Cave of Candles
A Cave of Candles / by Dorothy V. Corson



The Dove represents the Living God sent down to be with us.


“The Best and the Last”


The two mysterious letters I chanced upon in Fr. Corby’s correspondence became the catalyst that sent me down another “road less traveled” looking for more evidence. The first of these two letters was handwritten and undated. It was drafted by Fr. John Zahm and appears to have served as a model for the second letter, dated March 28, 1895 which was modified and mutually agreed upon, by the Superior General of the Congregation of Holy Cross (Fr. Gilbert Francais, C.S.C.) and Mother Superior General, (Mother M. Augusta, C.S.C.) of the Sisters of the Holy Cross. It was then sent to His Excellency, Monsignor Satolli, Apostolic Delegate, to be submitted to the authority of the Propaganda [a committee of cardinals established by the Pope Gregory XV in 1622 to supervise foreign missions].

These two, seemingly misplaced, letters in Fr. Corby’s files also supplied the names of those directly involved before and after Fr. Sorin’s demise: Superior General Fr. Gilbert Francais, Mother General Augusta, Fr. Corby, Provincial; Fr. Walsh, President and Fr. Zahm, vice president of Notre Dame; Bishop P.J. Hurth, Bishop of Dacca; Monsignor Satolli; and Cardinal Simeoni.

Working backwards in Fr. Corby’s correspondence also brought forth the names of others involved. Mother Ascension in charge of the Sisters of the Holy Cross on the campus of Notre Dame, who, in poor health herself, tended Fr. Sorin during his last days when he was dying in his Presbytery rooms and Sr. M. Cherubim who watched over Mother Ascension throughout the ordeal as her health began to decline as well. Also, Professor James F. Edwards and Father Daniel E. Hudson, whose correspondence with the Sisters was a special comfort them.

Professor James F. Edwards took charge of the Lemonnier Library after the death of Father Auguste Lemonnier, President of the University. It was Father Lemonnier who brought the first library, which he named the Circulating Library, into existence at Notre Dame. Before he died, in 1874, he wisely appointed Professor James F. Edwards to take charge of the library which was named the Lemonnier Library after his death. Professor Edward’s attention to detail and the preservation of documents may explain why many of the letters he received during this crisis survived to document this story. Father Daniel E. Hudson was the editor of the Ave Maria which was started by Sorin and published at Notre Dame.

The first letter, written by Mother Ascension, describes the election of 1889. Similar sentiments exchanged throughout the last two years of the conflict -- following the deaths of Fr. Walsh, Fr. Granger and Fr. Sorin in 1893 -- are contained in excerpts from just a small portion of those letters of evidence I collected. I will conclude these excerpts with a complete transcript of the history-making letter mentioned in the first paragraph that became Fr. Corby’s Favor Granted.

Fr. Sorin was to die in the midst of the turmoil, never to know whether his beloved University would survive what was deemed the worst threat to its continued existence. He died in the Presbytery, where his rooms overlooked the Presbytery gardens which were created for him.


Rome and “The Sisters Question . . .”

An excerpt from one of the first letters to surface alludes to impending problems on the Notre Dame home front. It was written to Professor James Edwards by Mother Ascension, in charge of the Sisters of the Holy Cross at Notre Dame, who were ever loyal to Fr. Sorin. She is speaking of the result of the 1889 elections of the Sisters of the Holy Cross at St. Mary’s. The following letters have been placed in chronological order.

The letters of this type began to escalate in June of 1893 shortly before Fr. Sorin’s death in October of that same year. Mother Ascension writes again to Prof. J. F. Edwards about the Sisters of the Holy Cross at Notre Dame.

Fr. Walsh’s untimely death on July 17, 1893, and the death of his dear friend Fr. Granger adds to Sorin’s sorrow. Mother Madeleva ended her story when Fr. Sorin died in 1893.



Mother Madeleva’s chronicle ended with these ambiguous words, after Fr. Walsh’s death in 1893. “Before the election of 1895, adjustments had generally been made.” The letters that follow take it from there:


At this point it is obvious that Rome is growing weary of the problem between Notre Dame and St. Mary’s. Now even St. Mary’s is threatened with the removal of the Sisters -- not just from Notre Dame -- but from all their educational establishments in America!



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