On this date, January 21, 1858, Mother St. John Facemaz faced her first major crisis since taking office [1857]. A fire destroyed a large part of the convent at Carondelet, including the log cabin that had been the first permanent home of the Sisters of St. Joseph in
When the fire struck, illness had confined Mother St. John to bed. She and another ailing sister were saved by being helped out of second story windows and carried away from the danger zone.
"The methods of the Carondelet fire department were still rather primitive; but the firemen, reinforced by many of the citizens and by the faculty and students of the ecclesiastical Seminary, who worked heroically under the direction of Father Feehan, succeeded in saving the north wing, in which were located the principal departments of the academy. A relic of Saint Agnes was placed in the corner stone of this wing when it was built by Mother Celestine in 1840; and the Sisters piously believed that through the young martyr's intercession [January 21 being her feast day] came the favorable wind that directed the flames southward. These encircled the log cabin convent in their fury, and the only visible link connecting
From "The History of the Sisters of
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