After serving as a teacher and choral director in the Twin Cities and North Dakota, Sister Ann Thomasine Sampson embarked on a new career, writing the history of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet in the Twin Cities.
Sampson, whose books and articles revealed lost history of the order to which she belonged, died on Aug. 18 at her Bethany Convent home in St. Paul. She was 93.
In 1970, she was organizing records and documents at St. Joseph's Academy in St. Paul, preparing for its closing. She thought to check the attic, where she found ledgers dating to the school's founding in 1851, when it was named St. Mary's School.
It was a "eureka" moment, and she dove headlong into researching the school's and the order's history along the Mississippi River.
Pioneering Sisters of St. Joseph, whose headquarters are in St. Louis, Mo., made the trip to St. Paul on a riverboat 160 years ago, so Sampson hitched rides on barge-lugging towboats to get a feel for what they experienced.
Among her publications, she wrote journal articles, crafted an oral history project and, in 2000, wrote "Seeds on the Ground," the biographies of 16 pioneer sisters.
"She didn't do anything half-heartedly," said Sister Joan Mitchell of the Sisters of St. Joseph in St. Paul. "She was a kind of renaissance woman, with a rich curiosity."
Her biographies told the lives of past leaders known and revealed others' service, once lost to history, said Mitchell.