Submitted By: Nadine Hardin
Name: Hertel, Colette Mary
(Sister M. John Michael) C.S.C.
Names in Obituary: Hertel, Rosing,
Danch, Wortinger
South Bend Tribune, Obituaries; August 23,
1999
Sister M. John Michael, C.S.C. (June 21,
1904 - Aug. 21, 1999)
Sister M. John Michael, C.S.C., was the
third member of a South Bend family with a religious vocation in
the international Congregation of the Sisters of the Holy Cross
and a rare family distinction.
In a religious vocation that spanned
silver, golden and diamond jubilee anniversaries, she often was
cited by her congregation superiors for talented skills that
included those of a teacher, hospital volunteer, business acumen,
manager and even service as a licensed chauffeur for her sister
nuns.
Born Colette Mary Hertel to
Michael Andrew Hertel and Mary Pauline Rosing on June 21,
1904, in Freemont, Ill., she passed away at the age of 95, at 8:15
p.m. Friday, Aug. 21, in St. Mary's Convent.
The Mass of Resurrection will be at 10:30
a.m. Tuesday in the Church of Our Lady of Loretto at St. Mary's
Convent and burial in the community cemetery. Friends may call
after 3 p.m. Monday in the church.
She was the fifth eldest in the Hertel
family that included 11 children, six girls and five boys.
Preceding her in death were Aloyisos, Walter, Paul, Helen,
Hildegarde, Raymond and Sister M. Ivan (Ceile) who passed away at
the age of 96, five years ago at St. Mary's Convent.
Survivors include a brother Norbert
of Portland, Ore.; and two sisters, Sister M. Clare Marie, C.S.C.
of St. Mary's Convent and Mrs. Elmer J. Danch of South
Bend.
The Hertel family moved from Freemont
to Goshen in 1918 at the request of a friend of Mr. Hertel. In Goshen,
Mr. and Mrs. Hertel operated a 24-room boarding house for
travelers and railroad employees directly across the tracks from
the New York Central Station. Shortly afterwards, Mr. Hertel met
an unfortunate death when struck by the 20th Century Limited
which was running late in the evening.
Two years later, Mrs. Hertel married
John Wortinger, a family friend and who assumed
responsibility of the 11 Hertel children. While living in Goshen,
the family was a member a member of St. John the Evangelist Church
and the children all attended St. John School.
In 1922, the Hertel family moved to South
Bend and resided for many years on North Lafayette Boulevard in
an area now occupied by Memorial Hospital facilities.
From South Bend, Colette Hertel joined a
sister, Sister M. Ivan, C.S.C., then a teacher at St. Mary's of
the Wasatch near Salt Lake city and stayed to graduate from the
school there.
Active in recreation programs at the
school, Colette Hertel brought her athletic talents to South Bend,
and for many years played on the Goodrich Girl's Basketball team
that was coached by her brother, Raymond, a South Bend High
School athlete. Colette Hertel was also active as a volunteer
girl's swimming coach locally and even qualified for several
national championships.
The Studebaker Corp. sought her
talents for office procedures and her excellent accomplishments
led the company to offer her a top supervisory post in their
fledgling automotive assembly plant in Los Angeles, Calif.
She shocked her employers by telling
them that ''I have decided to become a nun at St. Mary's!''
She entered the convent on Feb. 2,
1936; made her first profession of vows on Aug. 15, 1938, and her
final profession of vows on Aug. 15, 1941.
Her first assignment was as a teacher at
Hammond Noll Institute in the Calumet area and among other
duties, she coached girl's athletic teams. She was assigned to
several other posts before returning to St. Mary's Convent.
There, she managed a myriad of
supervisory positions, including that of purchasing, laundry and
maintenance. Because of her supervisory skills, she was asked to
compile a book on the many duties she was asked to handle.
During her early years in South Bend,
she also helped coach girl's basketball teams at St. Mary's
Academy, then located on Taylor Street, using St. Patrick School
gymnasium for practice. Later, she also took on the assignment as
a volunteer girl's coach at St. Joseph School, which was under
the supervision of the sisters of the Holy Cross.
Her sports interests never waned. She was a
loyal Chicago White Sox fan and a Notre Dame football fan. She
often carried a pocket radio to listen to broadcasts of both the
Sox and Fighting Irish. Her special highlights included
occasional trips to see the White Sox in Chicago and also to a
few out of town Notre Dame football games at West Lafayette for
Purdue tilts and to Los Angeles to watch the Irish play the University
of Southern California.
She was a devout religious sister in
every sense of the word and whose talented mission outreach
touched the lives of hundreds, but especially the poor, hungry
and neglected.
Kaniewski Funeral Home is in charge of
arrangements.
South Bend Tribune, Death Notices; August
22, 1999
Sister M. John Michael (June 21, 1904 - Aug.
20, 1999)
SOUTH BEND - Sister M. John Michael (Colette
Mary Hertel), 95, of Saint Mary's Convent, died Friday in the
convent. Survivors include two sisters, Sister Claire Marie of
Saint Mary's Convent and Angela Danch of South Bend; and a
brother, Norbert Hertel of Portland, Ore. Services will be at 10:30
a.m. Tuesday in Loretto Church, Saint Mary's, where friends may
call after 3 p.m. Monday and a wake service will be at 7 p.m.