, dedicated on October 15, 1887. Praxedes went to
Bernalillo, New Mexico in 1877 as a superior. The academy was $5,000 in debt and unfinished. The first bazaar held in April 1881 may have been the first to take place in the
Southwest. The church was dedicated on 15 October 1887. Mother Praxedes was sent to
Florissant, Missouri for a year in 1893 then in 1894, she went to Loretto Heights outside
Denver. Against the rules of the Order, she was appointed, rather than
voted, Mother Superior of all of the Society of
Sisters of Loretto in 1896 and went back to Loretto, Kentucky. In 1899, she toured the country, visiting
convents and schools of the Loretto Order. Mother Praxedes and the
Mistress of Novices went to Rome in 1903 and brought a new
constitution for the Sisters of Loretto to the
Pope. The new constitution was viewed by
Pope Pius IX in 1904 and put to a three-year trial. Shortly after that trip, she became ill and spent several weeks in recovery in
Michigan. For part of 1907, she toured Loretto schools and convents in the Western states, starting in Missouri. Later, she went back to Rome in 1907 during which the new constitution was fully approved. In July 1910 she was re-elected as mother general of the Order. Mother Praxedes began to work on rebuilding the Loretto Academy and beginning work on St. Paul Academy in
St. Paul, Kansas in October 1914. In July 1916 she was re-elected as mother general of the Order. Also in July, Mother Praxedes started working on the Loretto College for Women in St. Louis, Missouri, which is now known as
Webster University. During the
1918 flu pandemic, Mother Praxedes sent sisters to work as nurses into places that needed assistance. == Later life and death ==