On 30 April 1839, under the guidance of
Abbé Combalot, Anne-Eugénie Milleret de Brou (
religious name Marie-Eugénie de Jésus) founded the congregation in
Paris. Combalot was a well-known orator of the time, who had been inspired to dedicate a congregation to Our Lady of the
Assumption during a pilgrimage. He instructed Marie-Eugénie and the first community for two years, before parting ways with them in 1841. The congregation expanded quickly with new communities and schools founded in France and beyond: where the daughter of Confederate President
Jefferson Davis was briefly enrolled in 1869. Now at the head of a rapidly-growing congregation, Marie-Eugénie dedicated herself to the writing of
Constitutions inspired by the
Rule of St Augustine. In 1867, the congregation received its
decretum laudis and in 1888, the final Constitutions were approved. by
Pope Benedict XVI. Along with a white veil, the original
habit of the sisters was purple with a white cross on the breast. Today, the habits vary across the continents, but all retain some dimension of the original purple (symbolic color of penitence) and white (symbolizing joy). ==Present day==