Our country in story . e another St. Paul, became all to all. Every-one, the great and the lowly, the good and the bad, therich and the poor, the learned and the unlearned, feltat ease in his presence. His virtues, his dignity, andhis mildness won all hearts. The zealous Bishop entrujted the education of younggirls and the care of the sick and the orphans to religiouswomen of the various pioneer Sisterhoods—the Carmel-ites, the Visitation Nuns, and the Sisters of Charity. Togive his Catholic boys and young men an opportunity ofreceiving an education right at home without endanger-ing their fai


Our country in story . e another St. Paul, became all to all. Every-one, the great and the lowly, the good and the bad, therich and the poor, the learned and the unlearned, feltat ease in his presence. His virtues, his dignity, andhis mildness won all hearts. The zealous Bishop entrujted the education of younggirls and the care of the sick and the orphans to religiouswomen of the various pioneer Sisterhoods—the Carmel-ites, the Visitation Nuns, and the Sisters of Charity. Togive his Catholic boys and young men an opportunity ofreceiving an education right at home without endanger-ing their faith, he opened a college at Georgetown in ON THE BANKS OF THE POTOMAC 167 1791. St. Marys Seminary at Baltimore, an institutionfor the training of young men for the priesthood, wasopened in the same year. When the httle college of Georgetown, now a Univer-sity and the oldest Catholic seat of learning in the UnitedStates, was yet surrounded by a white-washed picketfence, it was one day honored by a visit from President. GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY Washington. On dismounting from his horse, the greatman was warmly welcomed by the professors and shownthrough the building. He admired the grand view whichthe college enjoys from its beautiful heights. Just thenan icy winter breeze sweeping by made the party shiverand Washington remarked: I see you have to purchasethe beauties of nature in summer by the winters Carrolls flock, consisting of all the Catholicsof the entire United States, numbered about fifty thou-sand and was scattered over an immense territory ex- 168 OUR COUNTRY IN STORY tending from Maine to Florida and westward to of travel being so few and slow, it was well-nighimpossible for the good Bishop to locate his people andminister to their wants with the few priests he the French Revolution, known as the reignof terror, caused a great number of French priests toseek refuge from persecution in America. These zealousexiles were men of gr


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