Today's Sisters of Providence originated from another community of religious women, the
Sisters of Providence of St. Vincent de Paul in
Kingston, Ontario, Canada. In September 1873, two Sisters from the Canadian community approached Reverend Patrick J. Harkins, pastor of Holyoke, Massachusetts' St. Jerome's Church, asking permission to solicit funds from his parishioners. Reverend Harkins granted the request, he in turn asked the Sisters to petition their superiors to send others from their community to establish a Holyoke mission. He wanted the new mission to address the needs of the rapidly growing poor
Irish and
Scottish immigrant mill workers in the Holyoke community. On November 7, 1873, four Sisters arrived to establish the Holyoke mission. Within a week they accepted the first orphan to their House of Providence and it was not long before city officials were sending the needy and infirm to them for care and shelter. In 1874, the Sisters of Providence established the first Catholic hospital in western Massachusetts. Today's Springfield-based Mercy Medical Center developed from this small start as the "House of Providence." Catholic Health East merged with
Trinity Health in 2013. Sisters of Providence Health System merged with
St. Francis Care to form Trinity Health of New England in 2015. In 2026, Mercy begins the transaction to a Baystate Health hospital. ==Services provided==