Our History
The history of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange
spans more than 350 years. The humble women of
today often comment about standing on the shoulders
of the sisters who came before them. This is a
brief glimpse of their story.
The French Foundation: 1650
Le Puy
The congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph
was begun around the year 1650 in small communities
established in the area of Le Puy, France by women
of whom we know little more than their names, and
by a Jesuit priest, Jean-Pierre Medaille. Father
Medaille had a unique idea about religious communities
of women; different from others in his time. The
place of sisters in the 17th century was usually
in a cloistered convent, not our among the people.
Father Medaille had a vision to go out into the
city, divide up the neighborhoods, find out the
needs and do your best to meet them, and find lay
people who want to do good works with you.
The Sisters of St. Joseph began by helping the
poor and sick in their homes, providing refuge
for widows and orphans, teaching religious education
and a trade to girls and young women, and shouldering
the burden of social work in villages where there
was often no one else to do it. As the Congregation
spread throughout central France, the Sisters served
in hospitals, schools and prisons, and even maintained
a pharmacy. Response to needs characterized the
service of these first Sisters of St. Joseph.
The French Revolution of 1789 radically affected
the visible structures of religious congregations.
Church property was confiscated and Sisters were
forbidden to live in convents. The Sisters of St.
Joseph were dispersed; some were imprisoned, some
were guillotined, and others went into hiding.
Lyon
Mother St. John Fontbonne, one of the sisters
who had been imprisoned and scheduled for execution,
reestablished the Congregation shortly after the
end of the French Revolution. Spared the guillotine
by the fall of Robespierre and released from prison,
she, like other women who had been in the Congregation,
continued to serve the needs of others while she
lived with her family. In 1806, she reestablished
the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph in
Lyon, not far from the original foundation in Le
Puy. Encouraged by Napoleon, bishops pressed formerly
independent houses to unite in larger congregations
governed by general superiors.
Missionary expansion was a chief product of the
new centralization and the astonishingly active
stamp of French Catholicism in the 19th century.
By the century’s end, the Sisters of St.
Joseph, previously confined to one section of France,
were in the United States, Canada, India, Italy,
Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Russia, Iceland, Armenia,
Algeria, Argentina and Brazil. Today, thousands
of Sisters of St. Joseph serve on every continent.
The American Foundation: 1847
Mother St. John sent several sisters to the United
States in 1836 to meet the needs of people in this
country as they moved westward. The foundation
was made at Carondelet near St. Louis, Missouri,
and in 1847 it became an independent congregation.
Establishing independent congregations as they
moved to new areas became a pattern for the Sisters
of St. Joseph, and eventually 25 independent groups
were established in the United States and Canada
from the original Carondelet foundation. Maintaining
a common heritage, each one added a spirit unique
to its own foundation.
The first ministries of the Sisters in the United
States involved establishing a school for the deaf,
working with Native Americans, establishing hospitals
and orphanages during the Civil War, and teaching
immigrants and African-Americans.
The California Foundation: 1912
The Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange is among the
youngest of the American congregations and traces
its roots through the St. Joseph congregations
of La Grange, Illinois; Concordia, Kansas; Rochester,
New York; and Carondelet, Missouri.
The Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange were established
in 1912 by Mother Bernard Gosselin. She and eight
sisters left LaGrange, Illinois, near Chicago to
establish a school in Eureka, California. When
the Sisters first arrived, they had only 60 cents
and only a promise of a temporary house, but even
with such limited resources they were able to open
a school within a few months of arrival. The Sisters
were able to sustain themselves with the meager
income the school provided by growing most of their
own food, and by the generosity of the people of
Eureka.
As the Congregation grew, the Sisters were better
able to address more of the needs of the area.
The 1918 flu epidemic presented a new challenge
to the community. Although none of the members
was trained in medicine, the Sisters knew that
the people of the area needed practical nursing
care as well as consolation and reconciliation
in the presence of death. The Sisters responded
as best they could at the time, but they realized
that by establishing a hospital they could provide
a health care service which would effectively address
the personal, social and spiritual needs of the
area. In 1920, the Sisters opened St. Joseph Hospital
in Eureka.
By 1922, the Sisters were teaching in several
Southern California areas and recognized that the
community could better develop its ministries by
moving the Motherhouse to Orange. The Congregation
continued in the same spirit of charity, simplicity,
and humility characteristic of the Sisters of St.
Joseph throughout the world. Mother Bernard further
encouraged the Sisters to respond to the needs
of their neighbors with faith, foresight and flexibility.
The first ministries of the Sisters of St. Joseph
of Orange were in education and health care. They
experienced decades of effective service within
a system characterized by centralized authority,
limited personal choice of ministry, and structured
ministerial activity. Schools and hospitals were
staffed primarily by the Sisters and in the 1940s
and 1950s the number of institutions directed by
the Congregation increased steadily. In the 1940s
the Sisters extended their work in health, education
and religious instruction to the people of Papua
New Guinea and Australia.
The 1960s radically challenged the environment.
Rapid changes in every aspect of life brought disruption
to the traditions of religious life as well as
to those of the broader society. At the beginning
of the 1960s Vatican II challenged religious congregations
to renew and adapt their mission and way of life
in order to respond to the changing needs of society
and the Church. The Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange
clarified their mission, broadened the scope of
their ministries, and changed outdated structures
and customs.
Today, the Congregation’s commitment to
education is expressed in a variety of forms including
elementary, secondary, university and other adult
education. The commitment to extend the healing
mission of Christ is expressed through acute care
hospitals, rehabilitation programs, home health
care, community education, primary care clinics,
and wellness programs. The works of the Congregation
have expanded, however, beyond education and health
care to also include such things as helping new
immigrants, feeding the hungry, giving shelter
to the homeless, and fostering spiritual development.
The Sisters are very aware that their ministry
is greatly enhanced through fuller collaboration
with their lay coworkers. They have developed clearer
roles for the laity involved in their ministries
and have asked them to be partners and leaders
with them in their institutions.
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