Permission to include this article granted by the editors of AcadiensisExamines the Sisters of St. Martha, a congregation of women religious, and their contributions to health and social services during the Great Depression in Prince Edward Island. The Sisters had advantages that allowed them to respond to the economic effects of the Depression more quickly and effectively than non-governmental or governmental organizations.Ye
This article explores the impetus and motivation for the McMillan sisters, Christian Socialists comm...
This article describes the challenges the Daughters of Charity faced on the American frontier and ho...
Studies of the Great Depression in Saskatchewan tend to focus on the unsurpassed poverty, unemployme...
Open access. Article licensed under a CC-BY-NO-ND 3.0 Unported LicenseBetween 1965 and 1985, the Si...
The aim of this thesis was to investigate the response of representative women in British Columbia t...
When Bishop John Timon arrived in Buffalo, New York, he saw an urgent need for a hospital, especiall...
This thesis examines the practice and application of relief policy in Saskatoon during the years of...
The Daughters of Charity were “the key provider of social service in [Los Angeles] before 1880,” ope...
This thesis examines the experiences of a single French-Canadian congregation of women religious as ...
Sherpa Romeo blue journal: open accessResponding to rural poverty associated with the declining fish...
The purpose of this thesis is to determine how a group of socially-concerned French-speaking Catholi...
This article focuses on the Sulpicians’ role in the establishment of the Sisters of Charity and thei...
Gina Bellafante wrote in the New York Times on 3/1/20 that the city would feel the impact of its hos...
This paper is an examination of the responses of Montreal's anglophone elite to poverty and homeless...
The Dominican Sisters of San Rafael celebrated their sesquicentennial in the millennial year of 2000...
This article explores the impetus and motivation for the McMillan sisters, Christian Socialists comm...
This article describes the challenges the Daughters of Charity faced on the American frontier and ho...
Studies of the Great Depression in Saskatchewan tend to focus on the unsurpassed poverty, unemployme...
Open access. Article licensed under a CC-BY-NO-ND 3.0 Unported LicenseBetween 1965 and 1985, the Si...
The aim of this thesis was to investigate the response of representative women in British Columbia t...
When Bishop John Timon arrived in Buffalo, New York, he saw an urgent need for a hospital, especiall...
This thesis examines the practice and application of relief policy in Saskatoon during the years of...
The Daughters of Charity were “the key provider of social service in [Los Angeles] before 1880,” ope...
This thesis examines the experiences of a single French-Canadian congregation of women religious as ...
Sherpa Romeo blue journal: open accessResponding to rural poverty associated with the declining fish...
The purpose of this thesis is to determine how a group of socially-concerned French-speaking Catholi...
This article focuses on the Sulpicians’ role in the establishment of the Sisters of Charity and thei...
Gina Bellafante wrote in the New York Times on 3/1/20 that the city would feel the impact of its hos...
This paper is an examination of the responses of Montreal's anglophone elite to poverty and homeless...
The Dominican Sisters of San Rafael celebrated their sesquicentennial in the millennial year of 2000...
This article explores the impetus and motivation for the McMillan sisters, Christian Socialists comm...
This article describes the challenges the Daughters of Charity faced on the American frontier and ho...
Studies of the Great Depression in Saskatchewan tend to focus on the unsurpassed poverty, unemployme...