This series contains annals and correspondence related to the community house at 233 Charlton Ave. W., Hamilton of the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Hamilton, Ontario. This was a house where Sisters who were leaving Martha House, another residence, lived. The Sisters leased this house in 1988. The records present document the Sisters' studies and ministries in health care and social services. There is also correspondence about the lease.
Congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph in Canada (Hamilton, Ont.)This file contains the certificate celebrating the Holy Rosary School's 25th anniversary.
This file contains photographs of the Sisters' residence at 251 Henkel Place and a map of the area.
This file contains the history of the Sisters residing at 253 Belleview Avenue, Windsor, which became the Home for Handicapped Children. It documents their work at the Roy J. Bondy Center, the establishment of the foster home, the children the Sisters cared for there, and the move to 7770 St. Rose Avenue. There is also a list of Sisters who resided at St. Joseph's Manor, Ruthven.
This file contains a certification that the stations of the cross were erected in the Holy Rosary Convent, legal agreements about the property, a survey plan of the lot of the property on Cadillac Street, receipts for the expansion of the convent in 1927, correspondence between Mother Philomena Hussey (1872-1950) and C. J. Mousseau regarding the renovations of the convent, and Sister Mary Doloroso Sullivan's (1901-1997) notebook. The notebook includes a chronicle of events and notes on the history of the Sisters in Windsor. This file also has photographs of Holy Rosary Convent and the various schools the Sisters were involved with.
This series consists of the annals from the Sisters of St. Joseph of Hamilton at 273 Elgin St., Brantford, Ontario and a news clippings celebrating the Sisters’ 125th year in Brantford. Topics in the annals include the Sisters’ ministries, travel plans, daily life, holiday celebrations, health, and attendance to the arts, including the May 1996 bomb scare at the performance of Joseph at the Sanderson Centre in Brantford. Brantford, Ontario is located on the traditional territory of the Haudenosaunee and Anishinaabeg and is covered by the Upper Canada Treaties and adjacent to Haldiman Treaty territory. The residence on Elgin Street, Brantford was opened after the two last Sisters moved out of the Sisters’ residence at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Brantford. Here, the Sisters did pastoral ministry and pastoral care.
Congregation of the Sisters of St. Joseph in Canada (Hamilton, Ont.)