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Our Heritage and Story
3. Sr M Ignatius Hayes: Mission
search 1859-1872
- Jamaica
- Orleans; Rome
- Sevres, Franco-Prussian War period
- St Thomas (West Indies)
Jamaica

The vessel Atrato which carried Hayes
to Jamaica in December 1859
(Provided by the Greenwich Maritime
Information Centre)
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Elizabeth (Sr M Ignatius) Hayes, standing on the deck of the Atrato,
thought that her mission in Jamaica would satisfy her yearning to serve
God in the poor and under-privileged. A woman who knew Elizabeth well,
looked at her with astonishment and asked, “Why are throwing away
your life in the West Indies?” The significance of these words
- recorded by Elizabeth in her diary - is better understood if one realizes
that this new missionary was a highly intelligent literary woman, well
educated and very gifted.
Hayes’ missionary dream was to become - as she later described
it – ‘a kind of slow torture process’. Instead of teaching
the children of poor plantation workers of African origin, she was obliged
to give lessons to daughters of wealthy plantation owners. While Elizabeth
delighted in being ‘a Catholic, a religious, a Franciscan’,
she struggled with the rigours of her French-orientated community who
were trying to live ‘enclosure’ in a missionary situation
that required adaptation and change. Hayes tried to cope with the oppressive
heat of Kingston. She hoped to strengthen community life by speaking
out for justice, peace and respect for the Franciscan Rule, yet being
a woman of integrity, she had to be true to herself. In late 1862, having
weighed up her options, her reasons for leaving Jamaica became clear
and she requested permission to seek another mission where she could
live her vowed life more meaningfully. Elizabeth felt unsure of where
God was calling her. She asked herself if it was nearby St Thomas Island,
with Mother Veronica Cordier who had left for France earlier or with
Franciscans in Calais or Paris? After May 1863, Elizabeth with another
sister set out for England; Hayes proceeded onto London then on to France.
Orleans; Rome

View from the Eiffel Tower over the Seine
Photo: Francine Shaw mfic |
Hayes and her Parisian Catholic friends were surrounded daily with Catholic
foreign mission news. The Society of the Foreign Missions of Paris provided
much mission content for publications. Yet Elizabeth knew her initial
steps included engagement in local ministry, establishment of a convent
and the training of young women for foreign missionary work. The Archbishop
of Paris, Georges Darboy, provided suggestions but the offer made by
the famous bishop of Orleans, Felix Dupanloup, pleased her more. In late
July of 1864 Hayes was in Lyon collecting money for her Orleans foundation
but then the bishop questioned the validity of her Glasgow Franciscan
Constitutions.
In September Hayes travelled to Rome to seek definite clarification.
Roman ecclesial authorities decided that a complete revision of the Constitutions
was essential. Hayes accepted the challenge, aware that her French foundation
was impossible without a pontifically approved Franciscan Rule and Constitutions.
During the course of her lonely work, Hayes was requested by the Glasgow
and Bayswater Franciscan Sisters to update and help seek approval for
their respective Constitutions also.
Always an avid reader and very able with pen and ink, Elizabeth set
about her task with confidence. When completed she found it difficult
to hasten Roman ecclesiastical authorities for she was anxious to be
back on a mission field again. Finally, being assured that Pope Pius
IX would sign the approbation of the Rule and Constitutions soon, she
left for France in August of 1866. In the following year her written
work was printed and bound and due to her work Cardinal Barnabo signed
a new Decree for the Glasgow Franciscans and a Rescript for the Bayswater
Franciscans.
Sevres, Franco-Prussian War period

Looking towards Paris from the Pont de Sèvres
today
Photo: Francine Shaw mfic
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Hayes returned to Orleans only to discover that another religious community
had commenced an educational ministry there, so she resurrected a former
plan for Sèvres with the Bishop of Versailles, who gave her ‘a
house, chapel and chaplain’ with his blessing to establish a school
for boarders and a novitiate.

Gold embroidered Mass Vestments
used in the Sèvres’ convent chapel
- held in the Missionary Franciscan Sisters Archives
in Rome
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On 8 December, the feast of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, Mass was celebrated in Sèvres’ convent chapel.
By the 15th, Monsignor Talbot at the Vatican replied in length to Hayes’ letter
from ‘13 Bellevue Avenue, Sèvres, près Paris’.
Hayes had gathered several companions as foundation members of her new
community. The mission needed financial assistance so Hon Fanny Montgomery
collected funds and involved Talbot in the project. Hayes’ proximity
to Paris, with Montgomery’s presence there, provided
her with opportunity to observe French Catholic periodicals, to read
publications from outstanding Catholic writers and to be aware of the
irreligious press that France, like other countries, was producing. Hayes
and her community flourished for over three years until the outbreak
of the Franco-Prussian war when the convent was forced to close and the
community was disbanded.

The Louvre faces Rue St Honore where
Fanny lived
Photo: Francine Shaw mfic |
Hayes, accompanied by three English-born companions, community member
Sr Mary Clare Peet, Hon Mrs Montgomery and Rosalie, a young orphan,
set out toward the French-German border. Railway authorizations testify
that the English group was permitted to travel first to Nancy and then
Saarbrüken.
The horrific conditions under which travellers moved were described
by Hayes’ former Vicar, Butler of Wantage, who was in Germany and
France at this time. Butler wrote regularly to his wife while working
in Cologne, Arlon, around Sedan and in Saarbrüken on a Red Cross
commission. Hayes was also working for the Red Cross and nursed wounded
French soldiers.
They numbered many, many thousands in hospitals, formerly large chateaux,
castles or convents, or in village hotels and homes spread around battlefields.
Hayes and her companions, who ministered just outside Berlin, made their
way to the capital where their ‘Accreditation for Voluntary Care
of the Sick’ was signed on 24 October. In January 1871 they were
given passports, signed by Lord Augustus Loftus, as British subjects
travelling on the continent.

Railway platform at Saarbruken
Photo: Francine Shaw mfic
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Saarbruken Red Cross Headquarters
Photo: Francine Shaw mfic
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Armbands worn by E Hayes
- held in the Missionary Franciscan Sisters Archives,
Rome
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The exact movements of Hayes and her group in Germany and France for
many months remain obscure but it is confirmed that other English groups,
including doctors, nurses, religious sisters and Red Cross volunteers,
helped the many wounded soldiers. Hayes and Montgomery observed people
and events during the outbreak of the Kulturkampf (religious
persecution) and they witnessed the necessity for and power of the Catholic
press. It appears that Franciscanism and literary interests guided some
of Montgomery and Hayes’ activities in 1871. Both women were committed
to Franciscanism and writing while Montgomery’s wealth and influence,
plus the presence of Sisters in Franciscan habits, facilitated their
common interests. Wherever Hayes and her companions moved in 1871, they
obviously kept away from Paris where the Commune brought about the massacre
of thousands of citizens and was directly responsible for the deaths
of Archbishop Darboy and five Jesuits.
St Thomas (West Indies)
Events of this historic period were profoundly influential; for Hayes
in early 1872, it was time to follow her missionary vision again. She
accepted the invitation of a Belgian Redemptorist, Fr Louis de Buggenoms,
to go to the West Indies again, this time to the Island of St Thomas.
Hayes and Peet arrived in the port of St Thomas where passengers were
quarantined; unfortunately Hayes was given a room in which the former
occupant had died from yellow fever and she became very ill. Conflicting
comments about numerous difficulties at the mission have circulated over
the years but the outcome at the time was that Hayes and Peet withdrew
and headed for New York.
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