Back on campus, with increased automation and a swelling student population, the Marthas role shifted. By 1994, the Sisters-who’d lived on campus for nearly one hundred years – moved to Bethany, behind the hospital the Marthas had founded in 1912.
Despite Wellspring’s location, in a former convent, and its volunteer staff of nuns, it is decidedly nondenominational in its modern iteration. Sister Marion Sheridan notes that Wellspring
“Is a place where Marthas offer Gospel Hospitality to students, persons of all faiths, LGBT groups, prayer groups, Catholics at X, Celtic Studies, Yoga, Mindfulness, Mental Health groups and many other groups on the campus. It is a little like the UN on the STFX campus with peace as the centre of all activities.“
StFX History professor and Ceremonial Officer Barry MacKenzie ’07 recalls fondly that
Former University Chaplain, Muffy MacIntyre ’11, transitioned from a student who took comfort in Wellspring to a volunteer there. Through the years, she notes,
MacIntyre volunteers mainly during exam seasons now: “To give back and serve alongside the Sisters and other volunteers is a gift.”
And, notes Sr. Joanne O’Regan, Councillor on the Leadership Team of the Sisters of St. Martha,