PIUS VI
Found in 7 Collections and/or Records:
Article: The Bishop's Invitation by B. McBriarty, in The Banner, 1954, 03/01/1954
Article: The Bishop's Invitation by Barbara McBriarty about the founding of Carmel in America. The article is in The Banner, Vol. 21, No. 7, dated March, 1954, published by the Congregation of the Resurrection, Chicago, IL.
Articles: Buying Dulaney Valley Estate; History of MD Carmel, 1958, 04/18/1958
Two articles from The Catholic Review, 04/18/1958, entitled: Carmelites Buy Dulaney Estate and History of the Maryland Carmelites.
Basilica of the Assumption: History & Description, C. Cuyler, 1951
Notes: The Foundation of Baltimore Carmel, ca 1935
Notes: The Foundation of the Baltimore Carmel, typescript, ca 1935, containing mention of The Pious Guide, Bishop Gross' sermon in 1874, statistics on U. S. foundations, religious and secular names of the four foundresses and those who entered Carmel at Port Tobacco, Discalced Carmelite Nuns in the United States (lists the foundations), and a necrology 1904-1927. No author, but authorized by Mother Seraphim.
Rule and Constitutions, in Spanish, 1816
Regla Primitiva Y Constituciones De Las Religiosas Descalzas De La Orden De La Gloriosisima Virgen Maria Del Momte Carmelo, Confirmadas Por N. SS. P. Pio Papa VI En 12 De Mayo De 1786. Con Las Licencias Necesarias. Valencia, Por D. Francisco Brusola, Impresor De Camara De S. M. Ano 1816. This edition of the Rule and Constitutions from Valencia, Spain includes the Papal Bull of Pius VI and Comemoraciones que se han de hacer al fin del Capitulo Conventual.
Serial Story: The Carmelite Order: Its Beginnings, ca 1960
Serial Story About The Carmelite Order: Its Beginnings. The Holy Land, Europe and Maryland in four installments and concerning raising funds for the new Carmel. Typescript, 15 pages.
Sermon: On the 150th Anniversary of Carmel in America, Oct 20, 1940, 10/20/1940
Sermon: On the Occasion of the One Hundred and Fiftieth Anniversary of the Coming of Carmel to Maryland. Delivered at the Shrine of the first Carmel, Charles County, Maryland, Sunday, October 20, 1940; no author, typed manuscript, 18 pages. Includes a list of the religious and secular names of the four foundresses and those who entered Carmel at Port Tobacco and a list of foundations in the United States.