Sisters Joan Cahill, de Sales O'Brien, and Mary Xavier Williams from Parramatta, New South Wales, established the Sisters of Charity in Tasmania. They set up their convent in the presbytery in Harrington Street behind St Joseph's Catholic Church opposite the site where they would open St Joseph's Orphanage.
According to the 1949 Constitution of the Sisters of Charity, the Sister-in-Charge should know each girl in the orphanage and her history personally. The Constitution also emphasised the importance of the girls' health. Diet was supposed to be appropriate for growing children and cleanliness maintained by adequate numbers of baths and toilets. Dormitories had to be well-ventilated. The orphanage was expected to provide regular medical and dental care, and education was 'a sacred duty'. The girls were "to be prepared to live their lives as good citizens on earth, so that they may be worthy of entrance to their true Home - Heaven".
In the 1960's the Sisters of Charity started to provide new forms of care for children, operating cottage care at St Joseph's Child Care Centre, and opening Family Group Homes in Tasmania,
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Last updated:
03 August 2022
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/tas/TE00062
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
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