Tag Archive | "Amityville"

Obituary: Sister Mary Helaine McGill, O.P.

OBIT_SrMHMcGillOPSister Mary Helaine McGill, O.P., a Sister of St. Dominic, Amityville, L.I., for 73 years, died Jan. 23. She was 94.
Born in Brooklyn as Mary Monica, her father was the architect responsible for designing and directing the building of Good Shepherd Church, Marine Park. He also created the grotto at St. Joseph’s, Monticello, N.Y., along with the ironwork behind the Dominican altar in the early days of Rosary Hall Chapel.
After graduating from All Saints H.S., Williamsburg, she entered the congregation from St. Gregory the Great parish, Crown Heights, in 1939. Later that year, she received the habit and her religious name, Sister Mary Helaine. 
One year later, she began her teaching ministry at St. Bartholomew, Elmhurst, 1940-62, and then American Martyrs, Bayside, 1962-85. One of her contributions was a written history of the founding of St. Adalbert parish and convent.
She taught in the Sacred Heart Early Childhood Program, Cambria Heights, 1985-87, and then moved to St. Luke School, Whitestone, where she tutored in the school, 1987-95, and volunteered in the pastoral services program, 1995-2000. 
Health issues necessitated a move to Carlin Hall, Amityville, in 2000. 
 A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated in St. Albert Chapel, Amityville, on Jan. 29. Interment in the Sisters’ Cemetery followed.

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Obituary: Sister Therese Forker, O.P.

OBIT_SrTForkerOPSister Therese Forker, O.P., a Sister of St. Dominic, Amityville, for 69 years, died Jan. 19 at Maria Regina Residence, Brentwood. She was 87.
Born in Most Holy Redeemer parish, Freeport, L.I., she became acquainted with the Dominican Sisters at the Dominican Juniorate, Water Mill, L.I.
She entered the congregation in 1943. One year later, she received the habit and her religious name, Sister Mary Norbert. She pronounced her religious vows on Aug. 8, 1945.
She taught at St. Catherine of Sienna, St. Albans, 1945-51; Cure of Ars, Merrick, L.I., 1951-55;  Incarnation, Queens Village, 1955-60; Dominican Commercial H.S., Jamaica, 1960-66; St. Agnes H.S., Rockville Centre, L.I., 1966-69; and Maria Regina H.S., Uniondale, L.I., 1969-71.
In the area of special education, she ministered in the diocesan office in Rockville Centre, 1972-74. While living at Paraclete House in Whitestone, she taught special education children at St. Luke School, 1974-75.  She was a supervisor for the New York Archdiocese, visiting various schools, 1975-79. This led to her ministry with the One-to-One Foundation, 1979-81. 
Her expertise was also called upon at Catholic Charities, Rockville Centre, 1981-82; Community Resource Center, the Bronx, 1982-83; and as a consultant at Georgetown Visitation Preparatory in Arlington, Va., 1983-84.
Returning to New York, she took charge of the special education program in St. Patrick School, Bay Ridge, 1984-86, and St. John’s School, Center Moriches, L.I., 1986-91.             
In 1991, she started the Success Through Expanded Education Program (STEEP) for learning disabled students at Molloy College, Rockville Centre. She devised ways to help the learning disabled with extra assistance, with study skills and accommodations for testing. She also served as an adjunct in the education department, teaching various methods and approaches for teaching students with special needs. She continued in this ministry until she retired in 1999.
She is survived by her brother, Paul of Bay Shore, L.I.; her sister, Catherine Lynch of Atlanta, Ga.; and her sister, Joan Curran of Pennsylvania. 
A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated in Rosary Hall Chapel, Amityville, Jan. 25. Interment in the Sisters’ Cemetery followed.

 

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Obituary: Sister Muriel Agnes Ott, O.P.

OBIT_SrMAOttOPSister Muriel Agnes Ott, O.P., a Sister of St. Dominic, Amityville, for 73 years, died Jan. 15. She was 92.
Born in Brooklyn as Elizabeth, she heard the call to become a Dominican Sister at a young age.
She entered the congregation from the parish of St. Nicholas in Williamsburg, in 1939 and later that year, she received the habit and the religious name, Sister Muriel Agnes. One year later, she pronounced her religious vows.
She taught at St. Agnes, Rockville Centre; St. Patrick, Huntington, L.I.; All Saints, Williamsburg; St. Luke, Whitestone; Holy Family, Park Slope; Good Shepherd, Marine Park; St. Catherine, St. Albans; St. Clement Pope, S. Ozone Park; Fourteen Holy Martyrs, Bushwick; Presentation B.V.M., Jamaica; St. Elizabeth, Ozone Park; St. Patrick, Bay Ridge; and St. Francis of Assisi, Astoria.
After leaving the classroom, she ministered in Catholic Medical Center, Woodhaven, 1982-84. She then resided in Sacred Heart Convent, East Glendale, and commuted to her ministry as secretary in St. Joseph’s rectory, Astoria, until 1992. 
In 1996, she moved to Rosary Hall, Amityville, and spent her years serving the elderly Sisters.
A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated in St. Albert’s Chapel, Amityville, on Jan. 23. Interment in the Sisters’ Cemetery followed.
 

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Obituary: Sister Doris Nevitt, O.P.

OBIT_SrDNevittOPSister Doris Nevitt, O.P., a Sister of St. Dominic, Amityville, for 61 years, died Jan. 16. She was 79.
Born in Brooklyn, she became acquainted with the Dominicans at St. Barbara’s Annex, Bushwick, and Bishop McDonnell H.S., Crown Heights. She entered the congregation in 1951, and one year later, she received the habit and her religious name, Sister Rose William. She pronounced her final vows in 1953.
She taught at St. Francis of Assisi, Astoria, 1953-59; St. Barbara, Bushwick, 1959-62; Incarnation, Queens Village, 1962-67; and St. Joseph, Kings Park, L.I., 1967-68. 
She served as principal of St. Frances de Chantal School in Borough Park, 1968-73.
 When she moved to St. Boniface Convent, Elmont, L.I., she taught in the school, 1973-75, and then was assigned to the Bursar’s Office at Molloy College, Rockville Centre, 1975-2003. She helped move the accounting from a copy book to the computer and through three new computer systems before retiring to Carlin Hall.
A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated in St. Albert Chapel, Amityville, Jan. 24. Interment in the Sisters’ Cemetery followed.
 

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Obituary: Sister Anne Gillen, O.P.

Sister Anne Gillen, O.P., a Sister of St. Dominic, Amityville, for 74 years, died Jan. 12. She was 92.

She attended St. Thomas the Apostle School, Woodhaven, and Dominican Juniorate, Water Mill, L.I.

She entered the congregation on Sept. 7, 1938. One year later, she received the habit and her religious name, Sister Thomas More.

OBIT_SrAGillenOPShe taught elementary school at Most Holy Trinity, Williamsburg, and Good Shepherd, Marine Park. On the secondary level she taught in St. Barbara H.S., Bushwick; the Dominican Juniorate, Water Mill; St. Agnes Academic H.S., College Point; and Queen of the Rosary Academy, Amityville.

She ministered as an office manager at the Rockville Centre Diocesan TV Center, Uniondale, L.I., 1969-1972; as the congregation’s public relations director, 1972-78; as an assistant in the congregation’s Communications Office, 1985-92; and as the Juniorate’s public relations director, 1992-95.

Her later years were spent in intercessory prayer at St. Catherine of Sienna Convent, Franklin Square, L.I., and Our Lady of Consolation Convent, Amityville, before moving to Carlin Hall in 2010.

She also served as a delegate in the congregation and was considered an expert in parliamentary procedure.

She is survived by her younger sister, Sister Rosemary Gillen, O.P.

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Obituary — Sister Edna Cooke, O.P. Taught Music for Over 30 Years

Sister Edna Cooke, O.P., a member of the Sisters of St. Dominic, Amityville, for 77 years, died Nov. 17. She was 96.
Raised in Blessed Virgin Mary Help of Christians parish, Woodside, she attended the Dominican Juniorate in Water Mill, L.I. She entered the congregation in 1935.
When she was invested with her habit, she received her religious name, Sister Mary Brendan. She pronounced her first vows on Aug. 18, 1936. She studied music at Manhattanville and Queens Colleges. 
She taught at St. Joseph School, Astoria, 1936-61; Dominican Commercial H.S., Jamaica, 1961-65; St. Agnes Cathedral H.S., Rockville Centre, 1965-68; and St. Agnes Academic H.S., College Point, 1968-71. 
From 1973 to 2006, she taught music at St. Francis Cabrini, Bath Beach; Our Lady of Solace, Coney Island; Annunciation, Williamsburg; American Martyrs, Bayside; Christ the King, Springfield Gardens; St. Margaret’s, Middle Village; Our Lady of Hope, Middle Village; St. Bartholomew, Elmhurst; Incarnation, Queens Village; and Notre Dame, New Hyde Park, L.I. Beside regular music lessons in the classroom, she was involved with school bands, orchestras, choirs and glee clubs. 
She is predeceased by her sister, Sister Regina Cooke, O.P., who died in 2003.
A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated in St. Albert Chapel, Amityville, Nov. 21. Interment in the Sisters’ Cemetery followed.

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Obituary — Sister Kathleen Thomas Steadman, O.P.

Sister Kathleen Thomas Steadman, O.P., a member of the Sisters of St. Dominic, Amityville, for 56 years, died Nov. 11. She was 74.
Born in Jackson Heights as Marguerite, she entered the congregation from her home parish of St. Frances de Chantal in Wantagh, L.I., in 1956. She was invested and received her religious name the following year. She made her first profession of vows on Aug. 7, 1958.
She taught at St. Joseph’s School, Astoria, 1958-61; St. Margaret, Middle Village, 1961-63, St. Barbara’s, Bushwick, 1963-70; St. Thomas the Apostle, Woodhaven, 1970-72; and Most Holy Trinity, Williamsburg, 1972-77, before becoming involved in parish ministry at St. Sebastian, Woodside.
She resided in Corpus Christi, Woodside, 1972-74, and then St. Francis of Assisi Convent, Astoria, 1974-84.
She served as director of religious education in St. Michael’s, Flushing, 1980-95, and was part of Damascus Community in Middle Village, 1988-89. 
For several years, she ministered in Incarnation parish, Queens Village, and studied in Weston School of Theology in Massachusetts. In 1999, she was appointed as the congregation’s vocation director, a post she held until 2003. She also was parish receptionist at Sacred Heart, North Merrick, L.I., 2003-07.
In 2011, she retired, and failing health necessitated a move to the motherhouse. She is survived by her brother Martin of Garden City, L.I.
A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated in St. Albert Chapel, Amityville, Nov. 15. Burial in the Sisters’ Cemetery followed.

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Obituary — Sister Maria Victoria Aldea, O.P.

Sister Maria Victoria Aldea, O.P., 82, a member of the Sisters of St. Dominic, Amityville, for 60 years, died Oct. 18.
Born in Caguas, Puerto Rico as Maria Eulalia, she dropped out of school and cared for her seven younger siblings when their mother died. She became acquainted with the Dominican Sisters in Puerto Rico and entered the congregation from the Cathedral of San Juan, Caguas, in 1952.
On Aug. 4, 1953, she received the habit of St. Dominic and her religious name. One year later, on Aug. 7, 1954, she pronounced her religious vows.
She ministered both in the U.S. and in Puerto Rico. She did domestic work in the Seminary of the Immaculate Conception, Huntington, 1954-55, and in Cathedral College, Brooklyn, 1955-59. Upon returning to Puerto Rico, she was stationed in Convento Santo Tomas, San Juan, 1959-62; Convento N.S. del Rosario, Vega Baja, 1962-67; Convento Santa Rosa, Bayamon, 1972-82; and Convento Santo Vincenzo Ferrer, Catano, 1981-86.
In 1986, she returned to serve as domestic assistant at the motherhouse in Amityville until 1999 when she retired.
Sister Maria Victoria was also an artist. Her depictions of San Juan are displayed in the congregation’s Heritage Center.
She is survived by four sisters, Georgina and Rafaela of Puerto Rico, Lydia of Alabama and Carmen of Yonkers, and two brothers, Carlos of Puerto Rico and Ernesto of Texas.
A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated in St. Albert Chapel, Amityville, Oct. 22. Interment in the Sisters’ Cemetery followed.

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Obituary — Sister Mary Aquinas Messer, O.P.

Sister Mary Aquinas Messer, O.P., a member of the Sisters of St. Dominic, Amityville, for 79 years, died Dec. 5. She was 98.
Born in Brooklyn, she grew up in Maryland and entered the congregation from Ascension parish, Halethorpe, Md., in 1933. She received the habit with her religious name the following year. On Aug. 26, 1935, she pronounced her religious vows.
She taught at 14 Holy Martyrs, Bushwick, 1935-37; St. Pancras, Glendale, 1937-42; Our Lady of Sorrows, Lower East Side, 1942-45; B.V.M. Help of Christians, Woodside, 1945-48; Dominican Commercial H.S., Jamaica, 1948-68.
In the evenings, she volunteered at the ESL Program at St. Pius V, Jamaica. She served at St. Agnes H.S., Rockville Centre, 1968-71, and then returned to Dominican Commercial, 1971-95, where she began her career as a guidance counselor. 
She retired from the formal school setting in 1995 but continued as a volunteer through 1998.  Failing health necessitated a move to Carlin Hall in 2004.
She is survived by relatives in Maryland as well as her nephew, Father Terry Messer of Newark, N.J. 
A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated in St. Albert Chapel, Amityville, Dec. 7. Interment in the Sisters’ Cemetery followed.

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Obituary — Sister Clare Marie O’Keeffe, O.P.

Sister Clare Marie O’Keeffe, O.P., formerly Sister Maureen Daniel, a member of the Sisters of St. Dominic, Amityville, for 60 years, died Dec. 5. She was 81.
She entered the congregation from St. Matthias, Ridgewood, in 1952 and received the habit and her religious name the following year. She pronounced religious vows on Aug. 7, 1954. 

She earned degrees in management from St. Francis College, Brooklyn Heights; theology from Manhattan College, Manhattan; and counseling/mental health from Long Island University’s C.W. Post.
From 1954 to 1962, she taught at Corpus Christi, Mineola, L.I.; Blessed Virgin Mary Help of Christians, Woodside; St. Nicholas, Williamsburg; and St. Patrick, Bay Ridge.
She devoted the next 45 years of her life to St. Patrick parish, Huntington, L.I., where she taught in the school, 1967-69, and then served as religious education director, 1969-96. She continued to minister in parish services from 1996 to the present. She worked with the senior citizens group, taught adult education, was an alcoholism counselor, a member of the board of directors of Melville House for Boys, the Huntington Town Consumer Protection Board and the board of the Huntington Community School. 
In 1990, she was honored as Grand Marshal of the Huntington St. Patrick’s Parade, becoming the first religious sister and the second female in the parade’s 58-year history.
A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated on Dec. 11. Interment followed in the Sisters’ Cemetery, Amityville.

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