Daughters of Mary of the Immaculate Conception


The Daughters of Mary of the Immaculate Conception is a pontifical apostolic institute of women religious founded in 1904 by the Right Reverend Monsignor Lucyan Bojnowski.

History

Born in Poland, Bojnowski was pastor of Sacred Heart Parish, one of the oldest Polish-American Roman Catholic parishes in New England. He saw the need to provide basic social services to the growing Polish immigrant families in New Britain.
In 1904, Bojnowski made an appeal for members of the parish to help care for orphans, and eight women of the Children of Mary Society responded. An orphanage was started in a rented building on Orange Street. In the 1920s, Our Lady of Rose Hill Orphanage was built on top of a hill overlooking forty acres of farmland Bojnowski had purchased north of Broad Street. The farm that included crops, cows, pigs, chickens and Msgr. Bojnowski's beehives. There was an annual bus trip to Lake CompounceAmusement Park every summer. In 1970 the orphanage was converted to a day-care center.
The Sisters began teaching in the parish and elsewhere, such as Our Lady of Czestochowa School in Harrison, New Jersey. They founded a high school, Mary Immaculate Academy, in New Britain. In 1925, the Sisters established St. Lucian's Home for the Aged. The community became a diocesan institute in 1929, and later pontifical institute.

Present Day

The congregation's administrative office is located in New Britain, Connecticut. They have apostolates in New York City, Cambridge, Boston, and New Britain, where most of the Sisters now reside. The community's apostolates include teaching, caring for the aged, child care and hospital work.
In recent years, in conjunction with Eversource Energy and Ecosolar, solar panels were installed in three fields. St. Lucian's Home for the Aged went online in 2017, resulting in a savings in operating costs.