160-year-old St. Patrick's Convent closing in St. John's - Action News
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160-year-old St. Patrick's Convent closing in St. John's

The last of the nuns are moving out soon, with the building closing in October.

4 nuns established the convent in city's west end in 1856

Presentation Sisters convent closing

8 years ago
Duration 1:08
After operating for more than a century, the Presentation Sisters convent in the west end of St. John's is slated to close.

The St. Patrick's Convent that has served a west end, working class neighbourhood in St. John's for 160 years will soon be no more.

"We have been told the convent will be closing but we haven't been given a date for that,"saidAnne Walsh,executive assistant to the archbishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of St. John's.

They instilled a love of learning and, for me,my mentoring in music came from St. Pat's.- Jacinta Mackey-Graham

The convent's beginnings stretch back to Jan. 10, 1856, when four Presentation Sistersestablished a convent at what was then known asRiverhead, in the city's west end.

The nuns have been also been a presence atSt. Patrick's Parish since it opened a few decades later, in 1882, but all of that will change in about eight weeks' time, when the building closes for good.

Walsh says she doesn't know how many nuns currently live at St. Pat's convent, except to say, "very few, right now".

The Presentation Sisters first set up shop on the west side of St. John's in 1856. (Google Maps)

'A love of learning'

For much of its long history, the convent has been involved in education.

The sisters initially taught both boys and girls at St. Patrick's Convent School,later teaching only girls at the institution, before it finally closed its doors in 1999. The building now houses a private school.

One alumna recalls the "mystery" of the nuns.

"We only saw them in the school setting," said Jacinta Mackey-Graham, who came to the school as a third grader in 1963 and stayed through to the end of Grade 9.

In the early years, she remembers the nunsin their full, old-fashioned uniforms,"where you never saw their hair and it was full, to-the-floor habits.They carried a huge presence."

Anne Walsh says there isn't an exact date on the convent closure just yet. (CBC)

In Grade 3,Mackey-Graham took piano lessons from Mother Gerard Walker and would practice in the passageway that connected the convent to the school.

But when time came for testing, they could go in the convent to practicea big thing for the little girls.

"[It was] something that rarely anybody ever saw,"saidMackey-Graham.

"We got to do our piano practice on the good piano that was in the nun's parlor. And that's where the examiners would come from England for our Trinity College piano examination."

Mackey-Graham,now a retired teacher, music educator, theater director and vocal coach herself, said that environment continues toinfluenceher years later.

"They instilled a love of learning and, for me,my mentoring in music came from St. Pat's," she said.

"The sisters taught us about pride and demand for excellence."

An artisticlegacy

But the convent schoolwasn't just about teaching the ABCs and educating youth in the area.

The nuns also had an impact on the cultural scene in Newfoundland and Labrador, with their emphasis on the arts.

The Roman Catholic archdiocese doesn't have an exact count on the number of nuns still residing at St. Pat's, but says it's "very few." (CBC)

"The music that came out of St.Patrick'sConvent and schoolvocal, choral, instrumental and piano, has been a really significant contribution to the arts life of theprovince," said Walsh.

Even though she didn't attend St. Pat's,she remembers that musicality fondly.

"I went to Mercy Convent and we were always in competition with St. Patrick's," said Walsh.

"[The sisters]had big choirs in those days and we were in fierce competition, but it was wonderful competition to be in, with the beauty of music and choral music."

With the convent closureimminent, no one is commenting onwhat the future holds for the building. The sisters told CBC that an announcement on that will come when the convent closes the end of October.