History & Traditions
Mother Mary Louis was born Mary Ann Crummey in 1852 in Flushing, Queens. Upon the death of her mother in 1860, Mary Ann, along with her younger sister, Ellie, was entrusted to the care of the Sisters of St. Joseph at St. Joseph’s Convent on Main Street and Kissena Blvd in Flushing.
She was elected Superior General of the Sisters of St. Joseph in 1892. She was repeatedly re-elected to this position by her own Congregation of Sisters, ultimately serving in this capacity for a total of 40 years. During the tenure of Mother Mary Louis as Superior, the Sisters of St. Joseph enjoyed tremendous growth and achievement. When Mother Mary Louis took over the leadership of the Congregation in 1892, the number of Sisters was at 300. At the time of her death forty years later, the Order had nearly quadrupled, consisting of more than 1,100 Women Religious.
Mother Mary Louis was a highly regarded woman of her time and worked closely with the male leaders of the Diocese of Brooklyn and Archdiocese of New York including Bishop McDonnell, Bishop Molloy and Archbishop Spellman. Under Mother Mary Louis’ direction St. John’s Hospital in Elmhurst and St. Joseph’s Hospital in Rockaway were both opened and staffed by the Sisters of St. Joseph, as well as 32 elementary and secondary schools and two colleges, mostly in Queens and also in parts of Brooklyn.
In early 1932, Mother Mary Louis began negotiations to open that Academy for girls on the hilltop just above Hillside Avenue at Edgerton Blvd/179th Street. The plans were interrupted, however, when Mother Mary Louis was felled by sudden illness in early April 1932, passing away a month later on May 22nd. The New York Times obituary of May 24, 1932 proclaimed Mother Mary Louis’ work of 40 years, "phenomenal."
The Sisters of St. Joseph took up the plans for their Jamaica Estates Academy deciding to name the school in honor of Mother Mary Louis, a woman of great vision, strength, courage, wisdom and, most of all, faith.
For over eighty five years, the tall, brick school standing on one of the highest hills in Queens has been a distinctive part of the skyline. Despite the increasing number of buildings, it is a landmark that can be seen clearly from the Long Island Railroad trains. This is very appropriate because tradition has it that it was while traveling on the Long Island Railroad in the early 1930’s, Mother Mary Louis, General Superior of the Sisters of St. Joseph, first gazed upon the untouched hilltops of the countryside of Jamaica and selected that as the site for a school. Although Mother Mary Louis passed away on May 22, 1932, her dream of establishing an academy for young women in the Jamaica Estates area lived on in the hearts and minds of her congregation of sisters.
The first students were fifty-seven young women who were greeted by a faculty of eight sisters on the first day of school on September 14, 1936. Classes were held in the Mary Louis Convent adjoining the school while plans for the permanent building were formulated.
The completed school building, housed at the address of 176-21 Wexford Terrace in Jamaica Estates, New York, took shape over a period of two years and finally opened its doors on October 16, 1938.
In the mid-1930’s it was considered a heroic act of faith to establish a school. In the midst of The Great Depression, when the prevailing spirit was one of pessimism, building a school was a statement of belief in the future, and in the contributions of Catholic education to that future. The founders of Mary Louis were women of great faith and vision. They saw the women who graduated from Mary Louis as a force for good in society. The Mary Louis woman would make a difference.
And she has.