nvited
to start a school in Baltimore, Maryland in 1808, Elizabeth
Seton left New York, the city of her birth, with regret and
sailed for Baltimore. There she opened a school on Paca Street
and within a year took vows as a religious. Soon other young
women joined her and thus was founded the Sisters of Charity,
the first American congregation of women religious.
The
small group moved to Emmitsburg, Maryland in 1809. Here Elizabeth
Seton, now Mother Seton, opened St. Joseph Academy. The revenues
from this school enabled the sisters to educate the poor country
children.
In the
valley in Emmitsburg, the spiritual daughters of Saint Elizabeth
Seton increased in numbers. In 1814 she sent three sisters
to an orphanage in Philadelphia. Later in 1817, three sisters
went to her own New York to open an orphanage on Prince Street.
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