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Pere marquette agnes repplier biography

          Agnes Repplier's 'Père Marquette: Priest, Pioneer and Adventurer' delves into the life and exploits of the French Jesuit missionary who played a crucial role in the exploration of the Mississippi River and the Great Lakes region during the 17th.

        1. Agnes Repplier's 'Père Marquette: Priest, Pioneer and Adventurer' delves into the life and exploits of the French Jesuit missionary who played a crucial role in the exploration of the Mississippi River and the Great Lakes region during the 17th.
        2. #5, in U.S. Colonial Period History.
        3. Born in France in , Marquette became a Jesuit at the age of Possessing a keen desire for adventure, coupled with a true missionary's compassion and a.
        4. Father Pere Marquette, S.J., a Jesuit Priest in the early 's on the North American Continent, gained the confidence of the Indians, not only with his.
        5. On the 10th of June, , there was born of a proud and ancient line in a proud and ancient little city of France Jacques Marquette, destined.
        6. Born in France in , Marquette became a Jesuit at the age of Possessing a keen desire for adventure, coupled with a true missionary's compassion and a.!

          Agnes Repplier

          American essayist

          Agnes Repplier

          BornPhiladelphia
          DiedDecember 15, 1950(1950-12-15) (aged 95)
          Philadelphia
          Resting placeSaint John the Evangelist church, Philadelphia
          Notable worksIn Our Convent Days (1905), Points of Friction (1920)

          Agnes Repplier (April 1, 1855[1] – December 15, 1950) was an American essayist.

          Early years

          She was born in Philadelphia in 1855,[2] of French and German extraction,[3] and was educated at the Convent of the Sacred Heart, Eden Hall at Torresdale, Philadelphia, and later at the Agnes Irwin School.

          Repplier was reportedly expelled from two schools for "independent behaviour" and illiterate until the age of ten.[2] She received mentoring in writing by a nun who was herself a noted writer, Mary Paulina Finn, who published books, poetry and plays under the pseudonym M.

          S. Pine.[4]

          Career

          Despite her school experiences, she became one of A