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St. Elizabeth Ann Seton
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Foundress and first superior of the Sisters of Charity in the United States,
b. in New York City, 28 Aug., 1774, of non-Catholic parents of high position; d.
at Emmitsburg, Maryland, 4 Jan., 1821.
Her father, Dr. Richard Bayley (b.
Connecticut
and educated in
England
), was the first professor of anatomy at
Columbia
College
and eminent for his work as health officer of the
Port
of
New York
. Her mother, Catherine Charlton, daughter of an Anglican minister of
Staten Island
,
N.Y.
, died when
Elizabeth
was three yeas old, leaving two other young daughters. The father married again,
and among the children of this second marriage was Guy Charleton Bayley, whose
convert son, James Roosevelt Bayley, became Archbishop of
Baltimore
.
Elizabeth
always showed great affection for her stepmother, who was a devout Anglican, and
for her stepbrothers and sisters. Her education was chiefly conducted by her
father, a brilliant man of great natural virtue, who trained her to
self-restraint as well as in intellectual pursuits. She read industriously, her
notebooks indicating a special interest in religious and historical subjects.
She was very religious, wore a small crucifix around her neck, and took great
delight in reading the Scriptures, especially the Psalms, a practice she
retained until her death.
She was married on
25 Jan., 1794
, in
St. Paul
's Church,
New York
, to William Magee Seton, of that city, by Bishop Prevoost. In her
sister-in-law, Rebecca Seton, she found the "friend of her soul", and
as they went about on missions of mercy they were called the "Protestant
Sisters of Charity". Business troubles culminated on the death of her
father-in-law in 1798. Elizabeth and her husband presided over the large
orphaned family; she shared his financial anxieties, aiding him with her sound
judgment. Dr. Bayley's death in 1801 was a great trial to his favourite child.
In her anxiety for his salvation she had offered to God, during his fatal
illness, the life of he infant daughter Catherine. Catherine's life was spared,
however, she died at the age of ninety, as Mother Catherine of the Sisters of
Mercy,
New York
. In 1803 Mr. Seton's health required a sea voyage; he started with his wife and
eldest daughter for
Leghorn
, where the Filicchi brothers, business friends of the Seton firm, resided. The
other children, William, Richard, Rebecca, and Catherine, were left to the care
of Rebecca Seton.
From a journal which Mrs. Seton kept during her travels we learn of her
heroic effort to sustain the drooping spirits of her husband during the voyage,
followed by a long detention in quarantine, and until his death at Pisa (27
Dec., 1803). She and her daughter remained for some time with the Filicchi
families. While with these Catholic families and in the churches of
Italy
Mrs. Seton first began to see the beauty of the Catholic Faith. Delayed by her
daughter's illness and then by her own, she sailed for home accompanied by
Antonio Filicchi, and reached
New York
on
3 June, 1804
. Her sister-in-law, Rebecca, died in July. A time of great spiritual
perplexity began for Mrs. Seton, whose prayer was, "If I am right Thy grace
impart still in the right to say. If I am wrong Oh, teach my heart to find the
better way." Mr. Hobart (afterwards an Anglican bishop), who had great
influence over her, used every effort to dissuade her from joining the Catholic
Church, while Mr. Filicchi presented the claims of the true religion and
arranged a correspondence between Elizabeth and Bishop Cheverus. Through Mr.
Filicchi she also wrote to Bishop Carroll.
Elizabeth
meanwhile added fasting to her prayers for light. The result was that on Ash
Wednesday,
14 March, 1805
, she was received into the Church by Father Matthew O'Brien in St. Peter's
Church,
Barclay St.
,
New York
. On 25 March she made her first Communion with extraordinary fervour; even the
faint shadow of this sacrament in the Protestant Church had had such an
attraction for her that she used to hasten from one church to another to receive
it twice each Sunday. She well understood the storm that her conversion would
raise among her Protestant relatives and friends at the time she most needed
their help. Little of her husband's fortune was left, but numerous relatives
would have provided amply for her and her children had not this barrier been
raised. She joined an English Catholic gentleman named White, who, with his
wife, was opening a school for boys in the suburbs of New York, but the widely
circulated report that this was a proselytizing scheme forced the school to
close.
A few faithful friends arranged for Mrs. Seton to open a boarding-house for
some of the boys of a Protestant school taught by the curate of St. Mark's. In
January, 1806, Cecilia Seton,
Elizabeth
's young sister-in-law, became very ill and begged to see the ostracized
convert; Mrs. Seton was sent for, and became a constant visitor. Cecilia told
her that she desired to become a Catholic. When Cecilia's decision was known
threats were made to have Mrs. Seton expelled from the state by the Legislature.
On her recovery Cecilia fled to
Elizabeth
for refuge and was received into the Church. She returned to her brother's
family on his wife's death. Mrs. Seton's boarding-house for boys had to be given
up. Her sons had been sent by the Filicchis to
Georgetown
College
. She hoped to find a refuge in some convent in
Canada
, where her teaching would support her three daughters. Bishop Carroll did not
approve, so she relinquished this plan. Father Dubourg, S. S., from St. Mary's
Seminary,
Baltimore
, met her in
New York
, and suggested opening in Baltimore a school for girls. After a long delay and
many privations, she and her daughters reached
Baltimore
on
Corpus Christi
, 1808. Her boys were brought there to St. Mary's College, and she opened a
school next to the chapel of St. Mary's Seminary and was delighted with the
opportunities for the practice of her religion, for it was only with the
greatest difficulty she was able to get to daily Mass and Communion in
New York
. The convent life for which she had longed ever since her stay in
Italy
now seemed less impracticable. Her life was that of a religious, and her quaint
costume was fashioned after one worn by certain nuns in
Italy
. Cecilia Conway of
Philadelphia
, who had contemplated going to
Europe
to fulfill her religious vocation, joined her; soon other postulants arrived,
while the little school had all the pupils it could accommodate.
Mr. Cooper, a Virginian convert and seminarian, offered $10,000 to found an
institution for teaching poor children. A farm was bought half a mile from the
village
of
Emmitsburg
and two miles from Mt. St. Mary's College. Meanwhile Cecilia Seton and her
sister Harriet came to Mrs. Seton in
Baltimore
. As a preliminary to the formation of the new community, Mrs. Seton took vows
privately before Archbishop Carroll and her daughter Anna. In June, 1808, the
community was transferred to Emmitsburg to take charge of the new institution.
The great fervour and mortification of Mother Seton, imitated by her sisters,
made the many hardships of their situation seem light. In Dec., 1809, Harriet
Seton, who was received into the Church at Emmitsburg, died there, and Cecilia
in Apr., 1810. Bishop Flaget was commissioned in 1810 by the community to obtain
in
France
the rules of the Sisters of Charity of St. Vincent de Paul. Three of these
sisters were to be sent to train the young community in the spirit of St.
Vincent de Paul, but Napoleon forbade them to leave
France
. The letter announcing their coming is extant at Emmitsburg. The rule, however,
with some modifications, was approved by Archbishop Carroll in Jan., 1812, and
adopted. Against her will, and despite the fact that she had also to care for
her children, Mrs. Seton was elected superior. Many joined the community; Mother
Seton's daughter, Anna, died during her novitiate (
12 March, 1812
), but had been permitted to pronounce her vows on her death-bed. Mother Seton
and the eighteen sisters made their vows on
19 July, 1813
. The fathers superior of the community were the Sulpicians, Fathers Dubourg,
David, and Dubois. Father Dubois held the post for fifteen yeas and laboured to
impress on the community the spirit of St. Vincent's Sisters of Charity, forty
of whom he had had under his care in France. The fervour of the community won
admiration everywhere. The school for the daughters of the well-to-do prospered,
as it continues to do (1912), and enabled the sisters to do much work among the
poor. In 1814 the sisters were given charge of an orphan asylum in
Philadelphia
; in 1817 they were sent to
New York
. The previous year (1816) Mother Seton's daughter, Rebecca, after long
suffering, died at Emmitsburg; her son Richard, who was placed with the Filicchi
firm in
Italy
, died a few years after his mother. William, the eldest, joined the United
States Navy and died in 1868. The most distinguished of his children are Most.
Rev. Robert Seton, Archbishop of Heliopolis (author of a memoir of his
grandmother, "Roman Essays", and many contributions to the
"American Catholic Quarterly" and other reviews), and William Seton
(q.v.).
Mother Seton had great facility in writing. Besides the translation of many
ascetical French works (including the life of Saint Vincent de Paul, and of
Mlle. Le Gras) for her community she has left copious diaries and correspondence
that show a soul all on fire with the love of God and zeal for souls. Great
spiritual desolation purified her soul during a great portion of her religious
life, but she cheerfully took the royal road of the cross. For several years the
saintly bishop (then Father) Bruti was her director. The third time she was
elected mother (1819) she protested that it was the election of the dead, but
she lived for two years, suffering finally from a pulmonary affection. Her
perfect sincerity and great charm aided her wonderfully in he work of
sanctifying souls. In 1880 Cardinal Gibbons (then Archbishop) urged the steps be
taken toward her canonization. The result of the official inquiries in the cause
of Mother Seton, held in
Baltimore
during several years, were brought to
Rome
by special messenger, and placed in the hands of the postulator of the cause on
7 June, 1911
.
Her cause is entrusted to the Priests of the Congregation of the Mission,
whose superior general in Paris is also superior of the Sisters of Charity with
which the Emmitsburg community was incorporated in 1850, after the withdrawal of
the greater number of the sisters (at the suggestion of Archbishop Hughes) of
the New York houses in 1846. This union had been contemplated for some time, but
the need of a stronger bond at Emmitsburg, shown by the
New York
separation, hastened it. It was effected with the loss of only the
Cincinnati
community of six sisters. With the Newark and Halifax offshoots of the New York
community and the Greenburg foundation from Cincinnati, the sisters originating
from Mother Seton's foundation number (1911) about 6000. The original Emittsburg
community now wearing the cornette and observing the rule just as
St. Vincent
gave it, naturally surpasses any of the others in number. It is found in about
thirty dioceses in the
United States
, and forms a part of the worldwide sisterhood, whilst the others are rather
diocesan communities
[Note:
Elizabeth Ann Seton was beatified in 1963 and canonized on
September 14, 1975
.]
13 vols. of letters, diaries, and documents by Mother Seton as well as
information concerning her, are in the archives of the mother-house at
Emmitsburg, Maryland; ROBERT SETON, Memoirs, Letter and Journal of Elizabeth
Seton (2 vols., New York, 1869); BARBEREY, Elizabeth Seton (6th ed., 2 vols.,
Paris, 1892); WHITE, Life of Mrs. Eliza. A. Seton (10th ed.,
New York
, 1904); SADLIER, Elizabeth Seton, Foundress of the Amer. Sisters of Charity
(New York, 1905); BELLOC, Historic Nuns (2nd ed.,
London
, 1911).
- B.
RANDOLPH
Transcribed by Thomas M. Barrett
Dedicated to Saint Elizabeth A. Seton
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XIII
Copyright © 1912 by Robert Appleton Company
Online Edition Copyright © 2003 by K. Knight
Nihil Obstat,
February 1, 1912
. Remy Lafort, D..D., Censor
Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of
New York