The founders of the American Vincentians, Felix De Andreis and Joseph Rosati, considered the conversion of the Native Americans one of the main purposes of the American mission, although this was not an official objective. Efforts to this end were relatively few due to a lack of personnel and resources, and the more urgent need to serve American Catholics. In 1824, while ministering to Catholics in the Arkansas Territory, John Mary Odin and John Timon said mass among the Kappas-on-Arkansas (Quapaw). In 1837, other Vincentians went to the Osages in what is now Oklahoma. These two ventures were considered major missionary journeys. In the intervening period, the Vincentians had increased contact with the Shawnees, Delawares, and Peorias livin...
Examination of three common myths about Vincentian ministry: Seminaries are our real work; Vincentia...
The lives and contributions of Felix De Andreis, Joseph Rosati, and John Timon are described. De And...
The translation of Joseph Rosati’s memoirs continues with the period after 1820. The Vincentians and...
The founders of the American Vincentians, Felix De Andreis and Joseph Rosati, considered the convers...
This article discusses the Vincentian mission in the United States from 1816 to the Civil War. The V...
The history of Saint Mary of the Barrens Seminary is discussed. It was essential to the evangelizati...
The Congregation of the Mission (the Vincentians) arrived in America in 1815. This article traces th...
Francis Mary Simonin was one of the earliest Vincentians in the United States. He conducted missions...
This is the earliest printed report in Vincentian sources on the Congregation’s American mission. It...
The Catholic Motor Missions operated from 1935 to 1965 to combat anti-Catholic prejudice. Traveling ...
Native Americans have had an incredibly complicated relationship with Christianity. On the one hand,...
Vincent de Paul pioneered missions exclusively for the rural poor. France had badly trained and ofte...
Father Peter J. DeSmet, S. J. has oftentimes been called the Apostle of the Rocky Mountains. Perha...
Continued from the first two issues, Joseph Rosati’s translated memoirs recount the Vincentians’ fir...
After anti-Catholic bigotry surfaced during the American presidential campaigns of the 1920s, three ...
Examination of three common myths about Vincentian ministry: Seminaries are our real work; Vincentia...
The lives and contributions of Felix De Andreis, Joseph Rosati, and John Timon are described. De And...
The translation of Joseph Rosati’s memoirs continues with the period after 1820. The Vincentians and...
The founders of the American Vincentians, Felix De Andreis and Joseph Rosati, considered the convers...
This article discusses the Vincentian mission in the United States from 1816 to the Civil War. The V...
The history of Saint Mary of the Barrens Seminary is discussed. It was essential to the evangelizati...
The Congregation of the Mission (the Vincentians) arrived in America in 1815. This article traces th...
Francis Mary Simonin was one of the earliest Vincentians in the United States. He conducted missions...
This is the earliest printed report in Vincentian sources on the Congregation’s American mission. It...
The Catholic Motor Missions operated from 1935 to 1965 to combat anti-Catholic prejudice. Traveling ...
Native Americans have had an incredibly complicated relationship with Christianity. On the one hand,...
Vincent de Paul pioneered missions exclusively for the rural poor. France had badly trained and ofte...
Father Peter J. DeSmet, S. J. has oftentimes been called the Apostle of the Rocky Mountains. Perha...
Continued from the first two issues, Joseph Rosati’s translated memoirs recount the Vincentians’ fir...
After anti-Catholic bigotry surfaced during the American presidential campaigns of the 1920s, three ...
Examination of three common myths about Vincentian ministry: Seminaries are our real work; Vincentia...
The lives and contributions of Felix De Andreis, Joseph Rosati, and John Timon are described. De And...
The translation of Joseph Rosati’s memoirs continues with the period after 1820. The Vincentians and...