In 1633, Vincent de Paul, a French priest and
Louise de Marillac, a widow, established the Company of the
Daughters of Charity as a group of women dedicated to serving the "poorest of the poor". They set up soup kitchens, organized community hospitals, established schools and homes for orphaned children, offered job training, taught the young to read and write, and improved prison conditions. Louise de Marillac and Vincent de Paul both died in 1660, and by this time there were more than forty houses of the Daughters of Charity in France, and the sick poor were cared for in their own dwellings in twenty-six parishes in Paris. The French Revolution shut down all convents, but the society was restored in 1801 and eventually spread to Austria, Australia, Hungary, Ireland, Israel, Portugal, Turkey, Britain and the Americas. In 1809, the American
Elizabeth Ann Seton founded the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph, adapting the rule of the French Daughters of Charity for her Emmitsburg, Maryland, community. (1897), US Civil War nurse In 1817, Mother Seton sent three Sisters to New York City to establish an orphanage. In 1829, four Sisters of Charity from Emmitsburg, Maryland, traveled to Cincinnati, to open St. Peter’s Girl’s Orphan Asylum and School. In 1850, the Sulpician priests of Baltimore successfully negotiated that the Emmitsburg community be united with the international community based in Paris. The foundations in New York and Cincinnati decided to become independent diocesan congregations. Six separate religious congregations trace their roots to the beginnings of the Sisters of Charity in Emmitsburg. In addition to the original community of Sisters at Emmitsburg (now part of the Vincentian order), they are based in
New York City;
Cincinnati, Ohio;
Halifax, Nova Scotia;
Convent Station, New Jersey; and
Greensburg, Pennsylvania. In 2011, the Daughters of Charity established The Province of St. Louise, bringing together the West Central, East Central, Southeast, and Northeast Provinces of the United States. Los Altos Hills in California remains a separate province.
List of affiliates Sisters of Charity Federation in the Vincentian-Setonian Tradition: •
Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul •
Sisters of Charity of New York •
Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth (Convent Station, New Jersey) •
Sisters of Charity of the Immaculate Conception (Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada) • Les Religieuses de Notre-Dame-du-Sacré-Cœur, (Dieppe, New Brunswick) •
Sisters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul (Halifax) (Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada) •
Sisters of Saint Martha (Antigonish, Nova Scotia, Canada) •
Sisters of Charity of Cincinnati •
Sisters of Charity of Seton Hill (Pennsylvania) •
Sisters of Charity of Nazareth (Kentucky) •
Vincentian Sisters of Charity (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania); (merged 2008) •
Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth (Kansas) •
Sisters of Charity of Our Lady of Mercy (South Carolina)
Paris, France The most famous convent is at 140 Rue du Bac in
Paris, France,
Chapel of Our Lady of the Miraculous Medal founded in 1633 by Vincent de Paul. This was where Catholics believe Sister
Catherine Labouré later received the vision of Immaculate Mary on the eve of St. Vincent's feast day in 1830, as well as the dispensation of the
Miraculous Medal. ==Other traditions==