The provincial house in Canada was founded on 18 October 1853, by
Jean-Charles Prince, first
Bishop of St. Hyacinthe. It is also the Canadian motherhouse and where the religious make their vows. The first six sisters, with Marie St-Maurice as superior, settled at Sainte-Marie-de-Monnoir (
Marieville, Quebec), where E. Crevier, pastor of the parish, had prepared a
convent. They opened a boarding-school and a class for day pupils. In 1855 the
novitiate was transferred to
Saint-Hugues, Quebec, and in 1858 it was definitively located at
Saint-Hyacinthe in a convent which was occupied up to this time by the Sisters of the
Congregation of Notre Dame from
Montreal. This house became too small and the community erected, not far from the seminary, a large building of which they took possession in 1876. The convent occupied since 1858 then became an academy, with the later addition of a large annex. The students were installed there in 1907. The Canadian sisters are engaged in a variety of apostolates:
campus ministry in secondary schools, teaching,
Catholic Christian Outreach at universities, nursing, inner city,
spiritual direction, pastoral care, and working with the people of the
First Nations. ==In the United States==