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Entered the Sisters of the Holy Cross from Logan, Utah on July 28, 1946
Initial Profession of Vows on August 15, 1952
The holiness of Sister Mary Byrnes was practical, immediate, and helpful throughout her life. Though she folded her hands in prayer, she also set her hands to doing all that makes a house a home, or an institution a community. Sister died at Saint Mary’s Convent, Notre Dame, Indiana, her home and community since June 2005.
Violet Mary Byrnes was named for her mother, Violet Mary Eliason, a woman who gave birth to 12 children, one having died at birth. Her younger sibling, Sister Viola Marie (Marigold Katherine Byrnes), was also a Sister of the Holy Cross and predeceased her on November 5, 2012. Their father, Michael Byrnes, was a devout Catholic raising his children in Logan, Utah where the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints predominated. In his efforts to support his family he was described variously as a machine shop worker, laborer, and beekeeper. His wife was a woman of tremendous faith, “although she had no particular religion” until she converted to Catholicism. Having grown up in a large boarding house run by her parents, Mrs. Byrnes nurtured her children in a faith of good works, instilling in them confidence to manage a household and care for the sick, without benefit of degrees in home economics, culinary arts, or medicine. Mrs. Byrnes passed on her home remedies using nature’s gifts of honey, vinegar, and olive oil.
Violet Mary, the daughter, attended public schools in Utah until her last two years of high school, graduating from Saint Mary of the Wasatch in Salt Lake City where she was influenced by the Sisters of the Holy Cross and applied to the Congregation soon after graduation in 1946. She was known as Sister Henry during her years as a teacher in Catholic elementary schools throughout California from 1952-1968. She then returned to her baptismal name and kept only her middle name, Mary.
Sister Mary Byrnes was best known for her helping hand where she served in many ancillary roles. One of the Latin titles for the Blessed Mother in Catholic tradition has been Ancilla Domini, Handmaid of the Lord. Sister Mary’s litany of practical roles in community included: sacristan, housekeeper, infirmarian, driver, seamstress, office assistant. She especially enjoyed her time ministering with sisters and lay staff of Madonna Manor, Salinas, California where she was a compassionate companion to elders in the facility sponsored by the California Catholic Daughters of America, 1995-2003. Sister Mary was also a gardener. In California she won ribbons at the state fairs in Monterey County and later in Ventura when she was missioned at Saint Catherine by the Sea (2003-2005). There Sister raised African violets and roses and sold her sweet peas to a local florist. Due in part to Sister Mary, God’s beauty was found on earth and now in heaven.
You are invited to make a donation in Sister’s name at the Sisters of the Holy Cross Ministry with the Poor Fund at www.cscsisters.org.
Kaniewski Funeral Home is handling arrangements for services at the Church of Our Lady of Loretto, on Thursday, January 17, 2019: 9:00 a.m. Visitation; 10:15 a.m. Prayers, Memento, followed by a Mass of the Resurrection at 10:30 a.m.. Burial will take place in Our Lady of Peace Cemetery, St. Mary's College, Notre Dame, IN.
To send flowers to the family or plant a tree in memory of Sister Mary Byrnes, C.S.C., please visit our floral store.