100th Anniversary

Celebrating 100 Years in Pembroke

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Written by Mary McGuire, csj Published in the Eganville Leader in February, 2021

During the next 11 months, we will continue to share the amazing story of the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph in Canada/Pembroke Site as we celebrate 100 years of our service and witness in the Diocese of Pembroke and beyond. As we tell our story we would like to express our gratitude, love, and prayers to so many of you who have been with us on this journey. Our Congregation is witness to the love and support you have bestowed on our community and we will be forever grateful for these gifts. We would like to say a heartfelt thank you and invite you to read our story in the months ahead as a way of celebrating this important milestone with us.

We hope you enjoyed reading the January story about the humble beginnings of the Sisters of St. Joseph in Canada/Pembroke Site. As we continue to share this grace-filled story, you will be inspired by God’s abundant love that he bestowed on our Congregation. In this second article, our story continues with the building of a new Motherhouse on the property known as St. Joseph’s-on-the-Lake.

After our initial move to the property, it became clear that a new building was needed to house our growing community and it was to become a home to many Sisters.

On September 15th, 1952 a ceremony of the ‘Turning of the Sod’ for a new Motherhouse was carried out by Bishop Smith who succeeded our initial benefactor, Bishop Ryan, in the Diocese of Pembroke.

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The main and first section of our Motherhouse was built only a few hundred feet from the original farmhouse and was completed in 1954. One Sister recalls loading wheelbarrows with furniture and pushing them across the field. Mattresses were a problem as they often fell to the ground. A watchful eye would catch them and say, ‘Don’t ruin the mattresses. That’s all we have’.

This first expansion included the building of our Chapel, which was the heart of our home and was blessed by Bishop Smith on December 12th, 1954 during a Mass of Thanksgiving. Many Sisters, priests, and neighbours gathered to celebrate. Following the Mass everyone was invited to lunch in our dining room where the celebration continued.

The Spirit of God was ever-present, guiding us in forming a community of genuine, caring women and the loving support was palpable. We felt the oneness of being a vital part of something much bigger than ourselves. Our journey to fulfilling our mission was just beginning.

Over the years our Chapel was offered to the public for Eucharistic celebrations and times of quiet prayer. We had the honour of hosting many sacred events including a wedding, a baptism, and some wakes (or funerals) of lay people who had requested this. We also held the wakes and funeral masses of our own sisters in the Chapel.

Throughout the years there was continual progress toward the completion of the Chapel and the facility’s furnishings. The many donations included the beautiful Stations of the Cross which were a gift from Father Dowdall and a new Chapel organ was donated by the Catholic Women’s League of Eganville. A statue of St. Joseph was a gift from Father T.J. Hunt and was erected on the lawn in front of the Motherhouse. The plaque at the base of the statue was donated by the Berrigan family. We are very pleased that the St. Joseph statue has found a new home at St. Joseph’s High School in Renfrew.

In 1962, an administrative section, known as the East Wing, was added to the main building. This contained a board room, offices, approximately fifty bedrooms, and a spacious auditorium. This addition meant we had more space to accommodate more Sisters as well as host important meetings and events and offer our facility to other community organizations when needed.

In 1967, the West Wing was built to accommodate those aging Sisters who were suffering from ill-health after their years of hard work and dedication to their missions and professions. These special accommodations and facilities included a welcoming and comfortable infirmary, designed and furnished with attention and skill, and provided ideal quarters for those requiring nursing care. As our health care facility grew we were able to take in priests and laypeople who needed this type of assistance. We had 24-hour nursing care and a Doctor who visited weekly.

This health care facility was of great use to Marianhill at one time. For a short period in 2009, during a transition for some hospital patients to transfer to the new Carefor facility on MacKay Street in Pembroke, we offered our home to 12 infirm patients on our second-floor health care unit.

A full-size therapy pool was also part of this west wing addition. Over the years the Sisters made the pool accessible to the local community who needed this type of therapy for healing. One of our Associates, Anita McGean, volunteered to oversee and schedule appointments to swim in the pool on a weekly basis. A referral from a Doctor was required and it was recognized as a way to give back to our supportive community. It was such an important part of our ministry and was so appreciated. The use of the pool was offered free to those who would use it and there were many gestures of appreciation. One man, after a serious accident, said, “This therapy pool saved my life and allowed me to walk again.”

Although these expansions provided a warm and welcoming home to the Sisters we were always aware that the land and its original purpose as a farm shaped our culture as a Congregation. Farmers are very dependent on the weather (God’s Providence) and dependent upon each other as neighbours. Those traits inspired the hospitality and simplicity that characterizes us and our community. Our attentiveness to the needs of smaller communities, especially rural communities, has been a value of our Congregation in our apostolic outreach over the years.

From those early days of our journey, a debt of gratitude is owed. The Peterborough Congregation sent 27 of their Sisters who volunteered to join the Pembroke Congregation early in our existence. This was a pure gift to our community and would not have been an easy decision to make at that time.

Priceless was the friendship of Bishop Ryan and Father Dowdall who went above and beyond their contributions of interest and precious time. Father Dowdall was unfailing as the most effective public relations promoter of our community.

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With bricks and mortar, our story supported a foundation in Pembroke to be of service to God’s people. The Sisters were open to all possibilities. Wherever there was a need, the community responded. We received so much affirmation and support. It is true when you give generously from the heart, it is returned one hundredfold. This was our experience and we are so grateful.

This story ends in thanksgiving of a very special gift that we received - one that we enjoy to this day. In 1968, through the generosity of the owners, a summer camp on the Madawaska River, not far from Combermere, was donated to the Sisters of St. Joseph. The large and completely furnished dwelling was built by Monsignor Biernacki and at his death, was inherited by a number of priests who were both American and Canadian and had, in former times, enjoyed the hospitality of Monsignor Biernacki at ‘II Nocturne’, as it was named. This four-season camp is beautifully situated on the River and was gratefully accepted by the Sisters who continue to use it throughout the year.

Stay tuned as our story unfolds in 2021!

Written by Mary McGuire, csj Published in the Eganville Leader in February, 2021

Celebrating 100 Years in Pembroke

Celebrating the 100th Anniversary of the

Congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph in Canada - Pembroke Site

Written by Mary McGuire, csj

During the next 11 months, we would like to share the amazing story of the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph in Canada -Pembroke Site as we celebrate 100 years of our service and witness in the Diocese of Pembroke and beyond.  As we tell our story we would like to express our gratitude, love, and prayers to so many of you who have been with us on this journey. Our Congregation is witness to the love and support you have bestowed on our community and we will be forever grateful for these gifts. We would like to say a heartfelt thank you and invite you to read our story in the months ahead as a way of celebrating this important milestone with us.

pembrokemotherhouse archive.jpg

The Sisters of St. Joseph from Pembroke were canonically born August 25, 1921 in the village of Douglas, Ontario.  Just a mere three weeks after this birth our Congregation moved quickly to a fully operational farm known as the O’Kelly Farm. It was comprised of 147 acres located on the shores of the Ottawa River in the Town of Pembroke. (Photos here)

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Bishop Thomas Ryan had paid $16,000.00 for the property and had coordinated all of the needed renovations and expenses to house the Sisters of St. Joseph at this location. Residents in the area had always referred to this portion of the river as ‘the lake’, so when it came time to rename the property, Bishop Ryan named it ‘’St. Joseph’s-on-the-Lake”.  Forty acres were under cultivation at the time but the house on the property was an ancient structure, too small for a Motherhouse. By September 14, 1921 four Sisters had moved into the renovated farmhouse on this site.   Within a week, twelve postulants were received. In the years to follow, many more Sisters would join the Congregation at the Pembroke site.  In 1953, construction began on the large Motherhouse that was located at 1127 Pembroke Street West (part of the initial 147 acres).  The local Congregation’s community membership numbered 215 at its highest peak in the 1960s.

This original farm was fully functional with horses, cattle, hens, and pigs.  The novices and postulants were very much involved in its day-to-day activities while the professed Sisters were teaching within the local community.  Gathering the eggs, plucking the chickens, milking the cows, churning the butter, washing the milk and cream separator, and weeding the gardens were regular duties.  What a challenge for those young Sisters who had never lived on a farm!  One Sister recalled laundry days – using a hand-turning object inside tubs to clean the laundry, and then the irons were heated on a wood stove.  This same Sister recalled the ‘roothouse’ and retreating to it to enjoy the coolness and singing amongst the vegetables. She continued this ministry of music and song for the Congregation with her beautiful voice throughout her life with the Sisters of St. Joseph.  

For many of these Sisters, the Pembroke Motherhouse was their first home away from home.  After a discernment process of prayer, they felt called to dedicate their lives to God as religious Sisters.

One of the many stories that have been passed down is about a Sister from England who was sent out by the cook to gather the eggs from the hen house.  After what must have seemed a disproportionate amount of time, the Sister returned empty-handed.  When asked to explain, she said that she had knocked repeatedly on the hen house and that no one was answering!

Bishop Ryan, who presided over the destiny of the Pembroke Diocese from 1916-1937, had a dream that every child in the Diocese would have access to a Catholic education, no matter how small and remote the area might be. Consequently, many Sisters were dispatched daily to Catholic schools in the area.  These schools were located in Pembroke, Petawawa, Deep River, Renfrew, Barry’s Bay, Douglas, and small Quebec locations, to name a few, providing a vital service and access to a valuable religious education.  Many Sisters had long and full teaching careers in Renfrew County.  A later article will fully cover the many places that our Sisters taught.

Alongside the teaching profession, our Sisters provided nursing, counseling, administration, and various other ministries within our community and beyond.

The previous Motherhouse in Pembroke

The previous Motherhouse in Pembroke

Unlike other apostolates, the Sisters of St. Joseph in Canada/Pembroke Site chose not to own large institutions outside of the Motherhouse.  Upon completion of our ministries and having prepared lay people to carry on the duties, we simply relinquished the small institutions we did own, namely Radville Hospital and Marion Home in the province of Saskatchewan, likewise Barrhead Hospital in the province of Alberta.  The St. Joseph’s Academy in Renfrew was left to the Pembroke Diocese.  We administered and operated Santa Maria Home in Regina, St. Francis Memorial Hospital in Barry’s Bay, and St. Joseph’s Manor in Campbell’s Bay, Quebec. We also divested our duties at these institutions to the lay community.

From the days of a full Motherhouse, there currently remain 26 Sisters, including two Peruvian Sisters.  We are also proud to have 48 active Associates divided into 8 faith communities in Canada.  There are also 15 active Associates in Peru and 23 non-active Associates who form a group called ‘The Supporters in Spirit and Prayer.’

As our story unfolds you will appreciate that even from our humble beginnings and our small but mighty numbers, by the grace of God we were able to do extraordinary things and display incredible resilience.  Our preferential option for the education, health care, and spiritual needs of rural communities as well as for the needs of the poor, the orphans, the youth-at-risk, the frail and the elderly, led us to take on ministries in many localities, a total of 45 locations in Canada and abroad.

(with files from Nicole Aubé, csj - S.A.I.L. 2011)

Stay tuned as our story unfolds in 2021.