Olive May Pearce

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Sister Mary Eucharia MBE
Bima Wear.
Aboriginal women sewing Bima wear garments at the factory at Nguiu, Bathurst Island.

Olive May Pearce, also known as Sister Eucharia (14 December 1914 5 October 1999)[1] was an Australian religious sister best known for her work with Aboriginal children and leprosy patients.[2] She was made a member of the Order of the British Empire in 1981.[2]

In 1914, Olive May Pearce was born in Glenbrook, New South Wales. She was the second child into a humble, working-class family with no strong religious ties. Olive woke one morning at the age of 14 to a vivid dream calling her into the service of the church. Pearce moved with her family to the Sydney suburb of Enfield, where she worked with her father in a cake shop for a short time before becoming a domestic servant. She then, at the age of 22, became a religious sister in the order of the Daughters of Our Lady of the Sacred Heart, taking the religious name of Sister Eucharia.[2]

Life in the Northern Territory

Later life

References

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