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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › UrsulinesUrsulines - Wikipedia

    Ursuline Convent, Dallas, Texas (postcard, circa 1901–1907) Ursuline Convent, Toledo, Ohio. Ursuline secondary education schools are found across the United States and other countries. The first school was Ursuline Academy, began in 1727 in New Orleans, Louisiana. It is the oldest all-girls school in the country. The

  2. Ursuline Convent (French: Couvent des Ursulines) was a series of historic Ursuline convents in New Orleans, Louisiana, United States. In 1727, at the request of Governor Étienne Perier, nuns from the Ursuline Convent of Rouen (Normandy) went to New Orleans to found a convent, run a hospital, and take care of educating young girls.

  3. The nuns moved to the Ursuline Convent in the 9th Ward of New Orleans in 1823, giving the old French Quarter structure to the city's bishop. The convent premises in the 9th Ward were in turn sold to the city in the 1910s, and the land was used as part of the route for the Industrial Canal.

  4. Vor 19 Stunden · William J. Behan. . ( m. 1865) . Signature. Kate Walker Behan (1851-1918) was an American club leader and philanthropist, prominent in social, educational, and Confederate memorial affairs in the South for many years. [1] She was president of the Confederated Memorial Association of the South, of the Ladies' Confederate Memorial Association of ...

  5. The Ursuline Convent riots occurred August 11 and 12, 1834, in Charlestown, Massachusetts, near Boston, in what is now Somerville, Massachusetts. During the riot, a convent of Roman Catholic Ursuline nuns was burned down by a Protestant mob. [1]

  6. 7. Juli 2021 · The Tragic Story Of The Ursuline Convent Riots. Wikimedia Commons. By Jean Mendoza / July 7, 2021 12:37 pm EST. At approximately 11 p.m. on August 11, 1834, an angry mob of Protestants gathered outside the Ursuline Convent in Charlestown, Massachusetts (now Somerville), and set fire to tar barrels outside the walls.

  7. The Ursuline Monastery of Quebec, established in 1639, founded the following monasteries and convents which were autonomous until 1953: Monastery of Trois-Rivières: (1697) Waterville, 1888-1892; Skowhegan, 1899-1900 (Maine, USA) Grand-Mère, 1900-1972; Shawinigan, 1908-1977; Trois-Rivières, Christ-Roi Monastery, 1939-1996