According to a history of the order, two teachers at St. Anne's Parish in the Manchaug section of Sutton, Massachusetts asked permission from Father Alexis Delphos, pastor of St. Denis Parish in East Douglas, of which St. Anne's was a mission, to taking simple religious vows and wear the habit of the Third Order of St. Francis. Having taken the habit, they and made vows for one year and continued to teach. Shortly thereafter they were recruited by Father Joseph Brouillet, parish priest of Notre-Dame-des-Canadiens in nearby Worcester, who planned to open an orphanage, and needed a religious community to staff it. The community, founded in September 1889, adopted the Franciscan spiritual tradition. In August 1898 the sisters opened a school in Wallagrass, Maine. They later opened schools in Fort Kent and Eagle Lake. In 1906 they took over operation of Northern Maine General Hospital. With the Motherhouse was in Canada, the Bishop of the Diocese off Springfield accepted them as missionaries, provided that they care for the elderly instead of orphans, which work was handed over to the
Grey Nuns. A home of the elderly was established which is now the St. Francis Rehabilitation and Nursing Center. As of 2016 the Little Franciscans of Mary work in Quebec, the United States, Madagascar, and Haiti in the fields of education, health care, social work and pastoral ministry. ==Marie Bibeau==