

In 1865, through perseverance and hard work with the poor in New York City, the five founding sisters convinced Bishop Horatio Potter to receive them as a monastic community. Monasticism had developed as a protest against the excesses of the Church in the late Roman Empire. Not since the dissolution of the
English monasteries in the 16th century had an Anglican bishop dared to officially constitute a religious community — one meant to be a true monastic body, not just a philanthropic sorority. The Episcopal Church was slow in giving full recognition, and our place in the Church was not truly affirmed until 1878, when the yellow fever epidemic in Memphis killed Sister Constance and three other sisters (along with several Episcopal, Roman Catholic and Methodist clerics) who had sought out and nursed the abandoned sick and dying. (Lesser Feasts and Fasts, Sept. 9)
Although it required “good works” to make our order acceptable to the mid-19th century Episcopal Church, ministry to the outside world was not the driving force behind Mother Harriet and the other founding sisters. Rather, they were called by Christ to live in contemplation and

Offsite Links to Historical Documents regarding CSM:
Ten Decades of Praise by Sr. Mary Hillary, CSM
Harriet Starr Cannon by Morgan Dix
Other Historical Documents and Resources for CSM from Project Canterbury

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