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Marie-Marguérite d'Youville
(née Dufrost de Lajemmerais).
Foundress of the Gray Nuns, or Sisters of Charity, born at Varennes, near
Montreal, 15 October, 1701, of Christophe-D. de L. and Renee de Varennes, the
sister of Laverendrye, discoverer of the Rocky Mountains; d. 23 December, 1771.
After studying two years with the Ursulines at Quebec, she shared, at the age of
twelve, in the housework of her widowed mother. She married (1722) M. d'Youville,
who treated her with indifference, and eight years later left her a widow with
three children and a heavy debt. She was forced to carry on a small trade in
order to meet her obligations. The only two of her sons who reached manhood
became priests. Out of her own poverty, she helped the needy. Mother d'Youville
conceived an ardent devotion to the Eternal Father, which was to be the keynote
of her life. Providence destined her to rescue from debt and ruin the hospital,
founded (1694) by M. Charon, ad hitherto managed by a brotherhood bearing his
name. This undertaking which was to be the cradle and groundwork of a new
religious institute, the Grey Nuns, or Sisters of Charity, was destined to
flourish under the wise and zealous direction of Mother d'Youville. When, in
1747, the General Hospital was entrusted to her, she had already, with a few
companions living under a provisional rule, begun practicing the spiritual and
corporal works of mercy. She opened the hospital to disabled soldiers, the aged
of either sex, the insane, the incurable, foundlings, and orphans. When, to save
the General Hospital of Quebec, the intendant Bigot, with Bishop Pontbriand's
assent, decided to transfer to the former institution the property of the
Montreal Hospital, Mother d'Youville submitted. The intervention of the
Sulpician superior, Cousturier, maintained her rights. In 1755, Mgr. Pontbriand
confirmed the rule of the institute drawn up by Father Normant. Mother
d'Youville assumed the entire debt, 49,000 livres, and to meet the expense of
restoring, rebuilding, and harbouring numerous inmates, increased by the
admission of epileptics, lepers, and contagious patients excluded from the
Hôtel-Dieu, she made clothing for the king's stores and for the traders of the
upper country, which constituted her chief revenue. During the Seven Years War
so many English soldiers were treated at the hospital, that one of its wards was
called la salle des Anglais
. Mother d'Youville ransomed from the Indians, at a
great price, an English prisoner destined to torture, and saved from their fury
several fugitives, one of whom, through gratitude, later prevented the
bombardment of the fortress-like hospital. Owing to the exorbitant cost of
necessaries of life, due to unscrupulous corruption, the hospital was heavily
indebted at the time of the conquest. A credit of 100,000 livres, due by the
French Government, was redeemed with interest only under Louis XVIII, and the
sum applied to the work begun by the foundress. Despite her poverty, Mother
d'Youville undertook to rescue all foundlings thrown upon her charity. When, in
1766, the General Hospital was destroyed by fire, fully resigned to her loss,
she knelt with her sisters and recited the Te Deum
. Her institute has spread
throughout Canada and even to some of the neighbouring states. The Decree
introducing the cause of her beatification, and entitling her to be called
Venerable, was signed on 28 April, 1890.
FAILLON, Vie de Madame d'Youville (Ville Marie, 1852); JETTE, Vie de la Ven. Mère d'Youville (Montreal, 1900).
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