OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERAVincentian Father John Gowan and Lady of Charity Margaret Aylward assisted in the founding of the Congregation of the Holy Faith Sisters. …

Margaret Aylward wrote that it was he who was largely responsible for the idea of opening schools for the ‘most abandoned and most destitute children’ in Dublin.

Fr. John Gowan CM was born in Skerries, Co. Dublin in 1817. First ordained to the priesthood in the Dublin Diocese, he later became a Vincentian, and was assigned to the Vincentian Mission Team in St. Peter’s Church in Phibsboro, Dublin.

It was here that in 1853 he met Margaret Aylward and shared her concern for the welfare of the city poor. As her friend and spiritual adviser, he assisted in the founding of the new congregation of the Holy Faith Sisters. He died in Glasnevin Convent on January 16th 1897.

Margaret Aylward wrote that it was he who was largely responsible for the idea of opening schools for the ‘most abandoned and most destitute children’ in Dublin.

According to the Catholic Encyclopedia the Holy Faith Sisters were ‘Founded at Dublin, in 1857, by Margaret Aylward, under the direction of Rev. John Gowan, C.M., for the care of Catholic orphans. The foundress was called a confessor of the Faith by Pius IX, because of the imprisonment of six months she endured on account of her efforts to save some Catholic orphans from the hands of proselytizers. The congregation is especially active in the Archdiocese of Dublin, the residence of the superior general being at Glasnevin, where the sisters conduct a boarding-school for young ladies. In the original foundation, St. Brigid’s Orphanage, Dublin, nearly three thousand orphans have been trained and placed in trades and situations. The members of the congregation also conduct primary schools, private day schools, infants’ schools, and junior boys’ schools. In their Coombe and Strand Street (Dublin) houses, which have an attendance of 1200 and 800 respectively, the poor receive their breakfast daily, and are also provided with clothing. Altogether the sisters in the fourteen convents of the archdiocese have charge of about seven thousand children. In the Diocese of Ossory a community of eight sisters conducts two primary schools and a private day school, with an attendance of 160.’

Their own websites provide further information…

In this it is important to note that the Sisters of Charity mentioned at the end of the first page of text is in fact the Congregation founded by Mary Aikenhead in the wake of Catholic Emancipation; formerly known as the Irish Sisters of Charity – to differentiate from Daughters of Charity or  ‘French Sisters’ – and now known as the Religious Sisters of Charity.

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