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  1. History of St. Elizabeth Seton Church. Saint Elizabeth Seton is a parish community founded on faith, nurtured in love, and dedicated to stewardship that returns God's gifts in a spirit of thanksgiving. Established on May 17, 1984 by Archbishop John F. Whealon, ...

  2. Summary. Elizabeth Bayley Seton is the first native-born US citizen to be made a Roman Catholic saint. Canonized in 1975, Seton founded the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph, the first vowed community of Catholic women religious created in the United States. Seton’s sainthood marked the culmination of a role she first served during her life: a ...

  3. www.encyclopedia.com › history › encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-mapsSeton, Elizabeth Ann | Encyclopedia.com

    Seton, Elizabeth AnnBorn August 28, 1774 (New York, New York) Died January 4, 1821 (Emmitsburg, Maryland) Educator, religious leader Source for information on Seton, Elizabeth Ann: Shaping of America, 1783-1815 Reference Library dictionary.

  4. The parish name changed from Blessed Elizabeth Ann Seton to Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton upon her canonization on September 14, 1975. Catholic roots in Shrub Oak soil go far deeper. In 1897 the parish of Saint John the Evangelist was erected on Main Street across from the present library. The bell that summons us to gather as a worshiping ...

  5. St. Elizabeth Ann Seton, sometimes called Mother Seton, the first native-born American citizen to be canonized a saint, was not a "born Catholic." She was the daughter of a wealthy Episcopalian family in New York City.

  6. Brief Life History of Elizabeth. When Elizabeth Seton was born about 1405, in Huntly, Aberdeenshire, Scotland, her father, Alexander Seton, was 24 and her mother, Elizabeth Gordon Heiress of Gordon, was 22. She married Alexander MacDonald in 1425, in Clackmannanshire, Scotland, United Kingdom. They were the parents of at least 3 sons and 4 ...

  7. Can you guess which saint was the first to be born in America? Not many can. If you had told this saint as little girl that she would become Catholic, she probably would have laughed at you. Elizabeth Ann grew up in a very strong Protestant family. They would have very little to do with anyone Catholic. Back then many people would judge you by what religion you were, not by your actions ...