) Horner

3630-521: Was born in Ballygriffin, Cork, Ireland. Her wealthy Catholic family provided her the advantage of an education in France, at a time when Ireland's Education Act 1695 precluded the less advantaged from education. She quietly began teaching Irish children in the trading port of Cork City , and her reputation spread widely. In a 1769 letter, she wrote: "I often think my schools will never bring me to heaven, as I only take delight and pleasure in them... I can assure you my schools are beginning to be of service to

3696-489: Was built by a Fr. Robbins, who was curate in Rahan from 1834 to 1847. The Island was once called the 'Island of Clonkeen'. St. Colman’s Church Mucklagh was built in 1979. Very Rev. J. Mooney and Father Sean Heaney lead the project. The previous church was demolished. Schools in the area include St Colman's National School (Mucklagh), Scoil Charthaigh Naofa (Newtown, Rahan), and Killina Presentation Secondary School (Killina). The most famous sporting person to come from

3762-483: Was constructed in 1930 at 2340 Turk Street. In 1991 the building became University of San Francisco 's Education Building. In nearby San Jose, California , the Presentation Sisters opened Presentation High School in 1962. The school still operates as an all-girls Catholic high school. In Sacramento, California , the Sisters staffed a pair of K–8 schools for 30 years each: Presentation School during 1961–1991, and Saint Mary School during 1969–1999. The congregation

3828-666: Was established adjacent to the Basilica of St. John the Baptist . As of 2019, the congregation was serving twelve ministry locations in Newfoundland. In November 1854, five Presentation Sisters arrived in San Francisco from Ireland at the invitation of Archbishop Joseph Sadoc Alemany . Mary Joseph Cronin was appointed as the community's first superior; but due to unforeseen circumstances, she returned to Ireland in 1855 with two other members of

3894-414: Was established by papal decree on 19 July 1976. Its full title is: The Union of Sisters of the Presentation of the Blessed Virgin Mary. As of 2015, member communities were those of: In 1946 the major superiors of the seven Presentation congregations in Australia agreed on common constitutions. In 1958 Pope Pius XII approved the formation of the Society of the Australian Congregations of the Presentation of

3960-431: Was established in 1799, by Mary Patrick Fitzgerald; and a convent at Kilkenny in 1800, by Mary Joseph McLoughlan. The schools, regulated at the time by a United Kingdom Government board, had for their first object the Catholic and moral training of the young, which was not interfered with by the government. The secular system followed was the "National", superseded, in many cases, by the "Intermediate", both of which ensured

4026-447: Was established in 1880 under Mary John Hughes, and took charge of a free school, home, and academy. Fargo's Presentation Sisters merged into the Union (U.S. Province) in 2013. In 1886, some Sisters from Fargo went to Aberdeen, South Dakota , and, under the guidance of Mary Joseph Butler, took charge of schools at Bridgewater, Bristol, Chamberlain, Elkton, Jefferson, Mitchell, Milbank, and Woonsocket, as well as two hospitals. In 1922, what

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4092-561: Was eventually named Presentation College opened in Aberdeen. The college primarily educated nurses for the northern portion of South Dakota. In 1886, Mary Magdalen Keating, with a small group of Sisters, left New York at the invitation of Philip Joseph Garrigan (later Bishop of Sioux City, Iowa), to take charge of the schools of St. Bernard's Parish, Fitchburg, Massachusetts . The mission flourished and established other foundations in West Fitchburg and Clinton, Massachusetts ; Central Falls, Rhode Island ; and Berlin, New Hampshire . In 1997,

4158-480: Was introduced into the Diocese of Dubuque by Mother Mary Vincent Hennessey in 1874. By 1913, the congregation had established ten branch-houses in neighboring Nebraska . The Presentation Convent of St. Michael's Church (New York City) was founded on 8 September 1874, by Mother Mary Joseph Hickey of the Presentation Convent, Terenure , County Dublin, with two Sisters from that convent, two from Clondalkin, one from Tuam, and five postulants. Father Arthur J. Donnelly,

4224-433: Was opened on 23 April 1899 led by Mother Mary Paul Boylson and three other sisters. Hearing of the successful work of the Presentation Sisters, the Irish settlers of Karoola petitioned the Sisters to open a convent and school. In 1902, Magdalen Riordan and novice Aquin Darling started St Margaret's school with 50 children in attendance. In 1953 a new convent dedicated to the Sacred Heart was built. In 1891 Archbishop Murphy laid

4290-438: Was the first Australian to join the Sisters. After copper was discovered in Queenstown on the west coast of Tasmania, Archbishop Murphy wanted a convent and school to be set up there. In January 1899, four Presentation Sisters from the Hobart Community sailed to Strahan , then by train to Queenstown. On 16 January 1899, St Joseph's School was opened with 65 children attending. The sisters were led by Mary Paul Boylson. In 1911

4356-406: Was very angry with her at first, because of the risks involved, but later became reconciled and gave her his full support." Nagle's first school opened with about 30 students, and this is now the site of South Presentation convent. At first alone, and later with the support of her family, particularly her uncle Joseph Nagle who had used Protestantism to preserve the family's wealth, she established

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