She sent an angel

She sent an angel

26 May 1913. Theresa (Cissie) McLaughlin enters Our Lady’s Home and becomes Eileen O’Connor’s

26 May 1913. Theresa (Cissie) McLaughlin enters Our Lady’s Home and becomes Eileen O’Connor’s first volunteer nurse. Cissie was born at Sodwalls, near Lithgow, NSW, in 1890, and educated by the Good Samaritan Sisters at Rosebank College, Five Dock, NSW. Cissie was introduced to Eileen O’Connor by her cousin, Rev. Alphonsus Coen cp, who had asked if she’d like to meet ‘a saint’. Recalling the events several years later, Cissie says that a tremendous joy settled upon her as she waited for the tram after one of her early meetings with Eileen – and that this joy for ‘The Work’ never left her. Eileen replies that she had sent an angel to guide Cissie back to Coogee. Cissie becomes Eileen’s loyal deputy and helps to keep the fledgling community of nurses together during Eileen’s long trip to Europe in 1915. She will become the congregation’s first Superior in 1953 and its first Mother General, positions she will retain until her death on 28 March 1965.

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For further reading, visit our resources page where you can discover more about the Our Lady's Nurses for the Poor, Eileen O'Connor, Fr Edward (Ted) McGrath and the work of the Brown Nurses.
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