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Mary's sister, Margaret "Peggy" Catherine Ahl (1923–2007) was also an RN. She entered the Daughters of Charity in 1943. During the ensuing 35 years, she became known as Sister Angelica. After that, she resumed her own name – "Sister Margaret." In 2000, after 63 years with DC, she retired. An impetus for her lifelong commitment to charity was the untimely death in 1940 of her mother, Mary E. Ahl (née Connolly; 1890–1940).

Mary Ellen Ahl-Heugel
In 1959, when their father, William Henry Ahl, died, Mary Ellen Ahl was also known as Sister Winifred Ahl of Boston.
 * Sister Winifred Ahl:
 * Sister Winifred Ahl, A.B. (St. Joseph's Coll., Md.) St. Joseph's Coll., Emmitsburg, Md.


 * "Study of the Errors Made by 344 Students in the State of Virginia on an Achievement Test in the Nursing of Children" (masters thesis), by Sister Winifred Ahl, under the direction of Sister M. Theofreda Thell and Sister M. Olivia Gowan (M.S., Nursing Education, Catholic University of America) (1951);


 * From 1982 (or sometime before) to 1986 (or sometime after), Mary Ahl-Heugel, PhD, was Director of the Mount Vernon Hospital School of Nursing, Mount Vernon, New York, later known as the Dorothea Hopfer School of Nursing, which ran from 1901 to 2013, when Mount Vernon Hospital filed for bankruptcy and thereafter became part of Montefiore.

Education

 * 1941: Graduated June 8, 1941, Latin-Science Curriculum, Seton High School, Baltimore

Dorothea Hopfer
Dorothea Hopfer (1899–1895) was a lifelong educator in Mount Vernon, New York.

Industry notes

 * 1986: Nursing Practice Bill, which, as proposed, would mandate either two years of college training for the title "associate nurse" or four years for the title "nurse." It would give "grandfather" protection to all present L.P.N.S and hospital nursing-school R.N.S who would retain their licenses. (did this pass in New York?)