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Doherty, Catherine de Hueck, 1896-1985 (Personal Name)

Preferred form: Doherty, Catherine de Hueck, 1896-1985
Used for/see from:
  • De Hueck, Catherine, 1896-1985
  • Hueck, Catherine de, 1896-1985
  • De Hueck Doherty, Catherine, 1896-1985
  • Hueck Doherty, Catherine de, 1896-1985
  • Kolyschkine, Catherine, 1896-1985
  • Kolyshkina-Dokherti, Ekaterina, 1896-1985
  • Dokherti, Ekaterina Kolyshkina, 1896-1985

Friendship House, 1946: title page (by Catherine De Hueck)

Wild, Robert A. Love, love, love: the "Little mandate" of Catherine de Hueck Doherty, 1989: CIP title page (Catherine de Hueck Doherty) book title page (Catherine de Hueck Doherty) page x (born August 15, 1896; died December 14, 1985)

NLC, May 22, 1986 (Doherty, Catherine de Hueck, 1900-) NLC February 22, 1996 (Doherty, Catherine de Hueck, 1896-1985)

They called her the Baroness, 1995: CIP title page (Catherine de Hueck Doherty)

Istorii russkoĭ strannit︠s︡y, 1999: title page (Ekaterina Kolyshkina-Dokherti)

Doherty, Catherine de Hueck. Essential writings, 2009: title page (Catherine de Hueck Doherty) page 20 (born Catherine Kolyschkine in Nizhni Novgorod on August 15, 1896; she herself said that she was born "around 1900"; passport records bear the date of 1896) back cover (Catherine de Hueck Doherty (1896-1985); Russian-born aristocrat who has recently been proposed for canonization; dedicated her life to promoting "the gospel without compromise"; committed to social justice, she founded Friendship House in Harlem; she was Roman Catholic but drew on her Russian roots to nourish her spirituality) pages 11-12 (she fled the Russian Revolution, first to Finland, then to England, where she converted to Catholicism in 1919; in 1921, she moved to Toronto and in 1924 to New York; she opened Friendship House in 1938) page 13 (died December 14, 1985, in Combermere, Ontario)

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