By Elizabeth B. Scott
Title: Southern Missions, 1937-2009
Predominant Dates:1940-1970
Extent: 27.0 Linear Feet
Arrangement: This collection has been arranged into series: I. Campus Ministry. II. Clippings. III. Convocations. IV. Correspondence. V. Financial. VI. Houses. VII. Missions Office. VIII. Parishes. IX. Scrapbooks/Albums. X. Sisters. XI. Southern Missions, Inc. XII. Southern Region. XIII. Spiritual reports. XIV. Sponsored Works. XV. Subjects.
Subjects: Dauphin Island (Ala.), Elizabeth City (N.C.), Mobile (Ala.), Mon Luis (Ala.), Selma (Ala.), Wake Forest (N.C.)
In the 1930’s, after moving their general administrative offices from England to Vermont, the Society of Saint Edmund began to seek ways in which it could meet the call of Pope Pius X’s to serve the “Negro and Indian populations of North America.” In January 1937, Bishop Thomas Toolen of Mobile (AL) invited the Society to “establish a mission among the colored population in Selma.” By July 1937, three Edmundites were serving in Selma. Within a month, they began publishing Your Edmundite Missions Newsletter (now the Edmundite Missions Newsletter) to solicit funds for the new mission.
Over the years, the work of the Edmundites expanded to include:
Work in parishes and schools throughout Alabama, (especially in Selma, Anniston, Gadsden, Mobile and the Gulf Coast), in Elizabeth City and Wake Forest, NC, in Apalachicola FL, in New Orleans, LA and in Caracas, Venezuela. Sponsorship of the Good Samaritan Nursing Home and Good Samaritan Hospital in Selma from the 1940s until their closure in the 1980s The Don Bosco Boys Club Sponsorship of the Good Samaritan School of Practical Nursing, the first school of practical nursing for black students in Alabama. Additionally, the Edmundites have sponsored learning centers, health clinics, nutrition centers, and other social service organizations in Dallas, Wilcox, Monroe, and Lowndes Counties in Alabama, and have maintained parishes and a school in Louisiana. Through the years they worked very closely with many Religious orders of women through the South, including the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Rochester and the Daughters of the Holy Ghost.
The work of the Society in the South included entrusted parishes, sponsored works, campus ministry programs, educational endeavors and a number of chaplaincies. Sponsored works were often run by the society or a women’s religious order affiliated with the society. Much of the funding was through the Edmundite Missions Office, which quickly became an entity distinct from the Southern Missions as a whole, (although the office of Mission Director and Superior was held by the same person in the earliest years). In 1952, the local superior and mission director were held by different men for the first time, with the mission director given responsibility for the work outside of Selma or “the missions.” In 1991, another office was established to oversee the sponsored works of the southern missions, that of Program director. The Mission Director was responsible for raising funds, the Program Director was responsible for administering the works themselves, and the Superior took responsibility for the house, house members, and the work in parishes. An entity known as Fathers of Saint Edmund, Southern Missions, inc. was established in Alabama in1943 as the non-profit corporation.
The Society members were often the only whites regularly engaging with the African American population in their chosen locations. Administering and sponsoring institutions that were a part of the social fabric of the community allowed them to witness events integral to twentieth century America. As the civil rights movement took hold, the Edmundites continued to manage their insitutions while the communities they served radically changed. A few individuals became deeply involved in the movement.
Dauphin Island (Ala.)
Elizabeth City (N.C.)
Mobile (Ala.)
Mon Luis (Ala.)
Selma (Ala.)
Wake Forest (N.C.)
Repository: Saint Michael's College Archives & Special Collections
Acquisition Source: Edmundite Missions Office
Acquisition Method: Transfer
Related Materials:
SSE 6.8 Local Administration/ South
SSE 2 Superior General Record Group
SSE Photograph Collection
Processing Information: This Record Group parallels the Local Administration/South record subgroup. Materials which accumulated in the Generalate offices prior to 2003 make up the Local Administration/South record subgroup. (It does not necessarily include correspondence written directly to the Superior General—those are kept with Superior General correspondence series.) The provenance of that record subgroup is unknown, although it is likely a combination of materials collected in the Generalate and some material transferred from the Southern Missions offices at an earlier time. It is possible that some material is duplicated. For a comprehensive view of the Society’s work in the South it may be necessary to explore all three collections.
Correspondence 1940-1999
This series is correspondence collected in the Missions Office. It includes correspondence between Missions Office and chancery; Missions Office and Superior General or Generalate; or the Missions Director and Regional Superior with priests in various southern parishes and others. It also includes Mission director correspondence as well as correspondence between the Selma House and the Generalate. Series is arranged alphabetically.
Box 5
Missions Dir. Lambert w/ F. Casey 1946-1949, 1952
Missions Dir.Galligan w/ Conlin + Boucher
Missions Dir. Paul Morin w/ R. Myhalyk
Missions Dir. Morin Caracas 1971-1973
Missions Dir. LaCharite Corr w/ SG McLaughlin 1986-1987
Missions Re: Fundraising 1975-1978
Missions w/ Bishop Wrath
Missions w/ Caracas 1963-1970
Missions w/ Catholic Press Assoc. 1957
Missions w/ Catholic Un. 1946
Missions w/ Chancery 1934-1946
Missions w/ Chancery 1946-48
Missions w/ Chancery 1949-51, 1955
Missions w/ Chancery 1956-1969
Box 6
Missions w/ Chancery 1971-1976
Missions w/ Chancery 1977-1980
Missions w/ Dioceses (Not Mobile-Birmingham) 1961-1969
Missions w/ Superior General Nicolle 1937-1939
Missions w/ Superior General Nicolle 1940-1941
Missions w/ Superior General Nicolle 1942-1943
Missions w/ Treasurer General McLaughlin 1981-1986
Missions Misc. Correspondence 1944-1956
Missions Misc. Correspondence1957-1963
Missions Misc. Correspondence1965-1969
Box 7
Missions w/ Superior General Nicolle 1944-1946
Missions w/ Superior General 1946-1947
Missions w/ Superior General Purtill 1948-1949
Missions w/ Superior General Purtill 1950-1951
Missions w/ Superior General Purtill 1952-1954
Missions w/ Superior General Purtill 1955-1956
Missions w/ Superior General Purtill 1956-1958
Missions w/ Superior General Purtill 1959-1961
Box 8
Missions w/ SG Purtill 1962-1964
Missions w/ SG Galligan 1964-1968
Missions w/ Priests 1974-1980
Missions w/ SG Leary 1978-1980
Missions w/ SG Leary 1981-1986
Missions w/ SG McLaughlin 1986-1987
Missions w/ SG McLaughlin 1987-1990
Box 9
Missions w/ SG Hart 1990-1996
Missions w/ SG Hart 1994-1998
Missions w/ SG Hart 1995-1999