Religious Hospitallers of St. Joseph

The Religious Hospitallers of Saint Joseph (also known as Réligieuses hospitalières de Saint-Joseph) was a religious order founded in La Fleche, France by the Venerable Jerome le Royer de la Dauversiere and Venerable Marie de la Ferre.

History

Buste Le Royer

Jerome le Royer de la Dauversiere

Jerome le Royer was born in La Flèche, France on March 18, 1597. He pursued his studies at the Jesuit College of there and when his father died in 1619, Jerome succeeded him as tax collector. He also inherited the small estate “La Dauversière”, whence comes the title attached to his name.[1] He was married to Jeanne de Bauge who bore him five children.[2]

M. le Royer collaborated in the administration of the old Maison Dieu (House of God), where the sick poor received care. The three women who worked there lived on alms obtained in the city. Jérôme wondered what to do to improve their situation. First he rebuilt the dilapidated hospital at la Flèche.[1]

Marie de la Ferre

Marie was born around 1589, in small village of Roiffé, Towards 1601, she lost her mother, when her father remarried she went to live with her aunt, Catherine de Goubitz, at her manor in Ruigné, near la Flèche. Her aunt wanted her to make a brilliant match; but Marie decided to consecrate her life to the Lord. Several experiences of religious life having failed, Marie devoted herself to her aunt’s service, as well as those wounded by life. The people, witnesses of her charity, called her “The Holy Woman”. After the death of her aunt, Marie visited the sick poor in the little Maison Dieu in la Flèche where she met M. le Royer.[3]

Congregation of the Daughters Hospitallers of St. Joseph

Le Royer founded the Religious Hospitallers of St. Joseph (RHSJ) order with Marie de la Ferre in 1636. This order is distinct from the Sisters of Saint Joseph founded in Le Puy-en-Velay, France in 1650.

In May 1636, Marie de la Ferre and Anne Foureau formed a community at the Hotel-Dieu with three servants of the poor already on site. Thus began the Congregation of the Daughters Hospitallers of St. Joseph.[4] The first constitutions of the congregation were approved and on January 22, 1644, Marie de la Ferre and her eleven companions made simple vows for one year in the Congregation of the Daughters of St. Joseph. Then they proceeded to the election of Marie de la Ferre as superior of the newly-born community.[1] In the spring of 1652, an epidemic fever broke out in the town of Moulins, where the Sisters had come to serve the sick. The infection claimed many people and even the Sisters fell ill. As the epidemic began to regress, Sister Marie de la Ferre, already exhausted, succumbed July 28, 1652.[3]

The RHSJ continued to expand to new sites. They founded hospitals at Athabaskaville, near Quebec City, in 1881; Campbellton, New Brunswick, in 1889; and in Burlington, Vermont in the United States in 1894.[5] In 1897 the RHSJ founded a Hotel Dieu at Cornwall, Ontario. There they constructed facilities, including a school, nurses training school, and nursing facility. In the twentieth century, the order reorganized to integrate its people from Canada, the United States and France. The generalate is located in Canada, its chief area of activity.

Ville Marie

Le Royer founded centers at Ville Marie, now Montreal, for education and a hospital, where care would be given by sisters of the new order.[6]

He sponsored Paul de Chomedey and Jeanne Mance, a lay woman, to go to Ville Marie with French colonists to evangelize the Natives and establish a hospital (Hôtel-Dieu de Montréal) to care for the poor.[7] Mance founded it in Montréal in 1642.

In 1659, three Sisters from Laval, Judith Moreau de Brésoles, Catherine Mace and Marie Maillet were chosen for the first community of Hospitallers of St. Joseph in Montreal in New France to work at the hospital.[4] That year the RHSJ received letters patent from King Louis XIV to take over the hospital and its operations.

Marie Morin, who took her vows with the order in 1671, was the first Canadian-born nun.[8]

Canada

Since its establishment in Canada, the RHSJ has set up a number of hospitals, schools and other facilities during the period of increased immigration and growth beginning in the mid-nineteenth century. In 1845 the RHSJ order established the Hotel Dieu in Kingston, Ontario. They were in operation when the city suffered an epidemic of typhus in 1847. The hospital cared for 100 orphaned children who had lost their parents. The disease had accompanied poor Irish immigrants fleeing the potato famine in their homeland. No one yet understood how the disease spread, and poor sanitation practices compounded the epidemic.[9]

The congregation spread to other towns, and subsequently, other houses opened orphanages and boarding schools. In 1819, a community of Hospitallers Canonesses of Saint Augustin in Ernée merged with the Hospitallers of St. Joseph.[4] In the nineteenth century, the RHSJ also established an Hotel Dieu and convent school in New Brunswick at each of three towns: Tracadie (1868), Chatham (1869), and Saint-Basile (1873). The sisters helped establish medical and nursing care in these communities, as well as schools for the education of children.[10]

Responding to recent immigration from the United States, the RHSJ established the Hôtel-Dieu Hospital in 1888 at Windsor, Ontario. They were invited to come by Dean T. Wagner, pastor of St. Alphonsus Church, who was concerned that black immigrants from the United States' South were not being adequately served by other community institutions. For instance, black children were denied entry to white schools. Many had arrived as part of the late nineteenth century-early twentieth century Great Migration to the North out of the South. The RHSJ founded a hospital for the town, and a school for black children.[11]

See also

References

External links

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