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At the age of nineteen, Catherine Spalding (1793--1858) ventured
into what would become a lifetime of leadership with the Sisters of
Charity of Nazareth (SCN) -- one of the most significant American
religious communities for women. As a cofounder and first superior
of the order, she dedicated her life to developing and improving
health care, services for orphans, and education on the early
frontier. Her contributions had a lasting impact on Catholicism,
the state of Kentucky, and the many people whose lives she touched.
Mary Ellen Doyle supplements her definitive biography of the
influential educator and humanitarian, Pioneer Spirit, with this
meticulously edited and annotated volume. The collected
correspondence illustrates Spalding's exemplary character and the
scope of her day-to-day life as an administrator. Together, the
letters reveal a new picture of Spalding's personality and drive,
her insights, her trials, and her world as mother superior. The
collection also gives readers a valuable glimpse of antebellum life
in Kentucky and the wider south. Doyle presents the correspondence
chronologically, following Spalding through key stages in her
career from the founding of the SCN to her final years, as she
turned to quieter cares. She provides essential historical context
and information about Spalding's various correspondents, and she
also analyzes the significance of letters missing from the
collection. Catherine Spalding, SCN brings the SCN founder's words
to a broader audience and offers readers new perspectives on both
the world in which she lived and frontier faith.
Mother Catherine Spalding (1793--1858) was the cofounder and
first leader of one of the most significant American religious
communities for women -- the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth near
Bardstown, Kentucky. Elected at age nineteen to lead the order,
Spalding also founded several educational institutions,
Louisville's first private hospital, and the first social service
agency for children in Kentucky. Pioneer Spirit is the first
biography of Catherine Spalding, a woman who made it her life's
work to serve the citizens of the Kentucky frontier. Catherine, who
lost her mother at a young age and was raised in many different
homes before she was ten years old, eventually came to be raised in
a colony of Catholic families. These formative years taught her
independence, the value of hard work and an enduring spirit, and
the importance of education, all of which would figure prominently
in her later career. Spalding became increasingly interested in
health care, services for orphans, and education, and her business
skills and strong sense of purpose allowed her to achieve her goals
with little interference from outsiders. She showed a natural gift
for administration, and the scope and services of the Sisters of
Charity expanded under her leadership. In the midst of this
ministerial work, however, Spalding always maintained the
connection of her ministry to spiritual and communal life,
ascribing great importance to all three facets of her calling.
Author Mary Ellen Doyle notes that in Spalding's correspondence
with the Sisters, she repeatedly emphasized the heart of charity:
"genuine interest in each other and sisterly affection free of
personal ambition or jealousy." By the time of Catherine Spalding's
death, the Sisters of Charity of Nazareth extended beyond Nazareth
to more than one hundred sisters in sixteen convents. Spalding's
legacy of service continues today with more than six hundred
members worldwide, and her story of progressive and compassionate
leadership offers unique insights into the growth of a religious
order and the struggles of developing America's frontier
communities.
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