Sisters of Saint Joseph in Kansas City
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Title |
Title
Title
Sisters of Saint Joseph in Kansas City
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Content type |
Content type
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Description |
Description
Chapter in the book about the Sisters of St. Joseph in Missouri between 1836 - 1920. Included in this account is a section concerning Kansas City and the sisters involvement here. Father Bernard Donnelly called the Sisters of St. Joseph to come to the city and be the first female religious order. Their school, St. Teresa's Academy opened in 1866 with 150 pupils. They also opened St. Joseph's Hospital in 1874 and St. Joseph's Girls Home in 1880.
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Creator Name |
Creator Name
Creator: Kremer, Gary R.
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Item Type |
Item Type
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Date(s) |
Date(s)
2004
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Digital Collection(s) |
Digital Collection(s)
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Related Item |
Related Item
Women in Missouri History
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Note(s) |
Note(s)
The book contains chapters on French women in Colonial Missouri, African Americans, German-speaking women, former slaves, women and the Civil War in Saline County, Sedalia prostitutes, political figures as Emily Newell Blair in the 1920s, social protester Fannie Cook, etc.
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Part |
Part
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Shelf Locator |
Shelf Locator
MVSC 305.409 W8724
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Restriction on Access |
Restriction on Access
This document is not available online. You may come to the Missouri Valley Room to view it or request a photocopy from the Library's Document Delivery service. http://www.kclibrary.org/copy-requests
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