The Daughters of Charity were “the key provider of social service in [Los Angeles] before 1880,” opening southern California’s first hospital in 1858. They served anyone, regardless of religion and brought different religious and cultural groups together to help people who were sick. During the smallpox epidemics from the 1860s through the 1880s, the Daughters partnered with officials of Los Angeles to treat the poor. Kristine Gunnell explains how the desire to cut costs, theories of containing disease, and racial and class biases led to the city’s initially inhumane treatment of poor patients. Acting as advocates for the poor, the Daughters of Charity used political leverage to improve conditions and to give patients quality, compassionate...
This article focuses on the Sulpicians’ role in the establishment of the Sisters of Charity and thei...
About the Author Keely Smith is a senior History, Spanish, and Global Studies major at Samford Unive...
Gina Bellafante wrote in the New York Times on 3/1/20 that the city would feel the impact of its hos...
This article describes the challenges the Daughters of Charity faced on the American frontier and ho...
When the American government called for nurses during the Spanish-American War, 189 of the 282 siste...
When Bishop John Timon arrived in Buffalo, New York, he saw an urgent need for a hospital, especiall...
With minor alterations, the Rule of the Daughters of Charity was established as the Rule for the Sis...
Betty Ann McNeil uses the words and experiences of five Daughters of Charity to illustrate the servi...
The Sisters of Charity arrived in Cincinnati in 1829 to establish a girls’ school and an orphanage a...
Christianity from its initiation looked at nursing of the sick and infirm as a Christian duty and se...
This is an eighteenth-century account of the establishment of the Daughters of Charity. It describes...
Jeanne-Marie Rendu, better known as Sister Rosalie Rendu, lived her whole life in the service of the...
The city of Lleida that was reborn after the war of independence 1808-1814 had a diminished populati...
The Sisters of Charity of Saint Joseph’s Academy in Emmitsburg, Maryland ministered to both sides be...
In 1828, four Sisters of Charity left Maryland to establish a new mission in the frontier city of St...
This article focuses on the Sulpicians’ role in the establishment of the Sisters of Charity and thei...
About the Author Keely Smith is a senior History, Spanish, and Global Studies major at Samford Unive...
Gina Bellafante wrote in the New York Times on 3/1/20 that the city would feel the impact of its hos...
This article describes the challenges the Daughters of Charity faced on the American frontier and ho...
When the American government called for nurses during the Spanish-American War, 189 of the 282 siste...
When Bishop John Timon arrived in Buffalo, New York, he saw an urgent need for a hospital, especiall...
With minor alterations, the Rule of the Daughters of Charity was established as the Rule for the Sis...
Betty Ann McNeil uses the words and experiences of five Daughters of Charity to illustrate the servi...
The Sisters of Charity arrived in Cincinnati in 1829 to establish a girls’ school and an orphanage a...
Christianity from its initiation looked at nursing of the sick and infirm as a Christian duty and se...
This is an eighteenth-century account of the establishment of the Daughters of Charity. It describes...
Jeanne-Marie Rendu, better known as Sister Rosalie Rendu, lived her whole life in the service of the...
The city of Lleida that was reborn after the war of independence 1808-1814 had a diminished populati...
The Sisters of Charity of Saint Joseph’s Academy in Emmitsburg, Maryland ministered to both sides be...
In 1828, four Sisters of Charity left Maryland to establish a new mission in the frontier city of St...
This article focuses on the Sulpicians’ role in the establishment of the Sisters of Charity and thei...
About the Author Keely Smith is a senior History, Spanish, and Global Studies major at Samford Unive...
Gina Bellafante wrote in the New York Times on 3/1/20 that the city would feel the impact of its hos...