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Sr Claude Feldner

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Sr Claude Feldner

Birth
Saint Cloud, Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin, USA
Death
2 Apr 2008 (aged 109)
Fond du Lac, Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin, USA
Burial
Fond du Lac, Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin, USA Add to Map
Memorial ID
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Sister Claude (Esther Mary) Feldner CSA, 109, entered eternal life Wednesday, April 2, 2008, at the St. Francis Home in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, where she was a resident. Her spiritual family, the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Agnes, maintained a constant bedside vigil during her final days.

"It is a loss and a blessing โ€” to have shared in the life of Sister Claude for these many, many years," said Sister Joann Sambs, general superior of the CSA. "Her fidelity for over 90 years stands as a witness for all of us. I ask for her grace and blessing as she is now home with God."

"One of Sister Claude's legacies was her love for life," Sambs said. "She was interested in all that was happening around her. Even up until her death, she very much kept in tune with the issues that we as a congregation are facing."

Sister Claude's death is made more bittersweet in the knowledge that it took place during the CSA's 150th anniversary year. "She left us in this very significant time in our history," Sambs said. "She's been a member of our community for 90 years. Before she passed, I talked to her and prayed with her and asked that she intercede for us now as a congregation as we go forward into our future."

Sister Claude was born in St. Cloud, Wisconsin, on September 11, 1898, the daughter of the late Peter, a St. Cloud shoemaker, and Lidwina Bittner Feldner. During a lifetime that spanned three centuries, the 1800s, 1900s and 2000s, Sister Claude dedicated her life wholeheartedly to the Lord.

In 1912, when she was only 13, Sister Claude was sent as a teenager and a candidate in the Congregation of St. Agnes, to teach in Defiance, Ohio. She professed vows on August 15, 1917. From 1917 on, Sister Claude taught primarily music and gave private music lessons to pupils in Kansas, Indiana, Wisconsin, Ohio, Illinois, and New York. She also served as a guide and mentor to nun candidates and novices.

Her talent as a musician led to a bachelor's degree in music with a major in violin from Fort Hays State Teachers College in Kansas, 1922, and a master's degree in music education with continued piano study from DePaul University in Chicago in 1938.

In 1946, Sister Claude was assigned as Novice Directress, guiding the young women who came to be Sisters of St. Agnes and preparing them for their first profession of vows, a ministry she held until 1962. Her music abilities during this time enriched community prayer and relaxation as she taught the novices Gregorian chant or played the organ for church services when needed or entertained with her violin. The following two years, Sister Claude returned to teaching music at Marian College and giving private lessons while she continued guiding the first year vowed sisters as their directress. She closed out her last 10 years of teaching music, giving private lessons, conducting a girls' choir, and playing the organ for church services at St. Mary's School in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. She even played second violin in the Oshkosh Symphony for two years in the 1970s. She also played the piano.

As an educator and as a mentor, Sister Claude believed not in promoting herself, but in drawing the best out of the students she taught and the women she mentored. She challenged without diminishing the other. She developed infinite patience, which she exhibited all her life. Above all, she modeled what she taught.

At 76 years of age, Sister Claude moved to the convent in North Fond du Lac and began a new ministry of telephone reassurance service for the elderly in the Fond du Lac and North Fond du Lac areas. Other services she rendered included taking Holy Communion to shut-ins, volunteering at the North Fond du Lac Senior Center and doing outreach with the parish mission group. When Sister Claude "retired" in 1982, she spent the first 16 years at Nazareth Heights, playing the organ for Masses and religious services.

In 1998, she relocated to Nazareth Center when the Heights was closed, finishing her retirement years at St. Francis Home. In keeping with her belief that "retirement is a time to be as active as possible, to live life to its fullest, to maintain varied interests and leave the rest to God," Sister Claude was interested in current issues, especially justice issues and those affecting the poor. At times, she was moved to write letters to the editor to speak for those unable to speak for themselves. She was often found or heard playing the piano, a musician to the end. Even in recent weeks when she could no longer play, she sometimes spent time in the early evening visiting one of her sister-friends, recalling fond memories and singing German songs.

With a lifetime spanning three centuries, Sister Claude was a walking history book of the Congregation and Fond du Lac as well as of events in the wider world. Sisters, family and friends loved to hear her stories and recollections of earlier times. Some of these that she has written down include: end of school year picnics in the early 1900s; family entertainment before radio, television or tape recorders; her father's work as a cobbler and his teaching his trade to one of the early Sisters of St. Agnes; the tragedy of World War I; and experiences of the early Sisters of St. Agnes in her hometown of St. Cloud.

Woman religious, musician, spiritual guide and mentor, she did all things well, always seeing herself as God's servant and life as a journey with God. She once wrote, "We come from God and we go to God. What lies between these two poles is what we call the journey of life." She called her retirement home the "vestibule to heaven."

Sister Claude would be the last person to call herself a model religious or an exemplary human being, but she did know the meaning of living life to the fullest. Her love of life was an overflow of her love for God. Her spirit flows through these words written in 1996: "May the glorious spirit of Easter inspire all of us to fresh enthusiasm to walk our way along the Risen Savior's landmarks!"

Even in her final years, Sister Claude never completely lost the humility or dry wit that characterized her personality.

"There is a time to be good and we have to use our lives to do good," she mused during a 2006 interview with The Reporter. "How your life goes depends on what you do with your time."

Survivors include nieces; nephews; other relatives; friends; and the members of the Congregation of St. Agnes, with whom she lived and ministered. The Sisters of St. Agnes are grateful to the nurses and staff at St. Francis Home and Hospice Hope for their care for Sister Claude.

Visitation: Visitation from 9 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. on Saturday, April 5, 2008, at Nazareth Court and Center, 375 Gillett St., where a prayer service will be held at 11 a.m. Zacherl Funeral Home is serving the Sisters of the Congregation of St. Agnes. www.zacherlfuneralhome.com

Services: A Mass of Christian Burial at 2 p.m. on Saturday, April 5, 2008, at the St. Francis Home Chapel, 33 Everett St., Fond du Lac. The Rev. Edward Sippel will officiate.

Memorials may be directed to the Sisters of St. Agnes Development Office, 320 County Road K, Fond du Lac, Wis. 54935.
----------
The 17th August, 1997, sister celebrated her 80th anniversary as a Sister of St. Agnes.
The 14th July, 2002, sister, who was 105, celebrated 85 years in the Congregation of Sisters of St. Agnes. She is the first woman in the history of the congregation to reach this milestone.
Sister Claude (Esther Mary) Feldner CSA, 109, entered eternal life Wednesday, April 2, 2008, at the St. Francis Home in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, where she was a resident. Her spiritual family, the Congregation of the Sisters of St. Agnes, maintained a constant bedside vigil during her final days.

"It is a loss and a blessing โ€” to have shared in the life of Sister Claude for these many, many years," said Sister Joann Sambs, general superior of the CSA. "Her fidelity for over 90 years stands as a witness for all of us. I ask for her grace and blessing as she is now home with God."

"One of Sister Claude's legacies was her love for life," Sambs said. "She was interested in all that was happening around her. Even up until her death, she very much kept in tune with the issues that we as a congregation are facing."

Sister Claude's death is made more bittersweet in the knowledge that it took place during the CSA's 150th anniversary year. "She left us in this very significant time in our history," Sambs said. "She's been a member of our community for 90 years. Before she passed, I talked to her and prayed with her and asked that she intercede for us now as a congregation as we go forward into our future."

Sister Claude was born in St. Cloud, Wisconsin, on September 11, 1898, the daughter of the late Peter, a St. Cloud shoemaker, and Lidwina Bittner Feldner. During a lifetime that spanned three centuries, the 1800s, 1900s and 2000s, Sister Claude dedicated her life wholeheartedly to the Lord.

In 1912, when she was only 13, Sister Claude was sent as a teenager and a candidate in the Congregation of St. Agnes, to teach in Defiance, Ohio. She professed vows on August 15, 1917. From 1917 on, Sister Claude taught primarily music and gave private music lessons to pupils in Kansas, Indiana, Wisconsin, Ohio, Illinois, and New York. She also served as a guide and mentor to nun candidates and novices.

Her talent as a musician led to a bachelor's degree in music with a major in violin from Fort Hays State Teachers College in Kansas, 1922, and a master's degree in music education with continued piano study from DePaul University in Chicago in 1938.

In 1946, Sister Claude was assigned as Novice Directress, guiding the young women who came to be Sisters of St. Agnes and preparing them for their first profession of vows, a ministry she held until 1962. Her music abilities during this time enriched community prayer and relaxation as she taught the novices Gregorian chant or played the organ for church services when needed or entertained with her violin. The following two years, Sister Claude returned to teaching music at Marian College and giving private lessons while she continued guiding the first year vowed sisters as their directress. She closed out her last 10 years of teaching music, giving private lessons, conducting a girls' choir, and playing the organ for church services at St. Mary's School in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. She even played second violin in the Oshkosh Symphony for two years in the 1970s. She also played the piano.

As an educator and as a mentor, Sister Claude believed not in promoting herself, but in drawing the best out of the students she taught and the women she mentored. She challenged without diminishing the other. She developed infinite patience, which she exhibited all her life. Above all, she modeled what she taught.

At 76 years of age, Sister Claude moved to the convent in North Fond du Lac and began a new ministry of telephone reassurance service for the elderly in the Fond du Lac and North Fond du Lac areas. Other services she rendered included taking Holy Communion to shut-ins, volunteering at the North Fond du Lac Senior Center and doing outreach with the parish mission group. When Sister Claude "retired" in 1982, she spent the first 16 years at Nazareth Heights, playing the organ for Masses and religious services.

In 1998, she relocated to Nazareth Center when the Heights was closed, finishing her retirement years at St. Francis Home. In keeping with her belief that "retirement is a time to be as active as possible, to live life to its fullest, to maintain varied interests and leave the rest to God," Sister Claude was interested in current issues, especially justice issues and those affecting the poor. At times, she was moved to write letters to the editor to speak for those unable to speak for themselves. She was often found or heard playing the piano, a musician to the end. Even in recent weeks when she could no longer play, she sometimes spent time in the early evening visiting one of her sister-friends, recalling fond memories and singing German songs.

With a lifetime spanning three centuries, Sister Claude was a walking history book of the Congregation and Fond du Lac as well as of events in the wider world. Sisters, family and friends loved to hear her stories and recollections of earlier times. Some of these that she has written down include: end of school year picnics in the early 1900s; family entertainment before radio, television or tape recorders; her father's work as a cobbler and his teaching his trade to one of the early Sisters of St. Agnes; the tragedy of World War I; and experiences of the early Sisters of St. Agnes in her hometown of St. Cloud.

Woman religious, musician, spiritual guide and mentor, she did all things well, always seeing herself as God's servant and life as a journey with God. She once wrote, "We come from God and we go to God. What lies between these two poles is what we call the journey of life." She called her retirement home the "vestibule to heaven."

Sister Claude would be the last person to call herself a model religious or an exemplary human being, but she did know the meaning of living life to the fullest. Her love of life was an overflow of her love for God. Her spirit flows through these words written in 1996: "May the glorious spirit of Easter inspire all of us to fresh enthusiasm to walk our way along the Risen Savior's landmarks!"

Even in her final years, Sister Claude never completely lost the humility or dry wit that characterized her personality.

"There is a time to be good and we have to use our lives to do good," she mused during a 2006 interview with The Reporter. "How your life goes depends on what you do with your time."

Survivors include nieces; nephews; other relatives; friends; and the members of the Congregation of St. Agnes, with whom she lived and ministered. The Sisters of St. Agnes are grateful to the nurses and staff at St. Francis Home and Hospice Hope for their care for Sister Claude.

Visitation: Visitation from 9 a.m. to 1:45 p.m. on Saturday, April 5, 2008, at Nazareth Court and Center, 375 Gillett St., where a prayer service will be held at 11 a.m. Zacherl Funeral Home is serving the Sisters of the Congregation of St. Agnes. www.zacherlfuneralhome.com

Services: A Mass of Christian Burial at 2 p.m. on Saturday, April 5, 2008, at the St. Francis Home Chapel, 33 Everett St., Fond du Lac. The Rev. Edward Sippel will officiate.

Memorials may be directed to the Sisters of St. Agnes Development Office, 320 County Road K, Fond du Lac, Wis. 54935.
----------
The 17th August, 1997, sister celebrated her 80th anniversary as a Sister of St. Agnes.
The 14th July, 2002, sister, who was 105, celebrated 85 years in the Congregation of Sisters of St. Agnes. She is the first woman in the history of the congregation to reach this milestone.


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  • Maintained by: mmel
  • Originally Created by: Elizabeth & Ron
  • Added: Apr 6, 2008
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/25780927/claude-feldner: accessed ), memorial page for Sr Claude Feldner (11 Sep 1898–2 Apr 2008), Find a Grave Memorial ID 25780927, citing Saint Joseph Springs Cemetery, Fond du Lac, Fond du Lac County, Wisconsin, USA; Maintained by mmel (contributor 47686399).