Part of highway to be named for
Blessed
Mother Theodore Guérin
By Mary Ann Wyand
A section of U.S. Highway 150 near Saint Mary-of-the-Woods College and the motherhouse of the Sisters of
Providence will be named in honor of Blessed Mother
Theodore Guérin, foundress of the order.
The honorary designation is the result of a resolution
approved by the Indiana House of Representatives last month
during the first regular session of the 112th General
Assembly.
State representatives adopted House Resolution No. 31,
urging the Indiana Department of Transportation to name
part of the highway for Mother Theodore, by voice vote on
March 12.
The resolution was sponsored by Rep. John Gregg of
Sandborn, Speaker of the House, and Reps. F. Dale Grubb of
Covington, Clyde Kersey of Terre Haute and Vern Tincher of
Riley.
Kathy Noland, director of communications and legislative
affairs for the state Department of Transportation, said the
signage will be installed along the highway this summer.
Noland said state highways are most frequently named in
honor of war veterans and people who made significant civic
contributions in Indiana. She said this is the first time that a
Catholic woman religious has been honored in this way.
This honor for Mother Theodore recognizes that “she
was beatified by the pope in 1998,” Gregg said. “I think
with all that the Sisters of Providence have done in our area
as a result of Blessed Mother Theodore coming to our area,
and with the college there, the very least that we can do is
name [part of] that highway after a person who made such
a great contribution to the Wabash Valley and western
Indiana.”
He said the designation also honors the Sisters of Providence
for their “strong characteristics of mercy and justice.”
House Resolution No. 31 calls attention to Blessed
Mother Theodore’s historic contributions to the state after
she “came to pioneer Indiana from her native country France
in 1840 with five other sisters at the request of the bishop of
Vincennes to teach the children of pioneers and establish a
home for the Sisters of Providence northwest of Terre
Haute.”
The resolution also honors Mother Theodore for establishing“a school for girls that would eventually become Saint
Mary-of-the-Woods College, the oldest Catholic liberal arts
college for women in the United States,” as well as other
Catholic schools throughout Indiana.
It also commends the Sisters of Providence for their commitment
to “living the virtues of love, mercy and justice,”
and for their ministries of “adult education, medical assistance,
home rehabilitation and food service programs for the
underprivileged.”
Providence Sister Diane Ris, the congregation’s general
superior, said “Blessed Mother Theodore Guérin gave herself
fully in providing quality education and establishing schools
all over Indiana. To receive this resolution from the Indiana
General Assembly, honoring Mother Theodore’s contributions
to education across the state, is deeply appreciated by
the Sisters of Providence.” †