25 reels of microfilm.
Contractual restrictions may apply.
Inventory arranged by series.
Officially called St. Joseph's Society of the Sacred Heart, a community of priests founded in Mill Hill, England, 1866. In 1871, four Mill Hill Fathers came to the United States to work with freed slaves; in 1893 the American community separated from the English and the two flourished independently.
Records of the American Province, 1872-1904; copy and letter press books, 1872-1898, with letters sent by John R. Slattery, SSJ, Provincial (1878-1883), Rector of Saint Joseph's Seminary in Baltimore (1884-1893), and first Superior General of the American Josephite Community (1893-1904); correspondence of Alfred B. Leeson, SSJ, Provincial (1883-1893); Slattery correspondence (1884-1904); annual reports of Josephite institutions and societies sent to Slattery; records of Saint Joseph's Seminary and Epiphany School, 1884-1963, including novitiate journals, faculty minutes, student journals, and other records; announcement books of Saint Francis Xavier's Church in Baltimore, 1869-1882; directory of priests with their assignments, 1913-1956; private papers and journals of Slattery and Louis B. Pastorelli (Josephite Superior General 1918-1942); and minutes of Josephite Washington regional meetings, 1928-1931; with transcriptions of the letter books, indexes, and a short history of the Josephite Fathers. Also microfilm of Josephite periodicals, including, The Colored Harvest, 1888-1960; The Josephite Monthly, 1900-1916; The Josephite Mission Monthly, 1916-1918; and St. Joseph's Advocate American Supplement, 1883-1894.
Source: Josephite Archives, Baltimore, Maryland.