Soon after this legal recognition, the Sisters spread their service overseas. An American foundation was established within seven years of its founding, to serve German emigrant communities in
New York,
New Jersey and
Ohio. At the same time, as their
Superior General, Mother Frances oversaw the foundation of several hospitals and
sanatoria in both Europe and the United States for those suffering from
tuberculosis, then a widespread cause of death, especially among the
working classes. Over the next fifty years, hospitals were established in several states. They founded various
community hospitals around the nation, including
St. Anthony Community Hospital in
Warwick, New York (now operated by the
Bon Secours Charity Health System), and the former St. Mary Hospital in
Hoboken, New Jersey (now
Hoboken University Medical Center). In
New York City, the Sisters opened and staffed St. Francis Hospital (1865-1966), St. Joseph Hospital for Chest Diseases (1888-1962) and the Frances Schervier Home and Hospital, all located in the
Borough of
the Bronx. The sisters, at the invitation of the Bishop of Covington and lay benefactors, opened St. Elizabeth Hospital in Covington, KY (1861). St. Elizabeth Hospital currently has six locations, and is one of the largest employers of the Northern Kentucky metro area. Mother Frances visited the United States in 1863, and helped her Sisters nurse soldiers wounded in the
American Civil War.
St. Mary Hospital in
Hoboken, N.J. was founded for this work. She visited the United States one more time in 1868, and attended the dedication of the new location for St. Elizabeth Hospital in Covington, KY. When Mother Frances died in 1876, there were 2,500 members of the congregation worldwide. ==A new congregation==