Our records do not give Sister M. Rosarii’s baptismal name, nor that of her parents. We know that she was born in February of 1882 and it seems that she lost both her parents when she was very young. In Weavers of the Tapestry Sister Kathrine Bellamy noted that she spent some of her youth in St. Michael’s Orphanage, Belvedere, but our records do not show that.
She requested entrance to the Sisters of Mercy in 1911 and made first profession in 1914.After her profession she was assigned to Immaculate Conception Convent in Conception Harbour, where she spent the entirety of her religious life. According to Sister Kathrine, Sister M. Rosarii was one of the “hidden“ Sisters of Mercy who spent her days looking after the kitchen and the day-to-day running of the convent.
Sister M. Rosarii’s kindness was legendary, and it was reputed that the pupils of St. Anne’s School would vie with each other to bring messages from the schoolto the convent. The fortunate children who came to her door with a message from one of the teaching sisters never left without enjoying her puddings or other tasty culinary treats. While the children liked and respected the other sisters who held authority in the school, they knew that Sister M. Rosarii would not report their misdemeanors and that she would always make excuses for them.
Years after her death, Sister M. Rosarii was spoken of with gratitude and affection by the children of Conception Harbor, whose hearts she had won through her simple kindness and warmth. The whole community was saddened when they heard the news that she was ill and needed treatment in St. John’s. She died on November 19 1934 at St. Clare’s Mercy Hospital after a few months’ illness and was buried in Belvedere cemetery.
Nuestros registros no indican el nombre de bautismo de la hermana M. Rosarii, ni el de sus padres. Sabemos que nació en febrero de 1882 y parece que perdió a sus padres cuando era muy pequeña. En Weavers of the Tapestry, la hermana Kathrine Bellamy señaló que pasó parte de su juventud en el orfanato St. Michael’s, en Belvedere, pero nuestros registros no lo indican.
Solicitó ingresar en las Hermanas de la Misericordia en 1911 e hizo su primera profesión en 1914. Tras su profesión, fue destinada al Convento de la Inmaculada Concepción en Conception Harbour, donde pasó toda su vida religiosa. Según la hermana Kathrine, la hermana M. Rosarii era una de las hermanas «ocultas» de la Misericordia, que pasaba sus días cuidando de la cocina y del funcionamiento diario del convento.
La bondad de la hermana M. Rosarii era legendaria, y se decía que los alumnos de la escuela St. Anne’s competían entre sí para llevar mensajes de la escuela al convento. Los afortunados niños que llegaban a su puerta con un mensaje de una de las hermanas maestras nunca se marchaban sin disfrutar de sus pudines u otras deliciosas recetas culinarias. Aunque los niños querían y respetaban a las demás hermanas que tenían autoridad en la escuela, sabían que la hermana M. Rosarii no informaría de sus travesuras y que siempre les pondría excusas.
Años después de su muerte, los niños de Conception Harbor hablaban de la hermana M. Rosarii con gratitud y afecto, ya que se había ganado sus corazones con su sencillez, amabilidad y calidez. Toda la comunidad se entristeció al saber que estaba enferma y necesitaba tratamiento en St. John’s. Murió el 19 de noviembre de 1934 en el St. Clare’s Mercy Hospital tras varios meses de enfermedad y fue enterrada en el cementerio de Belvedere.
Mary entered the Sisters of Mercy at Mercy Convent in 1914, was received into the novitiate as Sister Mary Alphonsus in 1915 and was professed on July 8, 1917, along with Sister M. Aloysius Rawlins. Her first mission took her to St. Edward’s Convent on Bell Island as a member of the founding community in September of 1917. From there she went to St. Anne’s Convent in Burin and in 1927 returned to Bell Island to join the founding community of Immaculate Conception Convent. From 1928 to 1934 she was superior of St. Mary’s on the Humber Convent in Curling, where she was noted for her dedication to visitation of the sick in their homes. In this ministry she was said to have washed patients, changed bed linens and did other chores to make the person more comfortable. Sisters in the community remember that on one occasion when a person in the parish died, she prepared the body for burial.