Life at Carthage: Rituals, Observances, Routines


First-person account of life at Carthage from Sister Magdalen Pancratius, recorded in 1951

Read the sisters' Christmas letter, 1950


Living at the Carthage site were four groups:

  • The Sisters of the Good Shepherd, vowed religious  referred to  as  "Mothers," along with postulants and novices who aspired to become Sisters.  
  • The Magdalens,  a contemplative community supervised by the Sisters of the Good Shepherd.  Magdalens were not able to become Good Shepherd Sisters. They made annual, temporary vows  over a 10 year period, after which they could make make perpetual vows.  They were known for fine embroidery, sewing altar linens and vestments, and making altar breads.
  • The "children"--the term used for the girls and women cared for and educated at Our Lady of the Woods.  These included
    • penitents or the reformatory class,  sometimes called "problem" or "delinquent " women and girls, or "fallen women and girls," as they were listed in the Benevolent Institutions Censuses of 1904 and 1910 . 
    • dependents, also known as the preservate or preservation class, sent to the facility due to destitution or unfavorable home conditions. 

According to Phillips, "the terms penitent class or preservate class were used routinely in the nineteenth century, but were phased out and finally eliminated during the late 1930s to prevent the girls’ developing a sense of stigma associated with being considered a 'bad girl.'" (p.  139)

The delinquent and dependent classes lived separately.   The institution served both black and white girls of both classes;  in the early to mid-twentieth century, the races were housed separately and had separate entrances to the Chapel.  Photographs from the late 1940's and later show mixed race groups engaging in various activities.

Daily Life and Routine

Though the typical daily activity schedule varied between facilities, the following schedule excerpted from the 1948 Vista Maria Handbook for students in Detroit, Michigan, may have been close to that observed by girls at  Carthage.

  • 6:00 A.M. Rising
  • 6:30 A. M. Mass
  • 7:00 A.M. Breakfast
  • 7:30 A.M. Duties as assigned and recreation
  • 8:30 to 11:45 A.M. Academic subjects
  • 12:00 to 1:00 P.M. Lunch and recreation
  • 1:00 to 4:00 P.M. Vocational subjects (referred to as “employments”)
  • 4:00 to 5:30 P.M. Recreation (Band practice 4:30 to 5:30 P.M.)
  • 6:00 P.M. Dinner
  • 8:00 P.M. Study hour
  • 9:00 P.M. Bedtime

(cited in Phillips, Education for Girls in the House of the Good Shepherd, 1940-1980, p. 175, note 580, from Handbook in the Sisters of the Good Shepherd Archive)

The girls had age-appropriate housekeeping chores such as laundry and ironing, meal preparation and cooking, gardening, housecleaning, and sewing. (Phillips, p. 134)  Like most Good Shepherd schools, the Carthage facility operated a commercial laundry and sewed embroidered clothing to supplement its income. As at other rural institutions, its gardens and small animal farms provided food for the residents. The girls contributed manual labor as part of their re-education process. (Phillips, p. 21) "Commercial laundries in the Good Shepherd schools were progressively closed because the mandatory requirements for school attendance decreased the time available for the girls to work" (Phillips, p. 183) and this appears to have been the case at Carthage, though the date the commercial laundry closed is not known.

Next section: Music, Recreation, Vocational Training

Sisters of the Good Shepherd outside Girls' Town Chapel

Sisters of the Good Shepherd outside Girls' Town Chapel

Novices outside Girls' Town Chapel

Novices outside Girls' Town Chapel

Sisters at Christmas at Girls' Town

Sisters at Christmas at Girls' Town

Sisters at Christmas at Girls' Town 2

Sisters at Christmas at Girls' Town 2

Group Photo of 40 Students, Early Teens and Younger, outside Chapel

Group Photo of 40 Students, Early Teens and Younger, outside Chapel

Carthage Buildings and Landscape

Carthage Buildings and Landscape

Group Photo of 16 Adolescent School Girls outside Chapel

Group Photo of 16 Adolescent School Girls outside Chapel

Group Photo of 21 Girls and Women outside Chapel

Group Photo of 21 Girls and Women outside Chapel

Christmas Card, 1950

Christmas Card, 1950

Girls' Town Choir

Girls' Town Choir

Post Camera Records Life of Candidate for Sisterhood: Image 1

Post Camera Records Life of Candidate for Sisterhood: Image 1

Post Camera Records Life of Candidate for Sisterhood: Image 2

Post Camera Records Life of Candidate for Sisterhood: Image 2