Kirwan was born at
Monivea, County Galway, to James and Ann Kirwan, in 1797. The family were one of the
Tribes of Galway. She joined the Presentation Sisters in Galway in 1823. Ten years later, Bishop
Michael Anthony Fleming visited the Presentation Convent at Galway with the aim of recruiting
religious sisters to teach in
Newfoundland. His object, he told Monsignor John Spratt of Dublin, was to establish "a system of education, that . . . would smooth the pillow of sickness, and soften the rigours of winter, by the diffusion of true Christian feeling." Four Sisters, including Kirwan and
Mary Xavier Molony, volunteered for the mission. On 8 August, Kirwan was appointed "Superioress of the intended convent of St. John's, Newfoundland." Accompanied by Fleming, the nuns left Ireland on 11 August, arriving in St John's on 21 September. The passage was difficult for Kirwan, who wrote, "I was so ill for ten days I was almost insensible to everything. The Sisters thought I would never reach St. John's." That year, Kirwan opened the first Presentation school in St. John's. "This country," Kirwan wrote in her first letter home, "is by no means as dreary as we heard. The bay is beautiful and so is the country as far as we can see." Living in a building formerly used as a tavern, they had two bedrooms and a small parlour which served "for choir, refectory, community and all," with the rest of the building and a nearby disused slaughterhouse for teaching. By 1848, they offered instruction in spelling, reading, writing, English grammar, history (both sacred and secular), geography, arithmetic, natural history (taught from a book of the Irish National Schools), spinning, and needlework. Kirwan served first in St. John's before moving up the Southern Shore to Admiral's Cove. The Admiral's Cove convent opened 23 September 1853. == Death ==