Mary Rose Columba Adams

{{Short description|(1832–1891) Dominican prioress}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}

{{Infobox religious biography

| name = Mary Rose Columba Adams

| image = File:MaryRoseColumbaAdams.tif

| religion = Roman Catholic

| order = Dominican

| founder = St Dominic's Priory College, Adelaide and the Church of Perpetual Adoration

| monastic_name = Rose Columba

| birth_name = Sophia Charlotte Louisa Adams

| birth_date = {{birth date|1832|03|21|df=y}}

| birth_place = Woodchester, Gloucestershire, England

| death_date = {{death date and age|1891|12|30|1832|03|21|df=y}}

| death_place = North Adelaide

| resting_place = West Terrace cemetery, Adelaide

| title = Mother

| period = 1856{{ndash}}1891

| consecration = 26 May 1857

}}

Mary Rose Columba Adams (21 March 1832 — 30 December 1891), born Sophia Charlotte Louisa Adams, was an English Roman Catholic Dominican prioress, recognized as a founder of St Dominic's Priory and the Church of Perpetual Adoration in North Adelaide, Australia.

Early life

Adams was born to Anglican parents, James Smith Adams and the former Emma Elizabeth McTaggart, in Woodchester, Gloucestershire. Her parents met and married in India. Her mother died in 1843, and her father in 1860.

At age 19, Sophia Adams converted to Roman Catholicism against family disapproval. She entered the Dominican convent at Stone in Staffordshire in 1856, as a postulant, and took her religious name "Rose Columba" upon profession in May 1857.

Career

As a young religious sister she taught at schools in Stone. In 1860, Sister Rose Columba became vicaress in the community at the Church of Our Lady of the Angels in Stoke-upon-Trent. She was appointed vicaress (later prioress) at St Mary's Church in Torquay in 1866, and served there until 1883. In the summer of 1883, Mother Rose Columba left that work to lead a group of eight overseas to Australia, where Dominican sisters were called to nurse. She kept a journal of the six-week voyage. In Adelaide, the sisters opened a school, embroidered, painted, and cared for the sick, while Mother Rose Columba worked to establish a spiritual component to the community. She designed a Gothic Revival chapel for the convent, but did not live to see it completed.{{cite journal |last1=Vandepeer |first1=Jo |date=2022 |title=The Atelier of the St. Dominic's Priory: cash for beauty and beauty for cash |url= |journal=Journal of the Australian Catholic Historical Society |volume=43 |issue= |pages=82–101}}

Death and legacy

Mother Rose Columba Adams died in 1891, aged 59, from kidney failure, at the convent she founded in North Adelaide. The girls' school she and her group founded in North Adelaide remains in operation as St Dominic's Priory College.

References

{{reflist|refs=

William R. Brownlow, [https://books.google.com/books?id=qPhDAAAAYAAJ Memoir of Mother Mary Rose Columba Adams, O. P.: First Prioress of St. Dominic's Convent and Foundress of the Perpetual Adoration at North Adelaide] (Burns & Oates 1895).

{{Cite AuDB|first=Stephanie|last=Burley|id2=adams-sophia-charlotte-louisa-12767|title=Adams, Sophia Charlotte Louisa (1832–1891)|year=2005|volume=Supplementary Volume}}

[http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/article/164860590 "Obituary: Death of Mother Rose Columba"] Southern Cross (31 December 1891): 7. via Trove

[http://www.stdominics.sa.edu.au/our-college/dominican-heritage.html Dominican Heritage, History and Vision], St. Dominic's Priory College website.

}}

{{Subject bar |portal1= Biography |portal2= Catholicism |portal3= England |portal4= Australia}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Adams, Mary Rose Columba}}

Category:1832 births

Category:1891 deaths

Category:19th-century English people

Category:Converts to Roman Catholicism from Anglicanism

Category:Dominican Sisters

Category:19th-century English Roman Catholic nuns

Category:People from Woodchester

Category:Burials at West Terrace Cemetery

Category:19th-century Australian Christian nuns

Category:19th-century Australian Roman Catholic nuns

Category:Deaths from kidney failure in Australia