Crossings and Dwellings: Restored Jesuits, Women Religious, American Experience, 1814-2014

Using historical maps, books, objects, and textiles, Crossings and Dwellings:  Restored Jesuits, Women Religious, American Experience, 1814-2014 tells the story of European Jesuits and women religious who arrived in America’s borderlands to serve indigenous and immigrant populations.

Resources Available

  • Crossings and Dwellings:  Loyola Library webpage and blog about the exhibition
  • Mapping Crossings and Dwellings:”  Provides a first attempt at visually representing the movements and settlements of Jesuits and women’s congregations after the restorations
  • Exhibition At a Glance:” Images and artifacts from the exhibition
  • Tumblr Blog:  Image-focused live blog of the exhibition
  • Exhibition Galleries
    • Broadsides:  Explores three historic broadsides related to the pres-suppression Jesuits on display in the Crossings and Dwellings exhibition
    • Blaeu Globes:  Focuses on globes created just a few years after the first Jesuit mission to the new world in 1609, the globes represent the world as the early Jesuit missionaries understood it.
    • Pierre Jean de Smet Correspondence:  Explores correspondence from Jesuit missionary in the Midwest in the 19th c., includes map and timeline visualizations
    • Nicolas Point Exhibit:  Guided audio tour, including commentary and text descriptions of sketches by Jesuit missionary to Salish (Flathead), Blackfeet, and Coeur d’Alene peoples
    • St. Ignatius College Library Provenance Project:  Reconstruction of 19th-century Jesuit library now held by Loyola University
  • John Padberg Keynote on the Suppression and Restoration of Jesuits:  Recording of keynote address on youtube
  • “Advanced Digital Methods:  Loyola Library Project:” Graduate-level syllabus related to designing the project

Loyola University Museum of Art, Loyola University Libraries