Henriette Díaz DeLille | |
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Born | New Orleans, Louisiana, United States | March 11, 1813
Died | November 16, 1862 New Orleans, Louisiana, United States | (aged 49)
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Henriette Díaz DeLille, SSF (March 11, 1813[1] – November 16, 1862) was a Louisiana Creole of color and Catholic religious sister from New Orleans. She founded the Sisters of the Holy Family in 1836 and served as their first Mother Superior. The sisters are the second-oldest surviving congregation of African-American religious.
In 1988, the congregation formally opened the beatification process for DeLille with the Holy See. She was of mixed race: her father was a white man from France, her mother was a quadroon, and her maternal grandfather was a white man from Spain.