Daems, Reverend Father Francis Edward O. S. C.

Daems, Reverend Father Francis Edward O. S. C.

Male Abt 1827 - 1879  (~ 52 years)

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  1. 1.  Daems, Reverend Father Francis Edward O. S. C.Daems, Reverend Father Francis Edward O. S. C. was born Abt 1827, Schaffen, , Brabant, Belgium; died 12 Feb 1879, Bay Settlement, Brown, Wisconsin, USA.

    Other Events:

    • Reference Number: 4106
    • Ordained: 21 Sep 1850, Leiden, , Zuid-Holland, Netherlands
    • Immigration: 8 Jun 1851, New York, New York, New York, USA; on the ship Mocambique from Rotterdam Page 5 line 01 Cabin
    • Stationed at: Between Nov 1853 and Sep 1855, St. John Catholic Church, Little Chute, Wisconsin, USA; Pastor
    • Stationed at: Between 1854 and 1856, St. Francis Catholic Church, Holland, Brown, Wisconsin, USA
    • 1855 State Census: 1855, Kaukauna, Outagamie, Wisconsin, USA; page 05b
    • Sabbatical: Between Sep 1855 and Sep 1856, , , , Netherlands; Returned to Holland
    • Stationed at: Between 1856 and 1879, Holy Cross Catholic Church, Bay Settlement, Wisconsin, USA; Pastor Holy Cross Catholic Church
    • Organizations: Abt 1868
    • Biography: Aft 1879; Holy Cross Bay Settlement Parish and Sisters of St. Francis Founders

    Notes:

    Stationed at:
    Father Daems returned to Little Chute as pastor in 1854 and contined to serve Hollandtown as a mission church.

    1855 State Census:
    Listed head of household 2 m 1 f

    Organizations:
    In 1868 he became the founder of a new religious community, the Sisters of St Francis

    Sister Christine Rousseau:
    Sister Christine was forty years old when she responded to Fr. Daems' invitation to return from Racine to Bay Settlement. Through her selfless service she helped him reach out to many sick and poor people. Father Daems appointed her as Superior of the Sisters, an office she held for ten years. She also was Father Daems' good friend and beneficiary. Sister Christine had an intense drive to call forth Gospel living--to know, love and live like Jesus. She died on March 29, 1900.
    Sister Pauline LaPlante
    Twenty years younger than her cousin, Sister Christine, Sister Pauline was her faithful companion. She was a real missionary and did much good for the adults as well as for the children. Through her kindness and amiability she won back to the Church many who had left for some reason or other. She also visited and comforted the sick. She died on March 15, 1926.
    Sister Mary Pius Doyle
    Sister Mary Pius, a dedicated educator, was able to communicate with her students at Holy Cross School in several languages. An undaunted leader, she helped provide stability and direction to the newly formed Community of Sisters. From 1884 until 1893 she served as Superior. She died on Christmas Eve of 1911.
    Sister Mary Immaculata Van Lanen
    Also one of the founding members of the Community, Sister Mary Immaculata helped Sisters Pauline, Christine, and Pius while taking care of her aged father. She taught catechism to Dutch children in their native language and helped at the rectory. She suffered mental confusion as a result of the flu, and was hospitalized from 1891 until her death on March 5, 1921.
    Sister Francis Jennings
    A daughter of Holy Cross Parish, Sister Francis knew Father Daems personally. She entered our Community in the year after his death. The Sisters, recognizing her pioneering spirit and missionary zeal, put great trust in Sister Francis and elected her to leadership five times. With 15 years of her leadership, the community grew in membership, gained financial stability, and expanded its missionary service to increasing numbers of schools and parishes. Sister Francis had a lasting trust in God. Finally relieved of her duties as Mother Superior because of ill health, she died on December 17, 1908.

    Biography:
    Rev. Edward Francis Daems
    In 1851, Fr. Edward Daems, a Crosier priest from Belgium, joined other Crosier missionaries in Little Chute, Wisconsin. He wished to minister among Belgians and other Europeans who had emigrated in search of religious freedom and economic opportunity. In 1852 he moved to Bay Settlement on the Peninsula of Wisconsin. His talent as an educator, pastor, and healer, his missionary zeal, and his example in prayer became widely recognized. In addition to building Holy Cross Church at Bay Settlement he worked to erect 14 chapels in the vast territory that was his parish.
    Recognizin g that a common education and language would help unite the people who had recently emigrated from different countries, he built a one-room parish school in Bay Settlement in 1865. In need of teachers, he remembered two young women from his parish who had joined the Racine Dominican Sisters. So he appealed to the Dominican Community for Sisters to staff his school. The Dominican Prioress replied that Sisters were unavailable, so Father Daems invited the two women from his parish, Sister Christine Rousseau and Sister Pauline LaPlante, to return from Racine to Bay Settlement and assist him in his ministry. Later, three other Sisters from the Racine Dominicans, including Sister Pius Doyle, joined them in February of 1868. Father Daems was a strong supporter of Catholic education as well as of the small new Community of Sisters ministering with him up to the time of his death on February 12, 1879.



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