April 2, 2017, ET Catholic, B section

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Sisters of Mercy mourn the loss of two

A former St. Mary’s Hospital president, Sister Marie Moore, passes away at 84, and Sister M. Placide Kilcoyne dies at 102 By Dan McWilliams

DEACON PATRICK MURPHY-RACEY

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he Sisters of Mercy are in mourning for two of their own who recently passed away. Sister Marie (Consilium) Moore, RSM, a former president of St. Mary’s Memorial Hospital in Knoxville, died March 18 at Physicians Regional Medical Center, the former St. Mary’s Hospital. She was 84. Mercy Sister Mary Placide Kilcoyne, 102, died Feb. 26 at Mercy Convent in Nashville. Sister Marie’s funeral Mass was held at her home parish of St. Albert the Great in Knoxville. “Sister Marie is a very, very important part of the history of St. Albert the Great Parish, a very integral part,” said St. Albert pastor Father Chris Michelson, who presided at the Mass. “I think since Sister Marie joined our parish back in 2008, we’ve never had a funeral that she wasn’t present at, and of course you know she’s present here today. And she’ll be present at every funeral into the future here, as she brings and has shared her spirit so generously with all of us.” Father Tony Budnick, Father John Dowling, Father Jim Haley, CSP, Father Tim Sullivan, CSP, Father Bill Gahagan, and Father Bill McKenzie concelebrated Sister Marie’s funeral Mass, with Deacon Jim Lawson and Deacon Mike Duncan assisting. Marie Frances Moore was born in Nashville in 1933, the first child of Edgar and Elizabeth Moore, both nurses, who eventually had three boys and six girls. Young Marie attended elementary school in Davidson County and then the Cathedral Catholic High School in Nashville, where she met the Sisters of Mercy. On Sept. 8, 1951, Marie entered the Mercy community in Cincinnati. She learned to become a sister and a nurse at Edgecliff College and Mercy Hospital School of Nursing in Ohio. Following her perpetual vows in 1957, as soon as she heard that she passed state boards, Sister Marie (then Sister Consilium) came to St. Mary’s Memorial Hospital in Knoxville. She served as the medical units supervisor from 1957 to 1961, then left to get her masters degree in nursing at Boston College. When she returned, she taught in the St. Mary’s School of Nursing from 1963 to 1965 and became director

Lighting the way The funeral Mass for Sister Marie Moore, RSM, was held at her home parish of St. Albert the Great in Knoxville. Home Health, hospice, psychiatry, and an employee-assistance program. Sister Marie initiated many community-service programs that provided continuing education and support, including the Arthritis Club, Pediatric Orientation, Preparing for Parenthood, the Stroke Club, elderly care programs, and smoking-cessation clinics. Sister Marie was president as St. Mary’s celebrated its 50th anniversary in 1980. In 1983, she was called to serve as regional councilor by the Sisters of Mercy, which required her move to Cincinnati. After seven years, she returned to health-care ministry in Chicago (1991-93), Lake Placid, N.Y. (1994-96), and Paducah, Ky. (1996-2008). Finally in 2008, Sister Marie, at age 75, “retired” and returned to St. Mary’s (then Mercy Health Partners) as mission representative. Sister Marie visited and prayed with patients before surgery or cardiac procedures at Mercy St. Mary’s, Mercy North, Mercy West, LaFollette, Jefferson City, and the Residential Hospice. In his homily at the funeral Mass, Father Michelson mentioned how Sister Marie served out her vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience. “She is to do that by serving the poor, serving the sick, and serving the ignorant,” he said. “I was thinking about that last night. I was thinking that certainly Sister Marie served me so well for all these years and was such a great

Sister Mary Placide Kilcoyne, RSM

of the school from 1965 to 1967. In 1967, Sister went to St. Rita’s Hospital in Lima, Ohio, as vice president for nursing for four years. Sister Marie was named president of St. Mary’s Hospital in 1971. She served in that position until 1983, a period of extraordinary growth and transition as St. Mary’s dramatically expanded services and facilities. During Sister Marie’s presidency, St. Mary’s Hospital was transformed from a hospital to a modern medical center with the completion of the Magdalen Clarke Tower, the addition of the central wing, construction of the Professional Office Building, and the creation of a new emergency-room entry. Many patient services were added: respiratory, the Short Procedure Unit (now One Day Surgery), the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory,

influence. “I thought, well, I might be spiritually poor at times, but I don’t really apply the ‘poor’ to me too much. Generally I’ve been fairly healthy, so I didn’t apply the ‘sick’ to me too much. Then I got to the ‘ignorant.’ Sister Marie, in her great wisdom and her great way, would show people and bring them out of their ignorance. I was thinking of so many different ways that Sister Marie influenced my life, bringing me maybe from ignorance to understanding.” The first reading at the Mass, chosen by Sister Marie, was from Zephaniah 3. “The reading says that we must always recognize that the King is in your midst. . . .,” Father Michelson said. “It says because that King will renew love in our hearts. When we serve the King, we serve the Lord. We will be renewed each day. I think Sister Marie in a very real sense knew about that sense of renewal because she experienced it herself, and she would challenge us to experience that same renewal of God’s love in each of our hearts each day.” Sister Marie “filled her life with service,” Father Michelson said. “I think for much of her life she would have been seen maybe more as a Martha than a Mary: finishing nursing school, running the nursing school, going to the hospital, running the nursing area, then taking over as CEO of the hospital, then going and helping the sisters, then going to Chicago, then going to Lake Placid, then going to Paducah, and finally to retire and come back to Knoxville,” he said. “She said, ‘I’ve been Martha long enough. I want to be Mary.’ . . . Sister Marie was truly both a Martha and a Mary. I don’t think I can categorize her singularly as either one. She reached that balance that few people ever reach,” he added. At every funeral at St. Albert the Great, “she was there to love and support, whether the funeral had five people or there were 100 people there,” Father Michelson said. “Today we celebrate the great victory of Sister Marie, that victory that she has completed her journey on this earth because she is up there now in the kingdom, and you Sisters continued on page B6

‘Historic’ KCHS boys basketball team reaches state finals

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he Knoxville Catholic High School boys basketball team’s dream of its first-ever state championship ended in the title game, but the Fighting Irish finished as one of the greatest teams in school history and earned a milestone victory for their head coach along the way. Nashville Maplewood defeated the Irish 60-57 in the Class AA finals March 18 at the BlueCross Basketball Championships at the Murphy Center in Murfreesboro. The loss ended a 28-game winning streak for KCHS, which finished 31-2 and made its 10th state-tourney appearance. The Irish were ranked No. 1 in every Associated Press state poll that came out during the season. “I’m very proud of these guys,” said head coach Mike Hutchens. “It’s been a great season, to have the consistency to go poll to poll ranked No. 1 and to win as many games in a row as we had. It’s a tough ending.

It doesn’t feel good right now, but they’re going to look back on it—it was a historical season, one of the greatest in school history.” Knoxville Catholic captured District 4-AA and Region 2-AA tournament crowns on its way to the state tournament. A 70-54 win over Christian Academy of Knoxville on Feb. 21 gave the Irish their first district title since the 2005-06 season. It also earned Mr. Hutchens his 499th win during his 28-year run as KCHS head coach. On Feb. 25, Knoxville Catholic defeated Union County 86-51 in the Region 2-AA tourney quarterfinals at KCHS to give Mr. Hutchens his 500th victory. Big man Brock Jancek poured in 25 points and collected seven rebounds for the Irish, while point guard Luke Smith added 20 points and Davari Reeder 15. KCHS went on to defeat Alcoa 80-56 and CAK 59-31 in the semifinals and finals at Austin-East

By Dan McWilliams

DAN MCWILLIAMS

Knoxville Catholic finishes 31-2 after posting a 28-game winning streak and going wire to wire ranked No. 1

Leading the way Brock Jancek of KCHS skies to block a shot by Maplewood’s Hassan Littlepage in the state championship game. Looking on are the Irish’s Davari Reeder (14) and Tony Scott (22). High School to earn the region title. Host Knoxville Catholic then topped Grainger 73-49 in the sec-

tional round to qualify for the state tournament. Basketball continued on page B6


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