Continued from the first three issues, Joseph Rosati’s translated memoirs relate the early days of Saint Mary’s Seminary of the Barrens and the Vincentians’ service to the nearby Catholic community. Covering the period between their arrival in Perryville in October 1818 and his appointment as visitor in 1820, Rosati describes hardships, triumphs, and people in detail. In this excerpt, the Congregation grows with the arrival of Italians who join it after being unable to form their own community
This life of the highly esteemed Andrew Ferrari, one of the first Vincentians in the United States, ...
Rosati, Missouri was originally named Knobview. Since other nearby places had “knob” in their names,...
John Francis McGerry recounts the Vincentians’ role in establishing Catholicism in the Cape Girardea...
Joseph Rosati’s translated memoirs conclude in 1831, which is when his authority over the Vincentian...
Continued from the first two issues, Joseph Rosati’s translated memoirs recount the Vincentians’ fir...
The translation of Joseph Rosati’s memoirs continues with the period after 1820. The Vincentians and...
Joseph Rosati accompanied Felix De Andreis on the first mission to the United States from 1816 to 18...
This is the earliest printed report in Vincentian sources on the Congregation’s American mission. It...
The lives and contributions of Felix De Andreis, Joseph Rosati, and John Timon are described. De And...
The history of Saint Mary of the Barrens Seminary is discussed. It was essential to the evangelizati...
This article discusses the Vincentian mission in the United States from 1816 to the Civil War. The V...
This work is the earliest known history of the Congregation of the Mission and dates from about 1730...
This is an eighteenth-century description of the life and virtues of Vincent de Paul. It also gives ...
The founders of the American Vincentians, Felix De Andreis and Joseph Rosati, considered the convers...
John Timon gives his account of Congregation’s development in the United States from the mission’s b...
This life of the highly esteemed Andrew Ferrari, one of the first Vincentians in the United States, ...
Rosati, Missouri was originally named Knobview. Since other nearby places had “knob” in their names,...
John Francis McGerry recounts the Vincentians’ role in establishing Catholicism in the Cape Girardea...
Joseph Rosati’s translated memoirs conclude in 1831, which is when his authority over the Vincentian...
Continued from the first two issues, Joseph Rosati’s translated memoirs recount the Vincentians’ fir...
The translation of Joseph Rosati’s memoirs continues with the period after 1820. The Vincentians and...
Joseph Rosati accompanied Felix De Andreis on the first mission to the United States from 1816 to 18...
This is the earliest printed report in Vincentian sources on the Congregation’s American mission. It...
The lives and contributions of Felix De Andreis, Joseph Rosati, and John Timon are described. De And...
The history of Saint Mary of the Barrens Seminary is discussed. It was essential to the evangelizati...
This article discusses the Vincentian mission in the United States from 1816 to the Civil War. The V...
This work is the earliest known history of the Congregation of the Mission and dates from about 1730...
This is an eighteenth-century description of the life and virtues of Vincent de Paul. It also gives ...
The founders of the American Vincentians, Felix De Andreis and Joseph Rosati, considered the convers...
John Timon gives his account of Congregation’s development in the United States from the mission’s b...
This life of the highly esteemed Andrew Ferrari, one of the first Vincentians in the United States, ...
Rosati, Missouri was originally named Knobview. Since other nearby places had “knob” in their names,...
John Francis McGerry recounts the Vincentians’ role in establishing Catholicism in the Cape Girardea...