| Margaret
Haughery
Margaret Haughery, "the mother of the orphans",
as she was familiarly styled, b. in Cavan, Ireland, about
1814; d. at New Orleans, Louisiana, 9 February, 1882. Her
parents, Charles and Margaret O'Rourke Gaffney, died at Baltimore,
Maryland, in 1822 and she was left to her own resources and
was thus deprived of acquiring a knowledge of reading and
writing. A kind-hearted family of Welsh extraction sheltered
the little orphan in their home. In 1835 she there married
Charles Haughery and went to New Orleans with him. Within
a year her husband and infant died. It was then she began
her great career of charity. She was employed in the orphan
asylum and when the orphans were without food she bought it
for them from her earnings. The Female Orphan Asylum of the
Sisters of Charity built in 184O was practically her work,
for she cleared it of debt. During the yellow fever epidemic
in New Orleans in the fifties she went about from house to
house, without regard to race or creed, nursing the victims
and consoling the dying mothers with the promise to look after
their little ones. St. Teresa's Church was practically built
by Margaret, in conjunction with Sister Francis Regis. Margaret
first established a dairy and drove around the city delivering
the milk herself; afterwards she opened a bakery, and for
years continued her rounds with the bread cart. Although she
provided for orphans, fed the poor, and gave enormously in
charity, her resources grew wonderfully and Margaret's bakery
(the first steam bakery in the South) became famous. She braved
General Butler during the Civil War and readily obtained permission
to carry a cargo of flour for bread for her orphans across
the lines. The Confederate prisoners were the special object
of her solicitude.
Seated in the doorway of the bakery in the heart of the city,
she became an integral part of its life, for besides the poor
who came to her continually she was consulted by the people
of all ranks about their business affairs, her wisdom having
become proverbial. "Our Margaret" the people of
New Orleans called her, and they will tell you that she was
masculine in energy and courage but gifted with the gentlest
and kindest manners. Her death was announced in the newspapers
with blocked columns as a public calamity. All New Orleans,
headed by the archbishop, the governor, and the mayor attended
her funeral. She was buried in the same grave with Sister
Francis Regis Barret, the Sister of Charity who died in 1862
and with whom Margaret had cooperated in all her early work
for the poor. At once the idea of erecting a public monument
to Margaret in the city arose spontaneously and in two years
it was unveiled, 9 July, 1884. The little park in which it
is erected is officially named Margaret Place. It has often
been stated that this is the first public monument erected
to a woman in the United States, but the monument on Dustin
Island, N. H., to Mrs. Hannah Dustin who, in 1697, killed
nine of her sleeping Indian captors and escaped (Harper's
Encyclopedia of American History, New York, 1902) antedates
it by ten years.
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