Does Mary Mackillop Had More Than 6 Siblings? Where Was She Baptised And Done Canonisation?

Mary Mackillop was an Australian religious sister recognized by the Catholic Church as St. Mary of the Cross.

Despite being a Melbourne, she is most renowned for her work in South Australia. Mary Mackillop has seven siblings and was the eldest of her seven siblings.

She co-founded the Sisters of St. Joseph of the Sacred Heart with Julian Tenison-Woods, a congregation of religious sisters who developed several schools and welfare organizations across Australia and New Zealand to focus on education for the underprivileged in rural areas.

How Many Siblings Did Mary Mackillop Have? 

Mary Mackillop was born in Australia to her parents, Alexander Mackillop and Flora MacDonald.

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Mary Mackillop was the eldest of eight children and was brought up in the Fitzroy neighborhood of working-class Melbourne.

Mary has seven younger siblings: Peter, Margaret, John, Annie, Alexandrina, Donald, and Alick. Donald trained as a Jesuit priest and served the Northern Territory’s Aboriginal population.

In Melbourne, Lexie joined the Good Shepherd Sisters. Before immigrating to Australia, MacKillop’s parents resided in Roybridge, Inverness-shire, Scotland.

Mary Mackillop’s father, Alexander MacKillop, started his studies for the priesthood when he was twelve years old and traveled to the Scots College in Rome two years later.

He also studied at Blairs College in Kincardineshire but left at the age of 29, just before he was scheduled to be ordained. He immigrated to Australia and arrived in Sydney in 1838.

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Where Was Mary Mackillop Baptised?

Mary Mackillop was baptised as Maria Ellen Mackillop on January 28, 1842. Mackillop was born on January 15, 1842, in Brunswick Street in Fitzroy, Melbourne.

Mackillop got her education from her father and private schools. She made her First Holy Communion at age of nine years old on August 15, 1850. Mackillop began working as a clerk at a Melbourne stationery store at the age of 16.

To support her impoverished family, Mary accepted a position as a governess in 1860 at the Penola, South Australia, home of her aunt and uncle, Alexander and Margaret Mackillop Cameron, where she was to care for and educate their children.

She also included the other farm kids on the Cameron estate because she was determined to assist the poor wherever possible. Before agreeing to take a position instructing the kids of Portland, Victoria, in 1862, MacKillop lived with the Camerons for two years.

Later, she worked as a teacher at the Portland school. In 1864, she founded the Bay View House Seminary for Young Ladies, now Bayview College, and welcomed the rest of her family.

Mary Mackillop Canonisation

Mary Mackillop’s canonization was announced on February 19, 2010, and the public ceremony for it was held in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican on October 17, 2010.

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She was the first Australian to receive saint status from the Catholic Church. The Brisbane Roman Catholic Archdiocese honors Mary Mackillop as its patron saint.

The Australian federal government declared that it was guarding the use of Mackillop’s name for commercial purposes in the week before she was canonized.

The canonization of Mackillop was commemorated on an official postage stamp from Australia Post.

Many people, especially in Australia, celebrate Mackillop in various ways. Many colleges and an electoral district in South Australia are named after her.

The Sisters of St. Joseph engaged one of Australia’s top rose growers in 1985 to create the Mary Mackillop Rose.

In 2008, the Royal Australian Mint published the first coin in its “Inspirational Australians” series, featuring Mackillop.

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