Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini Saint Frances Xavier Car bini was born in Lombardi, Italy in 1850, one of thirteen children. At eighteen, she desired to become a Nun, but poor health stood in her way. She tried to gain acceptance at a second congregation but was refused there too. She helped her parents until their deaths, and then worked on a farm with her brothers and sisters. In 1874 she was asked to manage a small orphanage called the House of Providence.
She had various obstacles and abuse in her work, but she stuck to it and, with several others that she recruited, took her first vows in 1877. The bishop put her in charge as the Superior. Three years later the effort to build up the orphanage failed, and the Bishop gave up and ordered the place closed. He sent for Sister Cabrini and told her now was the time to become a missionary sister since he did not know of any institute that had one. Mother Cabrini and seven followers moved into a forgotten Franciscan friary to set up a community to teach Christian education to girls and named the community The Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart. Within two years more houses were opened.
In 1887 she went to Rome to ask the Holy’s Sees approbation of her congregation and to obtain permission to open a house in Rome. She opened two houses in Rome, a free school and childrens home. She continued to express her interest toward missionary work in China. Various people were trying to change her views to work with the Italian immigrants in America and to help the priest there. She consulted Pope Leo XIII, and he directed her to go to America.
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On March 31, 1889, she and six sisters landed in New York. In New York they found a warm welcome but no home was ready for them to stay in and plans for them to open an orphanage had to be abandoned. Within four months, Mother Cabrini and her followers established a day school and made a star with an orphanage on a modest scale. Mother Cabrini went back to Italy in July 1889 to take care of her houses and to get help in America. She came back nine months later to continue to expand her prospering work. She went to Monogura, Nicaragua, in 1891 where she established an orphanage and also a boarding school.
On her way back, she stopped in New Orleans at the request of the Archbishop, to help the Italians. In 1892 the best known St. Frances undertaking was started-the Columbus Hospital in New York. During the next few years, she also traveled to Italy, Central America, Brazil, France, England, and Spain and throughout America.
In 1907, when the Constitutions of the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart were approved, the eight members of 1880 had increased to over a thousand in eight countries. Mother Cabrini had more than fifty foundations responsible for free schools, high schools, hospitals and other establishments throughout the world and America. In 1911, at age sixty-one, Mother Cabrini health began to worsen. She had become physically worn out. On December 22, 1917, she died in her room at Columbus Hospital located in Chicago. Mother Cabrini was beautiful November 13, 1938.
She was canonized in 1946. Her body in enshrined in the Chapel of the Cabrini Memorial School in New York City.