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Daughters of the Cross: A Grand

A Grand Centennial

The year is 1954. Americans who returned from the wars in Korea, Europe and the Pacific are establishing homes and raising families, cherishing peace. Air travel is growing in popularity, and television sets are beginning to appear in living rooms. President Eisenhower is leading the nation in navigating the Cold War, and students practice “duck and cover” drills in school hallways. “Mr. Sandman,” “Rock Around the Clock,” and Elvis Presley’s first single, “That’s All Right,” are playing on the radio and at sock hop dances held in school gyms. At St. Vincent’s, the Daughters of the Cross are excitedly planning a grand celebration commemorating their 100 years in Louisiana. Mother Elizabeth Freeman charges Sister Mary Clarissa LaCour, from Avoyelles Parish, the cradle of the mission, with the planning. The year-long festivities are inaugurated with a pontifical High Mass at St. Joseph’s Church in Marksville, offered by Rt. Rev. Henry Van der Putten, pastor. Most Rev. Charles Paschal Greco, Bishop of Alexandria, addresses the congregants, extolling the sacrifices, commitment and accomplishments of the Daughters of the Cross. The second Solemn High Mass is celebrated on Easter Sunday, April 12, 1955, at St. Matthew Church in Monroe by Bishop Greco, assisted by Rt. Rev. John C. Marsh, pastor. The climax of the jubilee year is the pontifical Mass of Thanksgiving offered on November 10, 1955, by Bishop Greco, assisted by priests from Louisiana and surrounding states, at the Shreveport Municipal Auditorium. The speaker is Rev. Lawrence O’Neill, S. J., of the New Orleans Province. Congratulations and benediction from Pope Pius XII are read, and music is provided by the combined choirs of the sisters’ schools in Shreveport and Bossier, directed by Sister Mary Grace Lagana, D. C. In addition, the Sisters publish a commemorative booklet titled “Daughters of the Cross in Louisiana: 1855-1955.” In it, they provide a broad overview of their history, beginning with St. Francis de Sales and Venerable Mother Marie l’Huillier de Villeneuve. They proudly feature each school, including many photos of the sisters, priests, and students. Twenty-one schools are listed, of which nine

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1957 Father Woods Retreat, St.Vincent’s Convent, 1st row, L-R: Sr. Mary Alice, Sr.Agnes Ruth, Sr. Raphael, Sr. Mary Evelyn, Sr.Aloysius, Sr. Mercedes, Sr. Rita, Sr. Sophia, Sr. Margaret Mary, Sr. Benedict, Sr. Lucy, Sr. Magdalen, Sr. Chantal, Sr. Camille, Sr. Margaret Rose, Fr. Nowlan, Mother Clarissa, Fr. Woods, Sr. Mary Grace, Sr. Joan, Sr.Adrian, Sr. Marietta, Sr. Marie Eloise, Sr. Mary Faith, Sr. Philip, Sr. Mary Margaret, Sr. Ellen Claire, Sr. Maria de Sales, Sr. Mary Madeline; 2nd row: Sr. Elizabeth, Sr. Ephrem, Sr. Mary of the Cross, Sr. Maria Goretti (Sr. Maria), Sr.Anna, Sr. Fabian Rose, Sr. Mary Ann, Sr. Mary Louise, Sr.Theresa, Sr. Laurentia, Sr.Ann Patricia, Sr.Andrea; 3rd row: Sr. Christine, Sr. Martha (Sr. Elizabeth Marie), Sr. Bridget, Sr. Cornelia, Sr. Eugenia, Sr.Angela, Sr. Francis; 4th row: Sr. Dorothea, Sr. Celine, Sr. Monica, Sr.Veronica, Sr. Imelda, Sr. Leonie, Sr. Joachim; 5th row: Sr. Constance, Sr. Helen Marie, Sr. John Roberta, Sr. Fidelis, Sr. Celeste, Sr. Catherine, Sr. Bernardine, Sr. Leocadie, Sr. Bernadette; 6th row: Sr. Patricia, Sr. Germaine, Sr. Miriam, Sr. Rose Marie, Sr. Geraldine, Sr. Mary Carmel, Sr. Mary Joseph; 7th row: Sr. Cabrini, Sr. Philomena, Sr. Mary Michael, Sr. Clement, Sr. Mary John, Sr. Loretta, Sr. Joseph Marie, Sr. Damien. Special thanks to Madeline Howard Elford for identifying the Sisters. LSUS Northwest Louisiana Archives, Noel Memorial Library

were operating in six locations: Presentation Academy in Marksville; St. Matthew’s in Monroe; St. Vincent’s, St. John’s, St. Catherine’s, and St. Theresa’s in Shreveport; Christ the King in Bossier City; St. Patrick’s in Lake Providence; and Sacred Heart in Moreauville. A special section honors the nine jubilarians, of whom seven came to Louisiana from France. Four young professed Sisters and three Novices received in 1954 are pictured. Two pages are dedicated to former students who have answered God’s call to a vocation: 44 to the priesthood; 79 to the Daughters of the Cross; and 30 to other religious sisterhoods. In August, 1957, the sisters gather at the St. Vincent’s motherhouse for their annual retreat, conducted by Rev. Joseph E. Woods, O. S. F. S. Afterwards, 70 Daughters of the Cross and 7 novices gather for a picture with Rev. Woods and Rev. Kevin Nowlan, S. J., chaplain. An additional 12 Daughters of the Cross are not pictured, bringing the total number of professed sisters in August, 1957, to 82. Not pictured are Sr. Aimee, Sr. Ann Barnard, Sr. Gabriel, Sr. Genevieve, Sr. Juliann, Sr. Loyola, Sr. Marcella, Sr. Martina, Sr. Paula Marie, Sr. Placide, Sr. Sebastian, and Sr. Theophane.

daughters of the cross

Schools staffed by the Daughters of the Cross in Louisiana “Daughters of the Cross in Louisiana, 1855-1955” Courtesy of Madeline Howard Elford

PATTI UNDERWOOD is a lover of history and is blessed to be a graduate of St. Vincent’s Academy and LSU-Shreveport.

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