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“The community of the Daughters of the Holy Hearts of Jesus and Mary


Community foundation

Marie-Thérèse Auffray was born in Saint-Quay-Portrieux in 1783 and died there in 1864. A member of the Eudist Third Order (a congregation founded in the 17th century and dedicated to teaching and preaching), she trained for religious life in the community of Notre-Dame de Charité in Saint-Brieuc.

In 1821, after taking the name Mère Saint-Louis de Gonzague, she founded the congregation of the Filles des Saints-Cœurs de Jésus et Marie. The motherhouse would be in Saint-Quay-Portrieux. Deeply involved in the life of the parish, the sisters had a vocation of hospitality, teaching and care.
After its foundation, the community built and occupied the large building sheltered by the high walls of rue Jeanne d’Arc. In the courtyard, a large chapel was used for daily services. By the 1830s, the building could accommodate over 500 retreat participants several times a year.

The success of the Saint-Quay community prompted the congregation to found a similar community in Val-André in 1882 and in Trégastel in 1884. The three congregations flourished for some twenty years, before declining.

The sisters were very active, running a boarding school for girls and a number of primary and secondary schools, and later technical colleges. A dispensary was available to local residents, and they provided home care to the people of Quinocéan. They also welcomed the elderly.

Chapelle Sainte-Anne Saint-Quay-Portrieux
Marie-Thérèse Auffray

Welcoming the first summer visitors

In July 1841, with the agreement of the Bishop of Saint-Brieuc, the sisters took in two women from Guingamp, whose doctor had prescribed “therapeutic” sea bathing, as boarders during the summer months, to provide additional means of support. The following year, they returned, accompanied by several friends… The sea-bathing craze was just beginning, but the train didn’t yet serve Saint-Quay-Portrieux, or even Saint-Brieuc… so the “adepts” came mainly from nearby towns.

A few years later, this activity developed within the community buildings. The sisters were authorized by the bishop to welcome “all honourable families who request it and present references”.

Les plages de France – Bertall – Flammarion 1886

The expulsion of the nuns

In 1905, the law on the separation of church and state, which introduced freedom of conscience, put an end to the Concordat regime. As religious buildings became public property, many religious congregations were expelled.

In Saint-Quay-Portrieux, the expulsion of the community’s nuns took place on February 10, 1908. It was a violent and traumatic experience for the inhabitants. The nuns were dispersed, forbidden to wear the habit, and left with no choice but to return to their families or leave for communities abroad.


Villa Jeanne d’Arc

By 1909, many of them were secularized and in civilian clothes, and able to return to their buildings, which had been bought by a wealthy Saint-Brieuc merchant with the agreement of the ecclesiastical authorities, and renamed “Villa Jeanne d’Arc”. Here they resumed their community life, teaching and care activities. Welcoming bathers to the “Villa Jeanne d’Arc” was a great success, so much so that the nuns were at one time accused of capturing the growing tourist market in the commune.


Hospital 59

From 1914 to 1919, the Community’s buildings housed No. 59 Supplementary Hospital for the Saint-Brieuc military region. Instead of boarders or holidaymakers, 285 beds were available to care for the many war wounded. The sisters reinforced the nursing staff.

Up to fifty nuns lived in the community. Little by little, their numbers have dwindled. A few elderly sisters are housed in buildings near the Saint-Quay-Portrieux retirement home. Their accommodation is located on the site of the former Community farm. The Duchesse Anne park is their former pasture.

The premises, now partly disused, have been transferred to the neighboring Stella Maris college.