Teresa Cowley

Irish Sisters of Mercy nun, Boer war nurse, and educator
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroIrish Sisters of Mercy nun, Boer war nurse, and educator
A.K.A.Mother Mary Teresa Mother Teresa Cowley Kane Cowley Jane Cowley
A.K.A.Mother Mary Teresa Mother Teresa Cowley Kane Cowley Jane Cowley
PlacesIreland
wasNun Nurse Educator
Work fieldAcademia Healthcare Religion
Gender
Female
Birth1852, Dunshaughlin, Meath, Leinster, Ireland
Death28 November 1914Mahikeng, Mahikeng Local Municipality, Ngaka Modiri Molema District Municipality, South Africa (aged 62 years)
Awards
Decoration of the Royal Red Cross 
The details

Biography

Teresa Cowley, RRC, born Jane Cowley (1852 or 1857 – 28 November 1914) was an Irish Sister of Mercy, Boer war nurse and teacher.

Biography

Mother Teresa was born Jane Cowley in Dunshaughlin, County Meath, in 1852 or 1857. She was the daughter of John and Margaret Cowley (née Loughran). On 2 February 1877, she entered the Convent of Mercy in Strabane, County Tyrone. She made her first vows on 8 January 1880, taking the religious name Mary Teresa. She became superior of the Strabane convent in 1894.

Cowley led a group of five sisters in October 1897 from Strabane to South Africa as superior in response to an appeal from the Bishop of Mahikeng, Anthony Gaughran. They arrived in February 1898 and opened their first school. The Second Boer War broke out in October 1899 and Mahikeng was besieged. The convent was requisitioned as a military hospital, with the sisters nursing the wounded. For seven months, they lived in a bomb-proof shelter. Cowley was awarded the Royal Red Cross from King Edward VII on 1 October 1901 in recognition of her service during the war. She also received the South African War Medal.

After the war they rebuilt and reopened the school in 1900, and went on to establish more schools in the area, and they would travel to outlying villages on Sundays to hold classes on religious instruction. The Sisters of Mercy led a campaign to admit students regardless of race, leading to the creation of multi-racial schools. Schools and convents were opened in Braafontein, Mayfair, Minakau, Orange Farm, Pretoria, Soweto, Vryburg and Winterveladt, and a retreat house in Natal. Cowley died on 28 November 1914. She received full military honours at her funeral, with the firing party being from the Bechuanaland Rifles, and is buried in Mahikeng town cemetery.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article on 27 Aug 2024. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.