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Franciscan Sisterhood

9/1/2008:

The grandeur of the plains is more subtle than most landscapes. It appeases the need for simplicity, filled with absences. Quiet, modest, and if one is not accustomed, lonely. However, for a faithful lover of the prairies, it holds not loneliness, but peace. This peace appealed to a group of Franciscan Sisters who made their home in Hankinson, North Dakota, in 1928. On this day in 1926 the location for the Sister’s intended community was selected. The “motherhouse” would be a foundation in the United States where the community of Sisters could receive and train prospective women for future service as educators, seminary leaders, and aids in hospitals and homes across the country.

The Sisters of St. Francis of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, although humbly nestled into the rural landscape of southwestern North Dakota, have a story that reaches across centuries and continents. The convent was the first and only North American Province of the Franciscan Sisters of Dillingen, whose story began in 1241 in Bavaria.

On one lot of land, with a cabbage patch and a meadow along the banks of the Danube, the sisters began their long history of service that would eventually reach North Dakota. Over the centuries, the Sisters combated fires, disease and military sieges, and emerged into the twentieth century facing a new challenge: coming to America.

In 1913, the Sisters were invited to Collegeville, Minnesota, by Abbot Peter Engel. The community of Benedictine monks needed help with the food preparation and laundry services for St. John’s Abbey, as well as the 400 young men that also attended the university there. The sisters in Dillengen willingly accepted the call, and promptly sent 24 sisters across the Atlantic. The promptness was not necessarily driven by the household needs of the St. John’s community, but by escalating tensions in Europe. The first rumblings of World War I were making travel dangerous.

By 1924, the Sisters had outgrown their home in Collegeville and felt the need for a place that was exclusively their own. It was decided by Mother General Laurentia Meinberge of Dillingen that a centrally-located area in the Midwest would be ideal. Reverand Joseph Studnicka of St. John’s Abbey proposed his home town of Hankinson, and the suggestion proved to be a success.

Today, the Hankinson Franciscans are still active. They serve communities across North Dakota and the United States. Other provinces of the same community serve in India, Brazil, Germany and Albania.

“Hankinson ND Centennial”, Hankinson Centennial Committee, 1985

Stutsman County Democrat, September 2nd, 1926

Sisters of St. Francis of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, Obituaries of Sisiter 1916-1996, North Dakota State Archives