Sisters of Charity of New York
The Sisters of Charity of New York is a congregation of religious women in the Catholic Church whose primary missions are education and nursing and who are dedicated in particular to the service of the poor.
Saint Elizabeth Seton founded the Sisters of Charity in Emmitsburg, Maryland in 1809, modeling her foundation on the Sisters of Charity founded in France by Saint Vincent de Paul and Saint Louise de Marillac in the 17th Century. The sisters, who take temporary vows of poverty, chastity and obedience, renewing these annually (in contrast to most orders of religious women, who at some point take permanent or "perpetual" vows), began to spread their work to other areas throughout the 19th Century, always seeking the poor and particularly the young to serve.
In 1817 three of the sisters were sent to New York City (which was Seton's hometown) to establish an orphanage. The sisters quickly took on the job of establishing Catholic orphanages in a city overrun with abandonned, orphaned or under-parented children. They also began founding or staffing existing parish schools, particularly in poor and immigrant neighborhoods, and set up hospitals.
In 1846, the sisters in New York incorporated as a separate entity from the Sisters of Charity still based in Maryland. This was due to Archbishop John Hughes' desire to have a greater measure of authority over the sisters' institutions (his own sister, Mary Angela Hughes, was by then superior of the sisters in New York). They became the Sisters of Charity of New York. This was not unusual, in that several other local groups of the sisters founded by Seton established themselves as independent entities once their congregation reached maturity in various cities.
The Sisters in New York established New York Foundling Hospital, an orphanage for abandonned children but also a place for unmarried mothers to receive care themselves and offer their children for adoption (New York immigrant communities were plagued by prostitution rings that preyed on young women, and out-of-wedlock pregnancies were a severe problem in these communities). New York Foundling continues its work today, and is noted for its work with babies and young children infected with HIV, and with severely handicapped children.
They also established St. Vincent's Hospital in Manhattan, which became the centerpiece of an extensive healthcare system under the Sisters' care that includes St. Vincent's Hospital in Westchester (a psychiatric hospital), St. Vincent's Hospital on Staten Island, and the recently closed Bayley Seton Hospital on Staten Island, in addition to a network of nursing homes and other institutions.
The Sisters were also the key congregation in the establishment of New York's parochial school system: they did not staff every parish school, but they did staff more schools than any other single order of women. In addition to parish schools (which, in New York, typically carry children through grade 8), the sisters ran a number of high schools themselves or provided staff for high schools run by others, and they established the College of Mount Saint Vincent, which also serves as their motherhouse.
Today, the Sisters of Charity of New York is a constituent community of the Federation of Sisters of Charity in the Vincentian Tradition, an umbrella group that brings together the various congregations that trace their roots back to Saint Elizabeth Seton, and ultimately to Saint Vincent de Paul.