![]() |
![]()
|
|
Our Patroness
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton
For more information on St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, click on any of the topics below: St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Facts and Figures St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Quotes Everyone's Sister of Charity (Homily) Elizabeth Ann Bayley grew up in New York when the City was under siege by the British. That she was a child of New York, growing up with the City and the Country, cannot be denied. The Bayley family and their friends can be traced in landmarks streets, areas and buildings throughout New York City, the Bronx, Westchester and Richmond. In 1794 at the age of 19 she married William Magee Seton, son of a wealthy New York shipping merchant. They lived in lower New York -- one of their homes on State Street in Battery Park is now the official New York shrine of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton. The marriage of Elizabeth and William was blessed with five children. It was a happy marriage but doomed to be brief. Within the next eight years the Seton shipping business declined, both Dr. Bayley and the elder Seton died and William's health began to fail. In an effort to restore him to health, Elizabeth and William went to Italy in 1803 taking their eldest child. However, William died in Italy in December and Elizabeth Seton at the age of 29 was a widow in a foreign land. A wealthy Italian family, the Filicchis, close business and family friends of the Setons, did what they could to console her. She lived in their home for three months -- and for the first time became intimately acquainted with Catholicism. Always deeply spiritual, Elizabeth Seton was profoundly impressed with the devotion and faith of the Filicchis.
The next few years were filled with hardships for the young widow. To support five children was not easy. The entire Seton fortune had been lost and Elizabeth was penniless. Several attempts to earn a livelihood were failures - due to the hostility her new religion had brought upon her. An opportunity to open a school in Baltimore now presented itself and on June 9, 1808 Elizabeth Seton and her five children left New York City. In Baltimore the School succeeded and in a short time Elizabeth Seton not only started the parochial school system in the United States but founded the first American religious order, The Sisters of Charity.
On September 14, 1975 Elizabeth Seton was canonized in Rome by Pope Paul VI the first native-born American Saint. 30th Anniversary of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton's Canonization Presidential Proculation on Canonization Day
|
WELCOME | PAROCHIAL
SCHOOL | RELIGIOUS EDUCATION
| ORGANIZATIONS
| LINKS © 1998-2006,
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Parish. All Rights Reserved. |