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1,499 Results Found
  • Sr. Rosemary Empen

    Educator, missionary

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Rosemary (Aemilia) Empen, 88, died March 2 in Footville, Wisconsin.

    Born in Rochelle, Sister Rosemary made her first religious profession in 1957 and her perpetual profession in 1960. She was a teacher, principal, missionary, pastoral minister and director of a cultural center, and she served in Illinois, New York, Nebraska, Wisconsin and Mississippi, and in Bolivia.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, Sister Rosemary taught at St. Basil (1957-1962).

    She is survived by three sisters: Shirley Modjallal, Phyliss Gibson and Carol Glenn; and two brothers:  Joseph Empen and Ronald Empen.

  • Sr. Cecile Matushek

    Educator, health care administrator

    Daughter of Charity Cecile Matushek, 81, died in Bridgeton, Missouri, March 14.

    Born in Chicago, Sister Cecile graduated from Aquinas High School in 1958 and entered the Daughters of Charity in 1959.

    Sister Cecile served in education for the next 28 years in Missouri and Louisiana, during which she earned a master’s degree in education administration.

    After completing another master’s degree in pastoral studies from Loyola University in New Orleans, Sister Cecile began working in health care in Texas.

    She is survived by her sister, Elissa Rose Oldaker.

  • Sr. M. Concetta Petrauskas

    Educator, guidance counselor

    Sister of St. Casimir M. Concetta Petrauskas, 101, died March 14 in Lemont.

    Born in Pennsylvania, Sister Concetta made her first profession of vows in 1943 and her perpetual vows in 1948. She ministered for 64 years in Illinois, Nebraska, Ohio and Pennsylvania as a teacher and guidance counselor.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, Sister Concetta taught at Providence of God (1943-1945), All Saints (1951-1952) and Maria High School (1956-1962). 

    Beginning in 2014, her final ministry was that of prayer and presence at Franciscan Village, Lemont.

  • Sr. Helen Diane McGuirt

    Educator, counselor

    Adrian Dominican Sister Helen Diane (Ina Marie) McGuirt, 82, died March 18 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Chicago, she graduated from Aquinas High School and was in the 64th year of her religious life.

    Sister Helen Diane ministered in education, as a religious education coordinator, pastoral minister and counselor in Ohio, Illinois, Minnesota, Virginia and Kentucky.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at Queen of Angels (1965-1966); Bishop Quarter, Oak Park (1966-1968); and St. Columbanus (1968-1972).

    She became a resident of the Dominican Life Center in 2012.

    Sister Helen Diane is survived by a sister, Mary Ina Otten.

  • Sr. Kathleen Conlin

    Educator

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Kathleen (Mary Bernard) Conlin, 89, died March 19 in Hazel Green, Wisconsin.

    Born in Wisconsin, Sister Kathleen made her first religious profession in 1953 and her perpetual profession in 1956. She was a teacher, support staff member and pastoral minister in Wisconsin, Illinois, Minnesota and Indiana.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, Sister Kathleen taught at St. Barnabas (1956-1960).

    She is survived by two sisters, Mary Ries and Patricia Thiesenhusen, and a brother, Bernard “Joe” Conlin.

  • Sr. Mary Kathleen Dowling

    Educator

    Sister of St. Joseph of Carondolet Mary Kathleen Dowling, 71, died March 20 in Fenton, Missouri.

    Born in Des Moines, Iowa, Sister Mary Kathleen entered the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet in 1972 and was received into the novitiate in 1973.

    Sister Mary Kathleen ministered in education, teaching in Colorado, Missouri, Michigan and Illinois.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at Nativity of Our Lord (1984), St. Fidelis (1985-1990), St. Philomena (1990-2005) and St. Helen (2005-2021). Sister Mary Kathleen retired in 2021 and moved to St. Louis in January.

  • Sr. Imelda Goska

    Educator

    Sister of St. Joseph-Third Order of St. Francis Imelda Goska, 95, of Bartlett, died March 22.

    She entered religious life in 1942 from St. Barbara Parish (Throop Street).

    She ministered in education and service to her community in Chicago as well as in Indiana and Colorado.

     

  • Fr. William B. Gubbins

    Pastor emeritus

    Father William B. Gubbins, 92, died March 14. He was pastor emeritus of St. John Berchmans Parish.

    Born in Chicago, Father Gubbins attended St. Philip Neri School, Quigley Preparatory Seminary and the University of St. Mary of the Lake/Mundelein Seminary before being ordained in 1955.

    Father Gubbins’ first assignment was as assistant pastor at Holy Name Cathedral for nine years before serving in the same role at Our Lady of Knock, Calumet City; St. Nicholas, Evanston; and St. Sylvester. He was associate pastor of Our Lady of Mercy; Divine Providence, Westchester; and St. Aloysius.

    After a five-month stay in Israel to study Scripture, Father Gubbins became pastor at Queen of Martyrs Parish, Evergreen Park. In 1992, he became pastor at St. John Berchmans, where he served until 1999. He received the title of pastor emeritus when he retired.

    Father William Corcoran, pastor of St. Elizabeth Seton Parish in Orland Hills, lived at the parish with Father Gubbins for about eight years.

    “He was 92 going on 60,” said Corcoran, who remembered his friend as thriving and being mentally sharp in his final years. Even after retirement, Father Gubbins heard confessions, celebrated Masses, and facilitated Bible studies, Corcoran added. “He was incredibly kind, a good listener and always serving people.”

  • Deacon Richard Flam

    Class of 1996

    Deacon Richard Flam, 87, died Dec. 4 in San Antonio. He was ordained in 1996 and served at St. Marcelline, Schaumburg.

    Born in Chicago, Deacon Flam worked in computer systems for 43 years. He loved the Cubs and playing golf, and collecting and building model cars and airplanes. After retirement he moved to Tucson, Arizona, and volunteered for many years at the Pima Air and Space Museum.

    Deacon Flam was preceded in death by his wife, Ruth, who died Dec. 1. He is survived by his children Julie Copeland, Christine Ballo and Mary Knox; and two grandchildren.

  • Deacon R. Michael Ruffner

    Class of 1992

    Deacon R. Michael Ruffner, 80, died March 15 in Florida. He was ordained in 1992 and served at Immaculate Conception (North Park Avenue) and at Mary,  Seat of Wisdom Parish in Park Ridge.

    Deacon Ruffner grew up in Chicago and attended Lakeview High School. He married his high school sweetheart, Sue Walker, and they had three children before his wife died at the age of 23. In 1977, he met his wife Jan through Naim, a group for widows and widowers, and they married in 1978, bringing together his three children and Jan’s son Edward in one family.

    Deacon Ruffner worked briefly for Illinois Bell and then American Can Co., before starting his own business, Can Serv, in which he was active even after formally retiring to Florida in 2004.

    While in Florida, he continued his diaconate ministry in the Diocese of St. Petersburg.

    Deacon Ruffner is survived by his wife of 44 years, Jan; his children Susan, Sean and Mike; and nine grandchildren. His son Edward predeceased him.

  • Fr. John T. Richardson

    DePaul University president, chancellor

    Vincentian Father John T. Richardson, 98, died March 29 in Missouri.

    Father Richardson served as president of DePaul University from 1981 to 1993, leading a major expansion of the institution, and he was chancellor from 1993 to 2017.

    “Father Richardson’s leadership of DePaul resulted in growing our national reputation, while expanding our engagement in the city of Chicago and deepening our commitment to the university’s Catholic, Vincentian, and urban mission,” DePaul President A. Gabriel Esteban said. “He was a visionary leader, whose impact on our university will endure, and he will be missed by all in the DePaul family.”

    He joined the university in 1954 as dean of the graduate school, and from 1955 to 1970, he taught in the law school, teaching dozens of future Cook County judges and Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley.

    Father Richardson’s presidency marked a period of intense growth of DePaul’s community involvement in Lincoln Park, the Loop and all of Chicago. Hallmarks of his time with the university include increasing DePaul’s appeal to students across the country, strengthening the university’s Vincentian commitment to its urban community and developing the diversity of DePaul’s faculty, staff and student body.

    In 1997, he went to Kenya to teach in the Vincentian seminary there, returning to DePaul in 2010.

  • Sr. Johanna Marie Shainauskas

    Educator

    Sister of St. Casimir Johanna Marie Shainauskas, 88, died Feb. 13 in Lemont.

    Born in Chicago, Sister Johanna Marie made her first profession of vows in 1952 and her perpetual vows in 1957.

    She ministered in California, Pennsylvania and Illinois as a teacher, assistant principal, principal and director of student services.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, Sister Johanna Marie taught at All Saints (1952-1954); St. Bartholomew, Waukegan (1954-1956); St. Norbert, Northbrook (1959-1963); Immaculate Conception (44th Street) (1963-1964); Nativity BVM (1964-1965); and Providence of God (1971-1976), where she served as principal from 1976 to 1977.

    She was a receptionist at Holy Cross Hospital while teaching music at Immaculate Conception from 1988 to 1989. At Maria High School, she taught Spanish and served as director of student services (1990-1999).

    After she retired from education, Sister Johanna Marie served as secretary and receptionist at Nativity BVM Parish.

  • Sr. Patricia Erickson

    Educator, nurse

    Adrian Dominican Sister Patricia Laverne (Michael Dominic) Erickson, 79, died Feb. 14 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Wisconsin, she was in the 61st year of her religious life. Sister Patricia ministered in education and as a nurse, and in service to her congregation. She served in Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, Alabama, Texas, California, Florida, and Puerto Rico, and in Nicaragua, the Bahamas and the Dominican Republic.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Denis (1961-1965), St. Rita (1967-1969) and Our Lady of Loretto, Hometown (1970-1972) and was a nursing assistant at Little Company of Mary Hospital, Evergreen Park (1972-1973).

    Sister Patricia Laverne became a resident of the Dominican Life Center in 2021.

    She is survived by her sister, Nancy Revell, and her brother, Michael Erickson.

  • Sr. Monice Kavanaugh

    Director of diaconate program

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Monice Kavanaugh, 83, died March 16 in Hazel Green, Wisconsin.

    Born in Chicago, Sister Monice attended several Catholic elementary schools, including St. Simon; St. Brendan; Little Flower; St. Leo; and Ascension, Oak Park; before attending Trinity High School, River Forest.

    She made her first religious profession in 1958 and her perpetual profession Aug. 5, 1961. She was a teacher, served her congregation, and was a pastoral minister and director of the diaconate formation program for the Archdiocese of Chicago. She served in Wisconsin, New York and Illinois.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, Sister Monice taught at Queen of Peace, Burbank (1966-1976), where she also served as the chair of the Christian Living Department. She was a pastoral associate at St. Fabian, Bridgeview (1976-1984), and at Immaculate Conception Parish (1991-1999), and was the director of formation for the permanent diaconate formation program for the archdiocese (1984-1991).

    Sister Monice served as a member of the Resources for Mission Team for the Sinsinawa Dominican Congregation while living in Chicago (2011-2017) and ministered with the House of Connections and the Learning Center in Chicago (1999-2014), providing adult education and literacy programs and serving the center as executive director, employment counselor and program director.

  • Deacon Norbert Ciesil

    Class of 1992

    Deacon Robert Ciesil, 94, of Schaumburg, died March 2. He was ordained in 1992 and served at St. Alphonsus Liguori, Prospect Heights, and St. Hubert, Hoffman Estates.

    He is survived by his wife, Harriet; and his children Mary Schroeder, Donna Fladd and James Ciesil; five grandchildren; and three great-grandchildren.

  • Sr. Grace Gianella

    Educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Grace (Susan Angela) Gianella, 80, died Jan. 13 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Michigan, she was in the 61st year of her religious life.

    Sister Grace ministered in elementary education, as a pastoral associate and in administration in Illinois, California and Colorado.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Rita (1962-1967) and Saint Maria Del Popolo, Mundelein (1967-1971).

    She is survived by her brother, Michael Gianella.

  • Sr. Anna Mae Kelly

    Educator

    Adrian Dominican Sister Anna Mae (Neal Joseph) Kelly, 88, died Jan. 13 in Adrian, Michigan.

    Born in Chicago, she graduated from St. Thomas the Apostle High School. She was in the 69th year of her religious life.

    She ministered in elementary education and as a chaplain in Michigan and Illinois.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, she taught at St. Mary Star of the Sea (1970-1972), St. Mary of Mount Carmel (1972-1975) and St. Clare of Montefalco (1975-1976); was a tutor at Alexander Smith (1977); directed the learning center at Blessed Agnes (1977-1984); taught at St. David (1984-1985), Bridgeport Catholic Academy (1985-1986), St. Gall (1986-1987), Providence of God (1987-1988), St. Casmir (1988-1989), Epiphany (1995-1997), and St. Benedict, Blue Island (1997-1998); and was a preschool teacher at St. Ailbe (1998-2002).

  • Sr. Maria Oppriecht

    Educator

    Sinsinawa Dominican Sister Maria (Maria Goretti) Oppriecht, 91, died Feb. 26 in Hazel Green, Wisconsin. Born in Wisconsin, Sister Maria made her first religious profession in 1951 and her perpetual profession in 1954.

    She was a teacher, school guidance counselor, pastoral minister and Reiki practitioner in South Dakota, Oklahoma, Illinois, Minnesota and Wisconsin.

    In the Archdiocese of Chicago, Sister Maria taught at Sts. Faith, Hope and Charity, Winnetka (1956-1961), and St. Thomas of Villanova, Palatine (1967-1969).

  • Sr. Dorothy Kunze

    Educator

    School Sister of Notre Dame Dorothy Kunze, 90, died March 2 at Maple Glen Memory Care Center in Glen Ellyn.

    Born in Chicago, she was a member of the School Sisters of Notre Dame for 70 years.

    She served as an elementary school teacher and administrator in Indiana, Wisconsin and Illinois and was on the province staff as secretary, office manager, finance bookkeeper and transportation coordinator.

  • Fr. Thomas J. Mescall

    Pastor

    Father Thomas J. Mescall, 74, died Feb. 1. He was the former pastor of St. Adrian Parish.

    Born in Chicago, Father Mescall attended St. Leo School and Leo High School. He went on to the University of Albuquerque, New Mexico, and graduated in 1973 from the John Marshall Law School, now known as University of Illinois Chicago School of Law.

    Prior to entering the seminary, Father Mescall practiced law in Albuquerque until 2000, serving as a judge for 17 years in municipal, district and probate courts. He married and had two children, and after his divorce, his marriage was nullified.

    Father Mescall always felt a pull toward priesthood and in 2000, he entered the Sacred Heart School of Theology in Hales Corners, Wisconsin. He was ordained to the priesthood in 2004.

    Father Mescall served the Archdiocese of Chicago as associate pastor of St. Terrence Parish, Alsip, and St. Denis Parish. He was also chaplain of the Catholic Lawyers Guild of Chicago and served as pastor at St. Adrian Parish until he retired in 2018.

    He is survived by his son, Thomas J. Mescall II; his daughter, Regina Ann Mescall; four grandchildren; his brother, James Mescall; and his dear and faithful friend, Mary Molina Mescall.

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