Another American woman is up for canonization, having lived in a very hard time in the United States.SERVANT OF GOD MARGARET MARY HEALY-MURPHY was born in 1833, to Jane Murphy Healy and Richard Healy in Cahersiveen, County Kerry, Ireland. When she was only five years old her mother died in childbirth, and over the next few years, Margaret watched her family and the rest of Ireland struggle to survive the ravages of famine.
Amazingly, Margaret Mary
was a relative of Daniel O'Connell, who worked politically to end slavery through the British Parliament system, as her own family would later own
slaves in America. Her father was a doctor who helped the poor in the
neighboring regions of Cahirciveen.
Margaret immigrated to America with her
father when she was 12. Her father died shortly after their arrival. She
accompanied her brothers, aunts, and uncles when they made their way across
several southern states and eventually to Mexico, where they operated a hotel.
She met John Bernard Murphy in Matamoros, Mexico. He had been stationed there while working as a volunteer in General Zachary Taylor's army. They married in Matamoros in 1849 in the Matamoros Cathedral. In 1850 the couple settled in Corpus Christi, where John owned a ranch and worked as a lawyer. The Murphys also owned slaves who worked on the ranch.
One of the patients Margaret tended to was Mrs. Delaney who entrusted her daughter, Minnie, to Margaret’s care. Margaret and John Bernard adopted Minnie and sent her to a boarding school in New York with the Sisters of St. Mary of Namur. They also adopted Margaret’s goddaughter, Lizzie, who had lost her mother as well. Upon graduation, both girls entered the religious life with the Incarnate Word and Blessed Sacrament Sisters.
In 1875, John was invited as a representative
at the First Constitutional Convention for Texas, held in Austin. When
he returned, he was persuaded to run for mayor of Corpus
Christi, which he held from 1880 to 1884.
When John died in1884, he left Margaret Mary with a fortune, which she decided to put to good use, helping others. She started a tuberculosis hospital in Corpus Christi. After a few years, she moved to San Antonio. In 1887, responding to a plea from the bishops during the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore, she was inspired to use her own finances to build the first black Catholic Church and school in the city.
With racial prejudice prevalent, she struggled with securing finances to sustain her project and maintain a stable faculty. In 1893, with the blessing of Bishop John C. Neraz, Margaret founded a new religious congregation, the Sisters of the Holy Ghost, now known as the Sisters of the Holy Spirit and Mary Immaculate. These sisters supported Margaret’s mission of working with the poor and people of color.Mother Margaret Mary Healy-Murphy died on August 7, 1907, leaving behind 15 sisters, two postulants and three missions. Even today, her congregation continues “manifesting the compassion of Jesus to the poor” in the United States and Zambia.
On June 28, 2022, Archbishop
García-Siller announced his intention to formally open the diocesan phase
of investigation into the life of Mother Margaret Mary Healy-Murphy.



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