The Four Sisters of Charity were four American educators. Loyola Ritchie, Rebecca Delone, Felicia Fenwick and Sister Rosaline Brown. The four women rebuilt Detroit's school system, educating 600 children in schools founded in 1844 and 1859. In 1845, they founded St. Vincent's Hospital, the first hospital in Michigan and the Northwest Territory. A second hospital, St. Mary's was constructed in 1850, and the following year the first outpatient clinic in Michigan, and the second in the nation. They also created the Michigan State Retreat for the Insane, the first private psychiatric hospital in Michigan, and The House of Providence, a home for unwed mothers and their children.[1]
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1990–1999 |
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1990 | |
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1991 | |
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1992 | |
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1993 | |
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1994 | |
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1995 |
- Yolanda Alvarado-Ortega
- Irene Auberlin
- Hilda R. Gage
- Lucia Voorhees Grimes
- R. Louise Grooms
- Odessa Komer
- Laura Freele Osborn
- Jacquelin E. Washington
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1996 | |
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1998 | |
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1999 | |
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2000–2009 |
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2000 | |
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2001 | |
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2002 | |
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2003 |
- Mary Agnes Blair
- Verne Burbridge
- Nellie Cuellar
- Alice Scanlan Kocel
- Joyce Lewis Kornbluh
- Eliza Seaman Leggett
- Ida Lippman
- Marion 'Babe' Ruth
- Bernice "B" Steadman
- Pamela Withrow
- Ruth Zweifler
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2004 | |
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2005 | |
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2006 | |
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2007 | |
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2008 |
- Carol Atkins
- Patricia Cuza
- Carol King
- Vicki Neiberg
- James Johnston Schoolcraft
- Leta Snow
- Mary Francilene Van de Vyver
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2009 | |
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2010–2019 |
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2010 | |
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2017 | |
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