Harriet Monsell

Harriet Monsell

Harriet O'Brien Monsell, Mother Superior, Community of St. John the Baptist
Mother Superior
Born 1811
Dromoland, County Clare, Ireland
Died 25 March 1883
Venerated in Anglican Communion
Feast 26 March

Harriet Monsell (1811 – 25 March 1883) founded the Community of St. John Baptist, an order of Augustinian nuns in the Church of England dedicated to social service, which by her death had expended to numerous houses, including in India and the Americas.[1] She is now remembered in the Calendar of saints in some parts of the Anglican Communion on 26 March.[2]

Biography

Harriet O'Brien, born in 1811, was the third daughter and next-to-youngest of nine children born to one of Ireland's oldest families. Her father, Edward O'Brien of Dromoland, continued family tradition by representing his county Clare in Parliament until 1826, when he relinquished the seat to his son for health reasons.[3] Upon his death in 1837, his devoutly Anglican widow and daughters moved to London, then Dublin and other places. Ultimately, three of the four daughters (including Harriet) married Anglican clergymen. One brother later became Lord Inchiquin, inheriting a barony from his uncle, the Marquis of Thomond. Harriet married Charles Monsell in 1839 while he was studying and receiving medical treatment at the University of Dublin, and they moved to Oxford the following year to complete his studies. He was the third son of the Archdeacon of Derry, and upon ordination was licensed to his father's curacy and later received a prebendary with the Limerick Cathedral. Due to his continued delicate health, much of their later married life was spent in Europe, including Naples.

Career

After her husband's death in 1850, Harriet Monsell continued her affiliation with the Oxford Movement. She began working in Clewer near the garrison town of Windsor among former prostitutes and unwed mothers at a House of Mercy, which had been founded by Mrs. Mariquita Tennant, a Spanish refugee and convert to Anglicanism (and clergyman's widow) several years earlier. Ill health had forced Mrs. Tennant to retire to nearby Windsor, where she soon died.[4] In 1852 Monsell moved to the village where her sister and brother-in-law, the Rev. Charles Amynd Harris, future bishop of Gibraltar, had moved.

The Rector of Clewer, Canon of Christ Church, Oxford Thomas Thellusson Carter was warden of the House of Mercy. Soon, Harriet Monsell professed religious vows with two other women. Initially they were called the Sisters of Mercy, but later changed their name to reflect their inspiration from John the Baptist's call to penitence. She thus became Mother Superior of the Community of St John Baptist, established on 30 November 1852, and one of the first Anglican religious orders since the Reformation. Because of their affiliation with the town of Clewer they are commonly called the 'Clewer Sisters'. The women lived according to a rule attributed to St. Augustine of Hippo. During the new order's first five years, it expanded from assisting about thirty marginalized women to dedicating a building to serve about eighty. As the Community of St John Baptist, guided by Mother Harriet's energy, extensive correspondence and humour, the nuns extended their original mission to running about forty institutions, including mission houses in various parishes, as well as orphanages, schools and hospitals.

Mother Harriet retired to Folkestone in 1875 for health reasons, although she was occasionally able to visit the communities she founded. Biographers state she died on the morning of 25 March 1883, which was Easter Sunday that year. Since it is also the Feast of the Annunciation, her Feast Day is always celebrated the following day and occupies that date in the Calendar of the Church of England.[5] By Rev. Carter's death in 1901, the Community of St John Baptist had more than 300 members in Great Britain, India and the United States.[6] It continues today, having moved its Oxford convent to a former Servite priory in Begbroke in 2001.[7] In 2012 the Community moved to new purpose built accommodation (Harriet Monsell House) at Ripon College, Cuddesdon in Oxfordshire. A new chapel, the Edward King Chapel, designed by Niall McLaughlin, and shortlisted for the 2013 Stirling Prize, has been built for them which is also used by the College students. Another affiliated community is in Mendham, New Jersey.[8]

However, the main religious organization today helping victims of human trafficking is Roman Catholic—the Sisters of Adoration, Slaves of the Blessed Sacrament and of Charity, founded by St. Maria Michaela of the Blessed Sacrament, a contemporary of Mrs. Mariquita Tennant, who inspired Mother Harriet. Also, in the United States, the National Florence Crittenton Mission was co-founded by Dr. Kate Waller Barrett, whose husband, the rector of Aquia Church died in 1896. Dr. Barrett continued to lead that organization and became one of the most prominent women in the United States before her death in 1925. The Florence Crittenden organization expanded its scope over the years to help homeless mothers and disabled veterans, and its approach to adoptions became controversial by the 1970s, although its two offshoots remain active today.

References

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