America’s first saint helps ease the way for Seattle’s Italian community

Sep 01, 2015 780

by Rita Cipalla

In 1903, several national figures made their way to the shores of Puget Sound, no easy feat at the time. In April of that year, John C. Olmstead, stepson of landscape designer Frederick Law Olmstead, arrived to plan out the city's parks and boulevards. In May, President Teddy Roosevelt stopped by on his grand tour of the American West.

A lesser-known but nonetheless influential visitor arrived in Seattle that year as well. She was Maria Francesca Cabrini, later known as Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini. Cabrini visited Seattle three times during her lifetime, ministering to the city's sick and poor, with a special focus on its Italian immigrants.

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Fonte: L'italo-Americano

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