Sisters
of Mercy Dallas Regional Community
Sisters
of Mercy of North Carolina Foundation
The
Mercy Foundation
GwyNedd-Mercy
College
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THE
SISTERS
OF MERCY
The Sisters of Mercy were founded in Dublin,
Ireland, in 1831 by an Irish heiress, Catherine McAuley. The special charisma
of the Sisters is based on the example of their foundress who "served the
needy with courage and compassion, with a special concern for women." The
Sisters, since 1831, have introduced Catholic education and health care
to immigrants and poverty-stricken communities throughout the world. From
Ireland, their work spread to England, the United States, Australia, New
Zealand, Newfoundland, South Africa, Guam, the Philippines, the Caribbean
and South America.
On April 23, 1894, three Sisters of Mercy,
Sr. Ursula Green, Sr. Antonia Chambers and Sr. Pauline DeFreitas, at the
invitation of Bishop A. Butler, S.J. laid the foundation of Mercy in the
then British Guiana. Their work was then mainly in education and visiting
the poor and the sick in the Charlestown area where they resided. They
served in elementary schools in Georgetown, along the East Coast and in
the county of Essequibo. In 1897 St. Joseph’s High School was started in
Charlestown. In the 1910’s and 1920’s they moved to the interior in the
Rupununi, Santa Rosa, Morawhanna, Hosororo and Mabaruma. In 1944 they were
invited by the "Sword of the Spirit" movement and the Diocese of Georgetown
to administer a Catholic Hospital, St. Joseph Mercy Hospital.
The Sisters continue to run St. John Bosco
Orphanage for boys, to work in the parishes and among the poor and sick,
carrying out Mother McAuley’s challenge to serve where the need is.

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Mercy
Medical Center
Mercy
Hospital and
Heath
Services, Auckland New Zealand
Trinity
Health
Trinity
Continuning Care Services
St.
Joseph Mercy Oakland
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