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SETON, Elizabeth Ann,
philanthropist, born in New York city, 28 August, 1774 ; died in Emmettsburg,
Maryland, 4 January, 1821. She was the daughter of Dr Richard Bayley, a
physician of New York, and married William Seton, of the same city. Her
husband's father, William Seton (1746-1798), belonged to an impoverished noble
Scottish family, emigrated to New York in 1758, and became superintendent and
part owner of the iron-works of Ringwood, N.J. He was a loyalist, and the last
royal public notary for the city and province of New York during the war. His
silver notarial seal, dated 1779, is still in the possession of his family. He
was ruined financially at the close of the Revolution, but remained in New York,
where he founded the once famous mercantile house of Seton, Maitland and Co.
In 1803 she went to Italy with her family. On the death of
her husband she returned to the United States, and in 1805 she was received into
the Roman Catholic church. To support her five children she opened a school in
New York, but, not meeting with success, she was about to remove to Canada, when
she made the acquaintance of Dr. William Louis Dent of St. Mary's college, who
invited her to reside in Baltimore and open a school for girls. Before this she
had formed the design of founding a congregation of women for the service of
children and orphans, and $8,000, given by a young convert to Dr. Dubourg for
charitable uses and transferred by the latter to Mrs. Seton, enabled her to
carry out this purpose. A farm was purchased at Emmittsburg, Maryland, and on 22
June, 1809, Mrs. Seton moved thither, with three companions, forming the nucleus
of an order that afterward spread over the United States. The community
increased rapidly in numbers, and pupils flocked to the school.
In 1811 Mother Seton adopted the rules and constitution of
St. Vincent de Paul, with some modifications, and the institution, having
received the sanction of the highest ecclesiastical authority, became a
religious order. Afterward a group of buildings, embracing a residence for the
Sisters, a novitiate, a boarding-school for young girls, a school for poor
children, and an orphan asylum, was erected.
In 1814 Mother Seton sent a colony of Sisters to
Philadelphia to take charge of the orphan asylum. In 1817, in response to
another application from New York, another body came to that city. At her death
there were more than twenty communities of Sisters of Charity, conducting free
schools, orphanages, boarding-schools, and hospitals, in the states of
Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, Delaware, Massachusetts, Virginia, Missouri, and
Louisiana, and in the District of Columbia. Although, according to the
constitution of her order, no one could be elected to the office of
mother-superior for more than two terms successively, an exception was made in
her favor by the unanimous desire of her companions, and she held the office
during life.
Mother Seton was canonized by Pope Paul VI in 1975,
the first American-born saint. See "Memoirs of Mrs. S, written by Herself : A
Fragment of Real History" (Elizabethtown, New Jersey, 1817); " Life of Mrs.
Seton, Foundress and First Superior of the Sisters of Charity in the United
States," by Reverend Charles J. White, D. D. (7th revised ed., Baltimore, 1872);
and "Vie de Madame Elizabeth Seton," by Madame de Barbary (Paris, 1868). A
collection of her letters and papers, edited by her grandson, Monsignor Seton,
has been published (2 vols., New York, 1869); “Dictionary of Saints” by John
Delaney, Doubleday, Garden City NY, 1980, p. 517.
Her grandson, William Seton,
author, born in New York city, 28 January, 1835, is son of William Seton, an
officer in the United States navy. He is recognized by Burke's "Peerage " as the
head of the ancient family of the Setons of Parbroath, senior cadets of the
Earls of Winton in Scotland. He was educated at Mount St. Mary's college,
Emmittsburg, Maryland, and by private tutors, and served as captain of the 4th
New York volunteers, during the first part of the civil war, until he was
disabled by wounds that he received at Antietam. He is a frequent contributor to
periodicals and journals, and has published "Romance of the Charter Oak" (New
York, 1870); "The Pride of Lexington; a Tale of the American Revolution "(1871)
; "Rachel's Fate and Other Tales" (1882); "The Poor Millionaire, a Tale of New
York Life " (1884); and "' The Shamrock gone West, and Moida, a Tale of the
Tyrol" (New York, 1884). He is also the author of "The Pioneer," a poem (1874).
Robert Seton, another grandson
of Elizabeth Ann, clergyman, born in Pisa, Italy, 28 August, 1839, was educated
in Mount St. Mary's college, Emmittsburg, Maryland, and in the Academia
Ecclesiastica, Rome, where he was graduated with the degree of D. D. In 1866 he
was raised to the rank of private chamberlain to Pope Plus IX. He is the first
American that was honored with the Roman Prelatura, and is the dean of all the
monsignori in the United States. He was made prothonotary apostolic in 1867, and
rector of St. Joseph's church, Jersey City, in 1876. He has written "Memoirs,
Letters, and Journal of Elizabeth Seton" (2 vols., New York, 1869) and "Essays
on Various Subjects, chiefly Roman" (1882), and is also a frequent contributor
to Roman Catholic periodicals.