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Benedictine Sisters of FL

Holy Name Monastery
Founded 1889

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Founders Day

Founder’s Day – 136 years and counting

February 28, 2025 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

136th Founding Anniversary

Each year on February 28th we mark one more year celebrating the accumulation of years that the Benedictine Sisters of Florida have lived the words of the reading from Paul’s Letter to the Colossians (Chapter 3).  “As God’s chosen ones, clothe yourselves with compassion and kindness, humility, meekness and patience.  Bear with one another, let peace rule your hearts, live in harmony, teach and admonish one another in wisdom, and never forget to be thankful for what God has done for you.”
We are grateful for all that God has done for us throughout these 136 years since our Founding Sisters ventured forth from Pittsburgh, PA. to Pasco County Florida.  I ponder changes that have drifted “under the bridges” in those years.  Some came quickly to mind: opening and withdrawing from schools – all still a credit to our transition skills as they continue in some form to serve the founding purpose.  Some changes were welcome and settled in easily; some sat uneasy on the Sisters shoulders as they, responded to “the call of our times”.  This included changes in attire, changes from Latin to English, all the changes after Vatican II, and the cycle of the rise and fall of hemlines.
Then I got really curious and went on-line, typed in “year in review” from the 1890, taking big steps through the 20th and 21st centuries in clusters of approximately ten years.
In the first decade after the Sisters first day on the job in Florida (1890) The U.S. Congress designated Yosemite a National Park; Grover Cleveland won the U.S. presidential election, becoming the only president to serve two non-consecutive terms; Thomas A. Edison finished building his first motion picture studio; a decline in the New York stock market triggered the Panic of 1893 and first  Monday of September was designated a legal holiday; and Klondike Gold Rush began in Alaska.
1900 – 1920s the Oreo cookie was first introduced, SOS was accepted as the universal distress signal, the first crossword puzzle was published, traffic lights were introduced; World War I began; there was an influenza epidemic and prohibition began.
Women were granted the right to vote; the lie detector was invented; The Reader’s Digest was published; Talking Movies were invented; the first Olympic Winter Games were held; flapper dresses came into style; bubble gum hit the market; penicillin was discovered and the car radio was invented.
In the 1930s the Empire State Building was completed; the US officially got a National Anthem; air-conditioning was invented, the Loch Ness monster was first spotted; the Golden Gate Bridge opened; the helicopter was invented; the first commercial flight flew over the Atlantic and World War II began.
In the 40s our Sisters were busy handing over the administration of parish schools in New Orleans, Olfen, Texas and Slidell, Louisiana.  This freed them to open new parish schools in Florida and to continue staffing summer catechetical programs in parishes where there were no Catholic schools.  In their spare time the Sisters, continued attending night and summer degree courses.  In the world around them, they may not have noticed that nylon stockings hit the market, the jeep was invented, T-shirts, ballpoint pens, computers, Polaroid cameras, the microwave oven, the bikini was introduced.
In the 1950s the first credit card was introduced, the Korean War began, color TV and car seat belts were introduced, and the polio vaccine was created.  The first McDonald’s opened, Velcro and TV remote controls were introduced.  Hula hoops and Lego toys were introduced and The Sound of Music opened on Broadway.
In the 1960s, the Peace Corps was founded, we had the Cuban Missile Crisis, the first Catholic president was elected and subsequently assassinated, the Beatles became popular, the Star Trek TV series aired, the first heart transplant was performed, and Neil Armstrong walked on the moon.
In the 1970s, computer floppy disks, pocket calculators and VCRs were introduced.
Moving quickly through the 80s and 90s, the Rubik’s cube became popular, the first woman was appointed to the US Supreme Court, personal computers were introduced, the first American woman rode a space shuttle and we witnessed the fall of the Berlin Wall.
These are only a few of the highlights that I picked out… there were many, many more historic events.  When we get our “seasoned” members talking about memories of the “good ole days” they may tell us about learning to drive on a tractor, how much cars have changed … and don’t forget to ask them why Mother Rose Marie bought PJs, rather than nightgowns, for all the sisters after experiencing a hotel evacuation order one night in New Orleans.  What a sight they must have been to the onlookers below: 5 women scantily clad in white nightgowns scampering down the fire escape.  The next morning Mother Rose Marie bought every Sister a pair of PJs for when they traveled.  (Reminds us of Benedict’s admonition to supply each member going on a journey with clean underwear!)
From 1929 – 1959 the sisters operated St. Benedict’s Prep school for boys.  Holy Name Academy provided day and boarding programs for girls from the first days in 1889 until 1964.  Shifting gears, we built new dormitories and a cafeteria to provide services to Saint Leo College students.  In 2014 we made the courageous decision to “begin again” the great adventure of the Benedictine Sisters of Florida – build a new house across the highway.
In our 136 years in Florida our community members have lived with 13 religious superiors.  Now, that alone is endurance!  And, they have had multiple careers.  To name a few: classroom teacher, principal, mission superior, CCD teacher and coordinator, teacher and “mom” at Good Counsel Camp; procurator, worker in various aspects of our guest ministries, archivist and keeper of artifacts and the chronologies.  They’ve been Hospice volunteers, provided service in health care, laundry and kitchen staff, seamstress and coif maker; choir director and sacristan; artist, calligrapher, musician, and champion crafter.  For any I’ve overlooked, rest assured that God got it in the Good Book.
But how, you may ask, in God’s great world, did I get here from there?  In the Gospel recently we heard Peter say to Jesus: “Lord, we have put aside everything to follow you.”   Many years of vowed commitment sit right here in this chapel.  In the midst of an ever-changing church and world.  We offer an example of flexibility, perseverance and stability. Faithfulness to lectio and community exercises shows us that they know where their life in God is sustained.  Their interest in everyday happenings shows their love of learning.  Their many friends within and outside the community clearly pays tribute to our Sisters’ sense of Benedictine hospitality.  If you listen keenly, you hear some other stories that could be told, like the Ajaxed apples, the chief of the oddballs and the day, when we first began wearing “regular” clothes, when one Sister paraded before us to show off her outfit.  She was all ready to go out for a Jai- Alai game with a full-length slip hanging below her shirt out over her new slacks!
In conclusion, Sisters, heed Scripture: continue to “do everything in the name of the Lord Jesus, thanking God through him.”
Please join us in prayer as we celebrate our 136th anniversary of the day Benedictine Sisters from PA arrived in San Antonio (Pasco County) FL … now located in St. Leo, FL – Florida’s first incorporated township.
Thank YOU for being in our “Fan Club”
God bless
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Filed Under: Blog, Front Page, Homily Tagged With: 136 years, 136 years and counting, 136th Founding annivaersary, Founders Day

Founders Day

March 1, 2022 by Holy Name Monastery Leave a Comment

133 Years and counting

In Sunday’s 2nd reading St. Paul exhorts us: “Therefore, my beloved, be firm, steadfast, always fully devoted to the work of the Lord, knowing that in the Lord your labor is not in vain.”  What an appropriate and uplifting message to us (the Benedictine Sisters of FL) as we approach the celebration of the 133rd anniversary of the day the Benedictine Sisters first set foot in Pasco County Florida on February 28, 1889.  The “Founding Five” Sisters from Pennsylvania asked the same question as the man in the Gospel: “Good Teacher, what must I do to inherit eternal life?”

Let me explain what prompts me to share what will follow – something I know you’ve already heard.  Pope Francis, in 2018, when pitching his idea for a book to Loyola Press, reminded the editors that elders have been “entrusted with the task of transmitting our history” to the next generation.  His book: Sharing the Wisdom of Time soon became a documentary series available on NETFLIX.   Indulge me now as I share the “Cliff Notes” version of our history; the beginnings of our community here is central Florida.

We can trace our lineage in U.S. history to Mother Benedicta Riepp and her companions who arrived in Latrobe, PA in 1852 from Eichstätt, Bavaria.   Now, leap frog over almost forty (40) years to 1889.  From central Florida, the voice of God spoke in the guise of Fr. Gerard Pilz to his Benedictine sister-friend Dolorosa Scanlan: “Please” he pleaded, “come and educate these children.”  The superior and bishop in PA blessed the five respondents, “Go in peace!”

On departure day, there was a 6’ snowfall as the train left Allegheny County, PA.  Three days later it was a toasty 80 degrees when they arrived in Pasco County, San Antonio, FL.   These Sisters had been divinely commissioned to “spread the Good news everywhere.”  They began the very day after their arrival, founding Holy Name Academy, assuming administration of Saint Anthony Parish School, and shortly thereafter the school 3 miles away in St. Joseph, FL.  From 1929 to 1959, the community also operated St. Benedict Prep and from 1970-2002 Holy Name Montessori early education center.  They fed the hungry, looked after the sick and buried the dead.

In the long view of history, this growing band of visionaries who just could not say NO, were involved at all levels of education: early childhood to college level, adult education and tutoring programs.  They were administrators and teachers, drama and music directors, school bus drivers, coaches for debate and sports teams.  They established a litany list of schools in Florida, Texas and Louisiana and conducted weekend and summer catechetical programs at Good Counsel Camp and parishes with no Catholic school throughout central FL. In 1902, the FL community was instrumental in the founding of the motherhouse in Cullman, AL.  In 1911, their 3-story wood-frame home was suspended on logs and pulled by oxen for the move from San Antonio town plaza to the shores of Lake Jovita in St. Leo.

The story is relatively routine for the intervening years until 1959 when the Sisters’ home and girls’ academy was declared unfit living space by the fire department.  The townspeople responded to their dilemma, opening their homes and hearts to the Sisters and academy students during the construction phase for a new convent.  That building still stands having been renovated and renamed Benedictine Hall on Saint Leo University campus.  In 2014, the Sisters moved across the road to the new Holy Name Monastery.

And, the “rest of the story”???  Here we are 133 years since those 5 adventurous souls responded to the voice of God. We continue to strive to live the words of Scripture, voiced by St. Paul in his Letter to the Corinthians [Sunday 2nd reading]: “Be firm, steadfast, always fully devoted to the work of the Lord.”   We live assured, that every worthy venture we consider, is blessed by the promise of God.  We’ve lived that fulfillment, as St. Paul says, “knowing that in the Lord our labor is not in vain.”

~Reflection by Sister Roberta Bailey, OSB

Please join us in prayer on Monday as we celebrate our 133rd anniversary of the day Benedictine Sisters from PA arrived in San Antonio (Pasco County) FL … now located in St. Leo, FL – Florida’s first incorporated township.

Thank YOU for being in our “Fan Club”

God bless

 

First Reading:   Sirach 27:4-7       Second Reading:  1 Corinthians 15:54-58
Gospel:  Luke 6:39-45

 

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Filed Under: Prayer Tagged With: 133 years, 133 years and counting, Allegheny County PA, Cullman AL, Founders Day, Holy Name Academy, Holy Name Monastery, San Antonio

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