In November 1804, Barat traveled to Sainte-Marie-d’en-Haut, near
Grenoble, in southeastern France, to receive a community of
Visitation nuns into the Society. Among them was
Philippine Duchesne, who would later introduce the Society to America and was canonized in 1988. A second school was then established at Grenoble, followed by a third at
Poitiers in western France. Varin envisioned an entire network of such schools and, after the first establishments in France, foundations were established in North America (1818), Italy (1828), Switzerland (1830), Belgium (1834), Algiers (1841), England (1842), Ireland (1842), Spain (1846), Holland (1848), Germany (1851), South America (1853), Austria (1853) and Poland (1857). Sophie Barat is credited with the twofold gift of intuition in the choice of persons fitted for office and trust of those in responsible posts. New foundations were always entrusted to other hands. In 1820, she called all of the superiors together in a council at Paris to establish a uniform course of studies for the quickly expanding network of Sacred Heart schools. In 1840, Barat averted a potential
schism between the Vatican and the Archbishop of Paris. All of her sisters pressured her to choose sides, Sophie refused to do so and was able to heal the breach. Over the course of her 65 years as the superior general, Sophie and her Society survived the regime of
Napoleon, saw France undergo two more revolutions, and witnessed Italy's struggle to become a full-fledged nation. The Sacred Heart schools quickly earned an excellent reputation. She dreamed of educating all children regardless of their parents' financial means. For almost every new school established, a corresponding “free” school was opened to provide the poorer children of the area with a high-quality education, which they would not otherwise have received. ==Death==