File #: 17-4095    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Consent Calendar Resolution Status: Approved
File created: 6/26/2017 In control: Board of Commissioners
On agenda: 7/18/2017 Final action: 7/18/2017
Title: PROPOSED RESOLUTION HONORING MOTHER CABRINI ON THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF HER PASSING WHEREAS, in 1850 Francesca Xavier Cabrini was born the thirteenth child to her family in Sant'Angelo Lodigiano, Italy. Her two-month premature birth left her in delicate health most of her life; and WHEREAS, in 1880 Mother Cabrini founded the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Lodi, Italy; and WHEREAS, in 1889 Pope Leo XIII sent Mother Cabrini to New York City to serve the increasing numbers of Italian immigrants and orphans; and WHEREAS, despite the neighborhood's extreme poverty, Mother Cabrini and the sisters soon opened an orphanage and within two years opened Columbus Hospital; and WHEREAS, in 1899 Mother Cabrini's success in New York brought her to Chicago, where she founded and taught at Assumption School, the first Italian school in the city. Mother Cabrini and the sisters worked hard to keep the school tuition free for its nearly 700 students, even if they had to beg for f...
Sponsors: PETER N. SILVESTRI
title
PROPOSED RESOLUTION

HONORING MOTHER CABRINI ON THE 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF HER PASSING

WHEREAS, in 1850 Francesca Xavier Cabrini was born the thirteenth child to her family in Sant'Angelo Lodigiano, Italy. Her two-month premature birth left her in delicate health most of her life; and

WHEREAS, in 1880 Mother Cabrini founded the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus in Lodi, Italy; and

WHEREAS, in 1889 Pope Leo XIII sent Mother Cabrini to New York City to serve the increasing numbers of Italian immigrants and orphans; and

WHEREAS, despite the neighborhood's extreme poverty, Mother Cabrini and the sisters soon opened an orphanage and within two years opened Columbus Hospital; and

WHEREAS, in 1899 Mother Cabrini's success in New York brought her to Chicago, where she founded and taught at Assumption School, the first Italian school in the city. Mother Cabrini and the sisters worked hard to keep the school tuition free for its nearly 700 students, even if they had to beg for funds; and

WHEREAS, in 1905 Mother Cabrini opened Columbus Hospital in Chicago's Lincoln Park and five years later founded the Extension Hospital (later changed to St. Cabrini Hospital) in a low-income Italian neighborhood on Chicago's West Side using surplus funds from the original hospital; and

WHEREAS, in 1909 Mother Cabrini became a citizen of the United States; and

WHEREAS, among Mother Cabrini's many attributes was her business acumen, and in 1917 she purchased a 32-acre farm in what is now Park Ridge so patients at her hospitals could have fresh food; and

WHEREAS, Mother Cabrini traveled the world for 25 years founding orphanages, schools, and hospitals on three continents; and

WHEREAS, in December of 1917 Mother Cabrini passed away in her room at Columbus Hospital at age 67. By the time of her death, she had founded 67 institutions, helping shape America's social and healthcare systems; and

WHEREAS, after four miracles had been attributed to her, Pope Pius XII pr...

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