In Memoriam


(1930-2016)

Mary Rebecca Garcia, Associate, one of six children, was born in a coal mining camp in northern New Mexico on September 13, 1930 to Manuel and Clara Garcia. She described her parents as “family oriented, loving, caring, hard working people” who raised their children in the Catholic faith and sent them to Catholic schools.

Growing up in a mining camp made a significant impact on Rebecca. Although her parents were not well educated, they made certain their children were and taught them the value of faith and leadership. Her father, a union leader, was eventually elected to the New Mexico Legislature, where he championed the cause of coal miners.

Rebecca attended St. Patrick’s Academy, staffed by the Sisters of Mercy. After high school she attended the College of St. Mary in Omaha, Nebraska, and eventually completed her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from New Mexico Highlands University. She earned a PhD in curriculum and instruction from the University of New Mexico.

Rebecca’s career was always in education. She started as a high school teacher in journalism, English, and business and, in time, became a school counselor and worked in school administration. Rebecca worked for the New Mexico State Department of Education, the Zuni Public Schools as Director of Instruction, the Los Lunas Schools as Assistant Superintendent, and St. Mary’s School in Belen as principal.

In total, Rebecca worked for more than 45 years in education. She believed that all children have the capacity to become productive adults, and her role was to foster an environment and stimulus to help children learn.

When she was 26, Rebecca married Edward Lutz. Tragedy struck this couple as, after 15 years of marriage, Edward was killed in a car accident. They had wanted children but, unfortunately, were not given that opportunity.

About the different hardships in her life, Rebecca shared the following: “Although I have had some disappointments (losing my husband, no children, losing my parents), I am basically a happy, positive, and goal oriented person. I feel that God has given me many gifts and I am happy to be an active member of my parish.”

Rebecca enjoyed travel, music, books, and gardening and she doted on her many nieces and nephews. After Edward’s death in 1971, Rebecca pursued her lifelong goal of becoming an airplane pilot. In 1972, she received her commercial and private licenses and purchased a plane, which she used to fly all over the state and beyond. She participated in flying competitions and was elected president of the Albuquerque 99’s, founded by Amelia Earhart for women in aviation. She had a really close call once and ended up gliding her plane to land on the interstate.

Rebecca met Sister Charlotte Moser, OP, at her parish, San Clemente, and was mentored by her and Sister Daria Herbella, OP. She was welcomed to Associate Life in May 1999 and was very active, renewing her commitment several times. Rebecca Garcia Lutz was an amazing woman, who was fully engaged in life through her many organizations, her parish, her community and her family, as well as the Dominican Family.

The final years brought health challenges, and Rebecca died on May 11, 2016.

Leave your comments and remembrances (if you don't see the comment box below, click on the "Read More" link).

 


(1926-2016)

Sister Ann de Lourdes Plourde, baptized Laurel Ann, was born on October 19, 1925, in Detroit. She was the oldest of the five children born to Gordon and Gertrude (Stindt) Plourde. Her parents were of French and German ancestry from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan. Her father was a corporate attorney and her mother a school teacher before they married.

In her autobiography, Sister Ann wrote:

After they were married five of [my mother’s] sisters came one by one to work in Detroit and live in our home until they married or left again. Occasionally Grandma or Grandpa lived with us and we enjoyed the comparative luxury of having help with the dishes and having our clothes ironed beautifully. The increasing demands of a family of five children and occasionally a grandparent did not put us in what is modernly called ‘the upper bracket.’ 

make a memorial giftRead more about Sister Ann de Lourdes Plourde (pdf)

Leave your comments and remembrances (if you don't see the comment box below, click on the "Read More" link).

 

Save

(1932-2016)

Sister Barbara Bieker was born in her grandmother’s house in Chehalis, Washington, on October 2, 1932. She was the second of three children born to Thomas Andrew and Ruby Alice (Handy) Bieker. In an article entitled, “I Need to be Ready for Anything,” Sister Barbara shared the following information about her family and childhood.

I have an older brother Jim and a younger sister Rosemary. When I was a young child, my family moved to Onalaska, Washington, where my public school education began. My family attended Mass sometimes at St. Joseph’s in Chehalis where I first met the Dominican Sisters [Congregation of Holy Cross]...I was impressed by their kindness. It was at this time that I first wanted to be a teacher. 

When I was a junior in high school, the Sisters came from [their Motherhouse in] Everett to teach summer vacation school. Sister Mary Jean Dorcy and Sister Agnella Graf invited and encouraged me to finish my senior year at Holy Angels High School in Seattle, which I did.

Read more about Sister Barbara (pdf)

make a memorial giftMemorial gifts may be made to Adrian Dominican Sisters, 1257 East Siena Heights Drive, Adrian, Michigan, 49221. Funeral arrangements are being handled by Anderson Funeral Home, Adrian.

 

Leave your comments and remembrances (if you don't see the comment box below, click on the "Read More" link).

 


(1914-2016)

Joy is the echo of Christ’s life within us. 

Baptized Kathleen Phillips, Sister Maura was born on April 25, 1914, in Defiance, Ohio. She was the third and last child born to James and Catherine (O’Donnell) Phillips. “I was blessed,” Sister Maura wrote her in autobiography, “with a wonderful mother and father. I never remember hearing an unkind word in our home.” She went on to describe her family.

My father, a strict puritanical Protestant, was born in Ada, Ohio, in 1877. He taught in the local school and later moved into the telephone business in Norwalk, Ohio, where he met and married my mother. My mother would never divulge the year she was born – not even for her grave marker. She used to say, ‘We are related to the kings of Ireland,” whatever that meant, since every proud Irishman loved to make the same boast. My father joined the Church in order to marry my mother.

Read more about Sister Maura (pdf)

make a memorial giftMemorial gifts may be made to Adrian Dominican Sisters, 1257 East Siena Heights Drive, Adrian, Michigan, 49221. 

 

Click on the "Read More" link below to leave comments and remembrances.

 


Cemetery of the Adrian Dominican Sisters

Our Adrian Dominican cemetery with its circular headstones is a beautiful place of rest for women who gave their lives in service to God — and a peaceful place for contemplation and remembrance. 


Helpful Links

Event Recordings (Video Library)

Dominican School Alumnae/Alumni

Become an Adrian Dominican Associate

What do you have to do to become a Sister?

Share our blog, A Sister Reflects

Sign up for the monthly Veritas newsletter (or view our other publications)

Employment opportunities

 


We invite you to meet some of the wonderful women who have recently crossed into eternity.

2024

Recent Posts

Read More »