Mary Madonna Ashton, CSJ, 鈥44 to be honored as part of 2016 National Women鈥檚 History Month
亚色影库 alumna Mary Madonna Ashton, CSJ, 鈥44 is among 15 women who will be honored during March as part of this year鈥檚 National Women鈥檚 History Month.The theme for 2016 is 鈥淲orking to Form a More a Perfect Union: Honoring Women in Public Service and Government.鈥
Sister Mary Madonna鈥檚 reach has been extensive. She has tirelessly used her gifts to care for the people of the Twin Cities and Minnesota. And, as Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet are called to do, she continues 鈥渕oving always toward profound love of God and love of neighbor without distinction.鈥
The first woman, nun, and non-physician to serve as Minnesota Commissioner of Health, Ashton took on big tobacco and dealt with the rising number of AIDS cases in Minnesota.
A convert to Catholicism while in college, she majored in sociology and psychology and graduated from St. Catherine (then College of St. Catherine) in 1944. After receiving her Master of Social Work from St. Louis University, she became a Sister of St. Joseph of Carondelet and began her career in medical social work (then a new field) at St. Joseph鈥檚 Hospital in St. Paul. After obtaining a Master of Hospital Administration from the University of Minnesota, she moved into administration at St. Mary鈥檚 Hospital in Minneapolis where she ultimately served as president and CEO for 20 years.
Trail-blazing for public health
Shortly after she left St. Mary鈥檚 Hospital, Minnesota Governor-elect Rudy Perpich came knocking, asking Sister Mary Madonna to serve as Commissioner of Health.
鈥淭here was a tremendous amount of opposition,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 a doctor. It was the first time they appointed someone who was not a physician. I was the first woman appointed and on top of that, I鈥檓 a nun!鈥
During consecutive terms totaling eight years, she helped tackle smoking and AIDS, becoming a highly respected and successful Commissioner of Health.
鈥淥ur original goal was to eliminate the sale of tobacco in Minnesota. We ended up outlawing smoking in public places, including hospitals, places of employment, and eventually, restaurants,鈥 explains Sister Mary Madonna, who had to take on the tobacco industry in what became a landmark legal fight. 鈥淚 spent weeks with lawyers preparing for what would become days of testimony and cross-examination on the stand.鈥
Ultimately the State won and smoking in public places and on public property in Minnesota stopped. Sister Mary Madonna is quick to note that major changes of this magnitude requires work from many organizations and individuals, but Minnesota鈥檚 success would start a nationwide movement.
鈥淲e were also the first State in the Union to obtain money from the State legislature to address teen smoking,鈥 reflected Sister Mary Madonna, 鈥渁nd as a result of the Department鈥檚 efforts, Northwest Airlines (now Delta) eliminated smoking on domestic flights and the Minnesota Twins baseball team stopped accepting tobacco ads at its stadium.鈥
Another public health focus during her tenure was on AIDS. 鈥淲hen I took office, there were only four reported cases of AIDS in the state. I really didn鈥檛 know what AIDS was, but I learned along with the community. As the epidemic took hold, and we came to realize the associated threat to the community鈥檚 blood supply, we had to act and fast.鈥
By the end of Sister Mary Madonna鈥檚 term, protections for the community鈥檚 blood supply were in place.
Taking public health into neighborhoods
After her term, she focused her energies on addressing a lack of healthcare for those living on the margins. 鈥淲e came up with the idea of having neighborhood clinics for people who where uninsured and weren鈥檛 eligible for government programs.鈥
She suggested that her religious community, the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet, use some funds from the sale of a previously sponsored health institution for this purpose. Sister Mary Madonna used her impressive network of contacts to find a host of volunteer physicians, nurses and support personnel to staff what became St. Mary鈥檚 Health Clinics (SMHC).
鈥淲e opened our first clinic in January of 1992. We thought it would be temporary.鈥
National healthcare, she thought, would surely be just around the corner. By the time Sister Mary Madonna retired in 2000, SMHC had 11 clinics throughout the Twin Cities. Even with the Affordable Healthcare Act (ACA or Obamacare), which was signed into law in 2010, there are still plenty of people who don鈥檛 qualify and need help. The nonprofit continues serving those children, women, and men.
Leading and influencing at St. Kate's
A founding member of the Henrietta Schmoll School of Health Advisory Council, a trustee emerita and member of St. Kate鈥檚 Centennial 100, Sister Mary Madonna was a trustee of St. Mary鈥檚 Junior College from 1974 to 1986 and at St. Catherine from 1986 to 1995 鈥 shepherding both institutions through the merger that would, in 2007, become the Henrietta Schmoll School of Health.
She has been recognized for her many achievements with the St. Catherine Alumnae Award, the University of Minnesota Public Health Alumni Leadership Award and the U-MN Minnesota Medical Association Shotwell award, as well as honorary doctorates from 亚色影库 and Hamline University.
At 92, Sister Mary Madonna now resides with other retired Sisters at Carondelet Village in St. Paul.
Noted National Women's History Month Honorees
Sister Mary Madonna Ashton, CSJ joins an impressive and distinguished list of women honored by the including: Bella Abzug, Abigail Adams, Susan B. Anthony, Clara Barton, Margaret Bourke-White, Hillary Rodham Clinton, Dorothy Day, Emily Dickinson, Martha Graham, Anita Hill, Coretta Scott King, Winona LaDuke, Georgia O鈥橩eeffe, Sally Ride, Eleanor Roosevelt, Beverly Sills, Gertrude Stein, Gloria Steinem, and a host of others.
Editor鈥檚 note: Mary Madonna Ashton, CSJ, 鈥44 is among St. Kate鈥檚 faculty, leaders and alumnae profiled throughout March as part of Women鈥檚 History Month.
by Ann Thompson