User:Uamaol/Clare Crockett

Mother Mary Clare (born: Clare Emma Whitty, 30 May 1883 - 6 November 1950) was an Irish Anglican nun, missionary and botanist who was killed during a nine-day death march lead by retreating North Korean soldiers during the Korean War.

She arrived in Korea in 1923, one of eighteen missionaries sent to the peninsula by her nursing order, the Community of St Peter between 1892 and 1950. In 1925, following the founding of the Society of the Holy Cross by the Rt Revd Mark Trollope, 3rd Bishop of Korea, she was appointed Mother Superior of the order.

Early life
Mary Clare was born to an Irish noble family on 30 May 1883 in either Enniskerry, County Wicklow, Ireland or Fenloe, County Clare, Ireland. Her father, Richard Lawrence Whitty - a qualified medical doctor and land agent, was born in 1844 in Rathvilly, County Carlow to a clerical family. He was the youngest of four children, to Reverend William Whitty, curate of Rathvilly, and his wife Gertrude (née Langley). Her mother was Jane Alicia Whitty (née Hickman), who was from a family of local landowners. Through her mother, she was the great granddaughter of Edward Stopford, Bishop of Meath, making her a distant cousin of Irish historian, Alice Stopford Green. She had one sibling, Sophia Angel St. John Whitty, who was named after their maternal grandmother. In the 1891 census, the family is recorded to have moved to Loughton, Essex, England. In the 1911 census, Whitty is recorded as an "elementary teacher". In the 1910s she received training in art in Paris, which she became a fluent speaker of French.

Sisterhood
In 1912, Whitty joined the Anglican Community of St Peter, then based in Kilburn, London and took her vows as a sister in 1915, taking the name, Mary Clare. Just before the outbreak of the Great War The Rev'd Mark Trollope who had been vicar of St Augustine's Church in Kilburn, was appointed the third Anglican Bishop of Korea, and requestedfor Whitty (then Sister Mary Clare) to aid him in the founding of a society of Korean sisters in Seoul. She eventually reached Korea in 1923, following the difficulties places upon travel following the war, she undertook Korean language studies. In 1925 in Seoul, with the help of the Trollope, she founded the Society of the Holy Cross and was appointed novice mistress, later becoming the first mother superior of the order.

Death
After refusing the opportunity from the British embassy to evacuate from Seoul, instead opting to stay with her congregation, on 6 November 1950 near Chunggangjin (present day North Korea) during a nine-day death march (which began on 30 October) following her capture by retreating North Korean forces, she died. She is believed to be the first recorded Irish-born woman to have lived in Korea.