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Margaret Anna Cusack (born 6 May 1829 in a house at the corner of Mercer Street and York Street (now known as Cusack Corner), Dublin, Ireland – died 5 June 1899), also known as Sister Mary Francis Cusack and Mother Margaret, was first an Irish
Anglican Anglicanism is a Western Christian tradition that has developed from the practices, liturgy, and identity of the Church of England following the English Reformation, in the context of the Protestant Reformation in Europe. It is one of th ...
nun, then a Roman Catholic nun, then a religious sister and the founder of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace, and then an Anglican (or possibly a Methodist). By 1870 more than 200,000 copies of her works which ranged from biographies of
saints In religious belief, a saint is a person who is recognized as having an exceptional degree of holiness Sacred describes something that is dedicated or set apart for the service or worship of a deity; is considered worthy of spiritual res ...
to pamphlets on social issues had circulated throughout the world, the proceeds from which went towards victims of the Famine of 1879 and helping to feed the poor. An independent and controversial figure, Cusack was a passionate Irish nationalist, often at odds with the ecclesiastical hierarchy.


Early life

Margaret Anna Cusack was born in Coolock, County Dublin into a family of Church of Ireland gentry. Her parents were Samuel and Sara Stoney Cusack. Her father was a physician. When she was a teenager, her parents separated, she, her mother, and brother Samuel went to live with her grand-aunt in
Exeter Exeter () is a city in Devon, South West England. It is situated on the River Exe, approximately northeast of Plymouth and southwest of Bristol. In Roman Britain, Exeter was established as the base of Legio II Augusta under the personal comm ...
, Devon, where Margaret attended boarding school.


"Nun of Kenmare"

Influenced by the
Oxford Movement The Oxford Movement was a movement of high church members of the Church of England which began in the 1830s and eventually developed into Anglo-Catholicism. The movement, whose original devotees were mostly associated with the University of O ...
, and motivated by the sudden death of her fiancé, Charles Holmes, in 1852 she joined a convent of
Puseyite The Oxford Movement was a movement of high church members of the Church of England which began in the 1830s and eventually developed into Anglo-Catholicism. The movement, whose original devotees were mostly associated with the University of O ...
Anglican nuns. However, disappointed at not being sent to the Crimean War, in 1858 she converted to
Roman Catholicism The Catholic Church, also known as the Roman Catholic Church, is the List of Christian denominations by number of members, largest Christian church, with 1.3 billion baptized Catholics Catholic Church by country, worldwide . It is am ...
and joined the Poor Clares in Newry,
County Down County Down () is one of the six counties of Northern Ireland, one of the nine counties of Ulster and one of the traditional thirty-two counties of Ireland. It covers an area of and has a population of 531,665. It borders County Antrim to the ...
, a community of Franciscan nuns that taught poor girls. She took the name of Sister Francis Clare. In 1861 she was sent with a small group of nuns, led by
Mary O'Hagan Mary O'Hagan (1823 31 January 1876), Abbess in Newry and Kenmare, founder of the convent in Kenmare. Biography Mary O'Hagan was born in Belfast in 1823. Her parents were Edward O'Hagan, a merchant, and his wife Mary Bell, daughter of Captain T ...
to Kenmare, County Kerry, then one of the most destitute parts of Ireland, to establish a convent of Poor Clares. She wrote 35 books, including many popular pious and sentimental texts on private devotions (''A Nun's Advice to her Girls''), poems, Irish history and biography, founding Kenmare Publications,Murphy, Cliona. "Cusack, Margaret Anna", ''Ireland and the Americas''
Vol. 2, (James Patrick Byrne, Philip Coleman, Jason Francis King, eds.) ABC-CLIO, 2008,
through which 200,000 volumes of her works were issued in less than ten years. She kept two full-time secretaries for correspondence and wrote letters on Irish causes in the Irish, United States, and Canadian press. In the famine year of 1871 she raised and distributed £15,000 in a famine relief fund. She publicly railed against landlords of the region, particularly Lord Lansdowne, who owned the lands around Kenmare, and his local agent. She was an outspoken Irish nationalist, publishing ''The Patriot's History of Ireland'', in 1869, though she later denied being associated with the Ladies' Land League. In 1872 she issued an account of the life of Daniel O'Connell, ''The Liberator: His Life and Times, Political, Social, and Religious''. After receiving death threats upon publication of her book on the abuse of tenants on the Landsdowne and Kenmare estates in Kerry, she "effectively absconded from her enmare convent on a supposed visit to Knock on 16 Nov. 1881."


Knock

Her transfer orders were for her to return to Newry, but she moved to Mayo where she was determined to erect a convent at Knock. Cusack has been described as "a temperamental extremist", "eccentric and rebellious", "passionate and difficult, constantly at odds with her ecclesiastical superiors", who was "an early and fervent believer in the
apparition of the Virgin Mary A Marian apparition is a reported supernatural appearance by Mary, the mother of Jesus, or a series of related such appearances during a period of time. In the Catholic Church, in order for a reported appearance to be classified as a Marian ap ...
at Knock".Vance, Norman. ''Irish Literature Since 1800''
Routledge, 2014,
Younger contemporaries of hers in the convent remembered her as "furious when disturbed and capable of making physical attacks", such as tugging off their veils. In 1880 she published the pamphlet ''The Apparition at Knock; with the depositions of the witness sexamined by the Ecclesiastical Commission appointed by His Grace the Archbishop of Tuam and the conversion of a young Protestant lady by a vision of the Blessed Virgin''. In 1936 Archbishop Thomas Gilmartin of Tuam established a second Commission of Enquiry. As most of the documents from the early years at Knock were assumed to have been lost, the commission was forced to rely upon press reports and devotional works printed in the 1880s, which portrayed the developing cult in a positive light, and interviews with Patrick Byrne and Mary Byrne O'Connell, the last surviving witnesses. A special tribunal was set by the
Cardinal Hayes Cardinal Hayes may refer to: *Patrick Joseph Hayes (1867–1938), fifth Archbishop of New York *Cardinal Hayes High School Cardinal Hayes High School is an American Catholic high school for boys in the Concourse Village neighborhood of the Bro ...
, Archbishop of New York, to examine John Curry who was residing there. In 1995, while doing research in Washington DC, among the papers of Margaret Anna Cusack, John J. White, discovered a large box marked 'pre-foundation papers'. "The box contained the original, unedited depositions of several of the 21 August 1879 witnesses, the original manuscript of the parish priest's account of cures, depositions and statements taken from witnesses in 1880, and hundreds of other documents and letters from people seeking or claiming cures through the intercession of Our Lady of Knock.".White, John. "The Cusack Papers; new evidence on the Knock apparition", ''18th-19th Century Social Perspectives, 18th–19th - Century History'', Issue 4 (Winter 1996), Vol. 4
/ref> While there are many local shrines throughout Ireland, Margaret Anna Cusack joined Canon Ulick Bourke and Timothy Daniel Sullivan in promoting Knock as a national Marian pilgrimage site. According to John J. White, professor of history at Dayton University, the Knock pilgrimages and the Land League developed simultaneously along parallel lines. Both involved many of the same individuals, and used similar methods of popularization and promotion. "The Cusack papers show how many figures from moderate nationalists to Land Leaguers and Fenians were actively involved with Knock." Although Cusack was widely seen as associated with the Land League, she herself claimed that she was not, and did not entirely approve of the movement.McCarthy, OSC, Philomena. ''The Nun of Kenmare: The True Facts'' (Kilarney Printing Works
989 Year 989 (Roman numerals, CMLXXXIX) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. Events By place Byzantine Empire * Emperor Basil II uses his contingent of 6,000 Varangians to he ...


Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace

After she claimed the Virgin had spoken to her, and she seemed to become difficult to deal with, problems arose with the local priest and archbishop. Cusack planned to establish a training school for young women intending to emigrate so that they would have some job skills when they reached America. The Archbishop of Tuam's feelings on the matter were somewhat ambiguous. While he supported a training school for young women, he did not wish to encourage emigration, "There is plenty of room to spare for all our people at home, if things were well managed..." Nonetheless, as she pointed out that people would emigrate anyway, he agreed to support the plan. Archbishop McEvilly granted permission for her to establish a convent at Knock. However, the archbishop wanted her to establish a community of Poor Clares whilst she intended to found an entirely new community called the Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace. Cusack believed that the Poor Clare's had been brought to Kenmare instead of the Presentation Sisters for political reasons, a claim biographer Philomena McCarthy disproved and attributed to a disturbed mind. Cusack grew impatient with the Archbishop's failure to heed her advise and considered him an obstructionist. She left Knock in 1883 taking most of the records regarding the apparitions, as well as the funds pledged for the building of a new convent, the latter causing something of an international scandal. She left the Kenmare Poor Clares and went to England. In 1884, during an audience with Pope Leo XIII to seek his support, Cusack obtained permission for a dispensation to leave the order of the Poor Clares and found a new congregation, the Sisters of St. Joseph of Peace, intended for the establishment and care of homes for friendless girls, where domestic service would be taught and moral habits inculcated."The Nun of Kenmare: Margaret Anna Cusack (1829-1899)", Maynooth Library Treasures
/ref> She opened the first house of the new order in Nottingham, England and in 1885, a similar house in
Jersey City, New Jersey Jersey City is the second-most populous city in the U.S. state of New Jersey, after Newark.Catholic hierarchy, this time regarding among other things, funding, and her public support of a suspended priest. She wrote a 176-page pamphlet entitled, "The Question of Today: Anti-Poverty and Progress, Labor and Capital". In it she defended social reformer Father Edward McGlynn. McGlynn was a vocal supporter of the political and economic views of Henry George, which some considered to border on socialism. George was popular with labor organizers, radicals, socialists, and Irish nationalists. Cardinal John McCloskey had reprimanded McGlynn and ordered him not to defend these views in public. McCloskey's successor,
Archbishop Michael Corrigan Michael Augustine Corrigan (August 13, 1839May 5, 1902) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who served as the third archbishop of New York from 1885 to 1902. Early life Michael Augustine Corrigan was born August 13, 1839, in Ne ...
ordered McGlynn to refrain from politics. McGlynn not only gave an address in support of George, (which earned him a two-week suspension),Fogarty, Gerald, and Fogarty, Gerald P., ''The vatican and the Americanist crisis'', Gregorian Biblical BookShop, 1974
but made the rounds of the polls with George on election day. He also publicly criticized a pastoral letter Corrigan had issued condemning theories that would violate an individual's right to private property. Corrigan then temporarily suspended McGlynn from his priestly functions for a second time. Corrigan viewed Cusack's pamphlet as an attack on the authority of the church, and demanded an apology. She attempted to halt its publication, but was unsuccessful. Her involvement in the New York City political campaign generated a good deal of controversy. Cusack resigned as head of her order and placed a loyal friend Honoria Gaffney as the new leader. Gaffney was voted the second Mother General of the order in 1888. She returned to the Anglican Communion and issued ''The Nun of Kenmare: An Autobiography'' in 1888. Afterwards she lectured and wrote a number of anti-Catholic books: ''The Black Pope: History of the Jesuits'', ''What Rome Teaches'' (1892) and ''Revolution and War, the secret conspiracy of the Jesuits in Great Britain'' (published posthumously, 1910). She died on 5 June 1899, aged 70, and was buried in a Church of England-reserved burial site at
Leamington Spa Royal Leamington Spa, commonly known as Leamington Spa or simply Leamington (), is a spa town and civil parish in Warwickshire, England. Originally a small village called Leamington Priors, it grew into a spa town in the 18th century following ...
, Warwickshire, England. Margaret Anna Cusack passed into obscurity for a long time, until as a result of Vatican II, religious orders were encouraged to review their roots and the intent of their founders. Since then there have been a number of studies on Cusack, such as Sister Philomena McCarthy's ''The Nun of Kenmare: The True Facts''. With the rediscovery of the life and times of Margaret Anna Cusack, she has been hailed as a feminist or not, and a social reformer ahead of her times.


Writings

In 1868, Cusack's ''An Illustrated History of Ireland'' was published with illustrations by Henry Doyle, where, in a lengthy preface, she writes:
I believe there are honest and honorable men in England, who would stand aghast with horror if they thoroughly understood the injustices to which Ireland has been and ''still is'' subject. ...I believe the majority of Englishmen have not the faintest idea of the way in which the Irish tenant is oppressed, ''not by individuals'', for there are many landlords in Ireland devoted to their tenantry, but by a system.
Her novels include ''Ned Rusheen, or, Who Fired the First Shot?'' (1871); and ''Tim O'Halloran's Choice'' (1877). In 1872 she wrote ''Honehurst Rectory'', ridiculing Dr. Pusey and the other founders of the Puseyite order. That year the entire edition of her ''Life of St. Patrick'' burned in a fire at her publishing office. She issued ''Advice to Irish Girls in America'' (1872), which deals mainly with tips and suggestions relating to the profession of domestic service. Cusack shared the prevailing views at that time regarding women's capabilities both physically and intellectually. In 1874 she wrote ''Women's Work in Modern Society'',Holte, James Craig. ''The Conversion Experience in America: A Sourcebook on Religious Conversion Autobiography''
Greenwood Publishing Group, 1992, , p. 53
in which she exhorted women that their main influence was exercised as good Christian mothers. She both recognized and supported the class distinctions of her day.Luddy, Maria. ''Women in Ireland, 1800-1918: A Documentary History''
Cork University Press, 1995, , p. 1
Norman Vance sees Cusack as bridging the gap "...between eighteenth-century Catholic antiquarianism and the cultural nationalism of the Literary Revival." He describes her 1877 ''A History of the Irish Nation'' as "...strange but impressively learned and detailed". In 1878 ''The Trias Thaumaturga; or, Three Wonder-Working Saints of Ireland'' appeared, telling the lives of saints Patrick,
Columba Columba or Colmcille; gd, Calum Cille; gv, Colum Keeilley; non, Kolban or at least partly reinterpreted as (7 December 521 – 9 June 597 AD) was an Irish abbot and missionary evangelist credited with spreading Christianity in what is toda ...
and
Brigit Brigid ( , ; meaning 'exalted one' from Old Irish),Campbell, MikBehind the Name.See also Xavier Delamarre, ''brigantion / brigant-'', in ''Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise'' (Éditions Errance, 2003) pp. 87–88: "Le nom de la sainte irlandais ...
. She issued ''Cloister Songs and Hymns for Children'' in 1881, and wrote verse. She published more than fifty works, chief among which are ''A Student's History of Ireland''; ''Lives of Daniel O'Connell, St. Patrick, St. Columba, and St. Bridget''; ''The Pilgrim's Way to Heaven''; ''Jesus and Jerusalem''; and ''The Book of the Blessed Ones''. Her two autobiographies are ''The Nun of Kenmare'' (1888) and ''The Story of My Life'' (1893).


Notes


References

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External links

* *
Biography of Sister Margaret Anna Cusack

Excerpt from ''Women's Work in Modern Society''


{{DEFAULTSORT:Cusack, Margaret Anna 1829 births 1899 deaths Anglican nuns Converts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism Converts to Anglicanism from Roman Catholicism Founders of Catholic religious communities Irish women writers Poor Clares Sisters of Saint Joseph People from Coolock People from Nottinghamshire 19th-century Irish nuns 19th-century Irish women writers 19th-century Irish writers Protestant Irish nationalists