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(1926-2023)
Associate Madeline Clark was born on January 18, 1926, in Hartford, Connecticut. She was the daughter of the late Charles and Madeline (Neigle) Beyer and the youngest sister of Charles Beyer, Rosalie Alden and Constance McDougall.
Madeline attended East Hampton High School in Connecticut and graduated in 1944. While raising her three sons in the early 1960’s, Madeline served as a parish secretary for more than 15 years. She was a member of the parish education commission and a CCD teacher who worked with junior high students preparing them for Confirmation. She was also an active member of the National Council of Catholic Women for more than ten years.
In 1977, Madeline and her family moved from Connecticut to Adrian, Michigan and she became the Residential Life Assistant Director at Siena Heights College. While working, she attended Siena Heights College and graduated with a degree in Psychology in 1982 and continued to take courses in religious studies. Madeline took a job as a Psychiatric Technician at Herrick Stress Center in Tecumseh, Michigan and eventually became the Director of Mental Health Services.
Madeline became interested in Associate Life with the Adrian Dominican Sisters in 1981. She was mentored by Sister Mary Carmelia O’Connor, OP, and supported by Sister Jean Cecile Hunt, OP, and Sister Mary Phillip Ryan, OP.
Madeline had a keen interest and passion for social justice. She was also faithful to a strong call to serve others. When asked why she wanted to become an Associate with the Adrian Dominican Sisters, Madeline was quoted as saying, “I want to deepen my faith, strengthen my prayer life, and be involved with those who are working for peace and justice. I want to grow as a minister.”
In addition to Madeline’s three sons, William, Thomas, and James, she had five grandchildren, eight great-grandchildren, and several nieces and nephews.
A funeral liturgy was celebrated for Madeline on February 21, 2023, at St. Patrick Church in East Hampton, Connecticut, followed by a burial in St. Patrick Cemetery.
Madeline Clark cherished the opportunity to work, pray and gather with the Adrian Dominican Community. She was engaged in letter writing campaigns for social and political action issues and she assisted at various Great Lakes Dominican Chapter Assemblies. Her long and faithful commitment to living the Dominican Charism is an example to all who knew and loved her. May her memory be a blessing!
(1924 - 2023)
In May 2002, Sister John Norton Barrett was honored by the St. Thomas More Society in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, with the Archbishop Edward A. McCarthy Award. Local attorney James D. Camp III, making the presentation at the society’s annual Red Mass Reception, said in his remarks:
Someone once said that 100 years from now, it will not matter what kind of car we drove or what was in our bank account, but 100 years from now the world may be a better place because we were important in the life of children. Sister, there are numerous lawyers here, including myself, who you personally taught, counseled, disciplined, loved and, ultimately, assisted in our graduating from St. Thomas Aquinas High School, and we are honored to have been one of your students. Those lawyers, many of whom are in this room tonight, along with the entire St. Thomas More Society, would like you to know this evening that, at a critical point in our young lives, as future lawyers, and in the lives of countless other students, we are grateful that you were important to us.
Catherine Elizabeth Barrett, the future Sister John Norton, was born in Detroit on December 18, 1924, to Edward and Marianne (“Minnie”) Norton Barrett. Edward, who made his living as an electrician, was a Detroit native, while Minnie was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Catherine was the fifth of seven children, all the rest of whom were boys: John Norton, Edward, Allan, James, Robert, and Ralph. John Norton died of pneumonia when Catherine was a sophomore in high school, and it was his name that Catherine would take in religious life.
In her autobiography, Sister John Norton remembered her Depression-era childhood as a simple one in a neighborhood with many children in it. She and her brothers all attended St. Catherine School, where they were educated by the Immaculate Heart of Mary (IHM) Sisters from Monroe, Michigan, and she graduated from St. Catherine High School in 1942.
An inclination toward religious life was put on hold as she went to work, first for the J.L. Hudson Co. for a short time and then for Metropolitan Life Insurance. A year after Catherine took the Metropolitan Life Insurance job, Minnie had a serious stroke and Catherine left her position in order to look after the household duties. At some point during this time, she took a part-time job working weekends as a salesperson for Sears, Roebuck & Co.
Read more about Sister John Norton (PDF)
Memorial gifts may be made to Adrian Dominican Sisters, 1257 East Siena Heights Drive, Adrian, Michigan, 49221.
Memorial Mass at St. Thomas Aquinas High School
On Saturday, April 1, 2023, a memorial Mass for Sister John Norton Barrett was hosted at St Thomas Aquinas High School in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where Sister John Norton was Principal for 50 years. The video recording is now available for viewing. The liturgy begins at the 12-minute mark.
Leave your comments and remembrances (if you don't see the comment box below, click on the "Read More" link).
(1949-2023)
Associate Karen Marie Hagen was born on July 15, 1949, and grew up in Hazel Park, Michigan with her mother, father and two brothers. She attended St. Justin Elementary School and St. Rita’s High School in Detroit. Karen was raised in a Catholic home, and she recalls that she knew of God’s presence in her life at a very early age.
Karen served in the United States Navy, working as a Dental Technician, and then attended Eastern Michigan University, graduating with a BA in Education and a MA in Educational Leadership. She went on to study at Michigan State University, obtaining a MA in Labor and Industrial Relations. She also studied Criminal Justice. Obtaining her certification as an online teacher provided Karen the opportunity to become an adjunct faculty member at Lansing Community College. In 2010 Karen enrolled in the Spiritual Direction Internship Program through the Dominican Center for Religious Development.
Karen had a long and impressive employment history, and she held various positions in the State of Michigan, working as a Human Resources Specialist in the Department of Mental Health and for the Michigan State Police. She became an Academic Team Leader at Lansing Community College and was a member of the adjunct faculty, teaching courses in Labor Relations, Principles of Management, and Human Resources Management. Additionally, Karen has served as a spiritual director, facilitated prayer services in her parish, served as a Eucharistic Minister, and taught religious education.
Being a mother and grandmother were important roles to Karen. She was devoted to her son Bill and his wife Jenn and their three children, Henry, Harrison, and Scarlett. She also considered her circle of women friends her family as well as her two brothers and their families.
Adrian Dominican, Sister Janet Kubiak, OP, aunt, and Godmother of Karen, introduced her to the Congregation and Associate Life. On August 3, 2013, Karen became an Adrian Dominican Associate, mentored by Sister Joan Meerschaert, OP.
Karen described her call to Associate Life in the following words:
I have always felt a call to a deeper relationship with God and so it was natural for me to look to the Adrian community for inspiration, leadership, and guidance. We are meant to be in community, and I am excited to begin my study of the Dominican tradition!
Karen certainly exemplified living the Dominican Charism in her life. She was a person of prayer, committed to study and learning. She loved being in community and she considered her life a vocation to serve others.
We entrust Karen Marie Hagen to God’s loving care. May her memory be a blessing.
(March 23, 1937 - February 2, 2023)
My joy and trust are great because of the One who loves me and calls me to be with Him, wherever He is. My final profession ring given to me by my parents is half of my mother’s wedding band. As I wear it, I feel wrapped in my parents’ love and commitment to God and to life in all forms.
All I can say over and over are the words of love in return for love: “Amen, Come Lord Jesus, Come.” They are the words inscribed in my final profession ring which I wear, and in my heart as well.
Sister Molly Anne Nicholson, who concluded her autobiography with these paragraphs, was born in Detroit on March 23, 1937. Her father, Mark Nicholson, a plasterer by trade, was born in Portadown, Northern Ireland, and came to the U.S. in early 1900. He returned to his homeland for a time in 1923, and there he met and married Sarah Jane McAlinden of Craigavon.
All seven of the children were given Irish names: Bridget (called Gael), Patrick, Terrance Arthur, William Dermot, Thomas Emmett, James Malachy, and Molly Anne, the youngest of the Nicholson clan. Gael entered the Congregation when her little sister was six years old, so Molly grew up with her five brothers.
She was named after her maternal grandmother and was very proud of that fact and of her Irish heritage. Mark and occasionally Jane regaled their children with Irish stories and taught them the songs of their ancestral home, and step dancing was part of their regular visits to the Irish clubs in Detroit.
Read more about Sister Molly (PDF)
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