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Volume 074-3 - July 2020 (8 pages)

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Page: of 8

NCHS Bulletin July 2020
Sisters also recognized the human condition of some
of their patients by recording as diseases “grief” and
“old age.” The disease of a woman named Amelia who
lived on Main Street was listed as “poverty.”
\@
x"
—
Sister Mary Peter Cody (Sisters of Mercy)
Not surprisingly, the registers suggest that the Sisters
shared the common racial and ethnic views of their
times. Whites were generally given the honorific
“Mrs.,” “Miss,” or “Mr.,”” while non-whites were often
listed only by their names. Jordan Ousley, a Kentucky-born African American, was afforded the honorific “Mr.,” but his nationality was listed as “colored.”
The abovementioned Amelia, who was Mexican, was
listed only by her first name. !°
The Sisters had at least one conversion as a result of their
visits. During April 1871 the Sisters made numerous visits to a Chinese man by the name Ah Luck in the Nevada
County jail whose religion they listed as “heathen,” and
whose disease was listed as “death sentence.” On their
third visit his name was recorded as “Charlie Luck,” and
his religion recorded as “R.C.” (Roman Catholic) shortly
before he was hanged on April 8.!°
In the following decades the Sisters engaged in a series of remodeling and building projects, as the older
structures no longer met their needs. Anticipating the
need for expansion, in 1870 Mother Mary Baptist
Morgan purchased eight acres west of Gold Hill on
Brighton Street for $140, and land on Pleasant Street
for $100. These expenses necessitated another “begging tour.” Three nuns traveled across Nevada, Sutter
and Sierra Counties, and into Storey County, Nevada.
Their efforts netted $3,000. By 1878 new orphanage
buildings, St. Vincent’s for the girls, and St. Patrick’s
for the boys, had been built on Brighton and Pleasant streets. In 1880 the convent’s name was changed
from Convent of the Sacred Heart to Mt. Saint Mary’s
Academy. And in 1894 a beautiful new chapel dedicated to St. Joseph was built on the site of the Henry
Scadden house where the original Rectory had stood.!’
But there was loss as well. Many of the pioneer sisters, including Mother Mary Baptist Russell had died.
Bishop Eugene O’Connell, and the Sisters’ supporter
and friend, Father Thomas Dalton, both died in December 1891. Father Dalton was buried under the floor
of the sacristy of St. Patrick’s Church.
As the decade came to an end the Sisters were still
fulfilling their mission of prayerful service with twenty Sisters and lay staff caring for 175 pupils, 100 girl
orphans, and 90 boy orphans.'* They remained innovative into the 20" century by adding a Commercial Department that taught “modern methods” such as Grigg
Shorthand, bookkeeping, and business writing.'®
A Year of Warfare and Sickness
Just five years after the Sisters celebrated their Golden Jubilee they faced a new challenge as the Spanish
influenza swept through Nevada County in the fall and
winter of 1918-19. The pandemic’s arrival at a time
when the country was still at war would test the relationships and resources of the entire community. The
Sisters and their pupils had already been doing what
they could for the war effort. In July 1918 they made
their commencement event a Red Cross fundraiser,
donating all of the proceeds to that organization. The
pupils of the school joined their public school counterparts by making Victory Pledges of donations for the
war effort.”