Medallas de Santa Isabel Ana Seton
La medalla de Santa Elizabeth Ann Seton rinde homenaje a la primera santa nacida en Estados Unidos —una socialité neoyorquina convertida al catolicismo que, viuda a los treinta años con cinco hijos, fundó la primera escuela católica gratuita en Estados Unidos y estableció las Hermanas de la Caridad, la primera comunidad religiosa estadounidense para mujeres. Nacida en la ciudad de Nueva York en 1774, Elizabeth Bayley Seton se convirtió al catolicismo en 1805 después de presenciar la fe vivida entre los católicos italianos durante la enfermedad final de su esposo William. Canonizada por el Papa Pablo VI el 14 de septiembre de 1975, es la santa patrona de las escuelas católicas, los maestros, las viudas, los conversos y aquellos que han perdido a un padre o un hijo. Su día festivo es el 4 de enero, coincidiendo con el inicio del nuevo semestre escolar.
Los católicos usan una medalla de Santa Elizabeth Ann Seton como un recordatorio diario de que la santidad se forja a través de las dificultades —a través del dolor, el sacrificio y la confianza radical en Dios. Los maestros en escuelas católicas, los administradores de escuelas parroquiales y los catequistas la invocan como patrona profesional. Los conversos que ingresan a la Iglesia a través del RICA encuentran en ella un modelo que eligió la fe a un enorme costo personal. Una medalla de Seton es un regalo profundamente personal para un maestro de escuela católica al comienzo del año escolar o durante la Semana de Agradecimiento al Maestro, y es igualmente significativa para alguien que completa el RICA en la Vigilia Pascual.
Cada medalla de Santa Elizabeth Ann Seton de nuestra colección está hecha en los EE. UU. por Bliss Manufacturing y cuenta con una garantía de por vida. Elija entre plata de ley, oro de 14 quilates laminado o oro macizo de 14 quilates, con múltiples tamaños y longitudes de cadena para adaptarse a cualquier preferencia. Explore nuestra gama completa de medallas de santos patronos o la colección de medallas de Santa Katharine Drexel para conocer a otra santa nacida en Estados Unidos que dedicó su vida a la educación y el servicio.

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Frequently Asked Questions
Who is St. Elizabeth Ann Seton the patron saint of?
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton is the patron saint of Catholic schools, teachers, widows, converts, and those who have experienced the loss of a parent or child. Her patronages grow directly from her own biography: she was widowed with five children, converted to Catholicism at great personal cost, and spent the rest of her life founding schools and a religious community. Wearing her medal is a way of asking her specific intercession over those same struggles and vocations in your own life.
Was St. Elizabeth Ann Seton the first American-born saint?
Yes — St. Elizabeth Ann Seton was canonized by Pope Paul VI on September 14, 1975, making her the first person born in the United States of America to be officially declared a saint by the Catholic Church. She was born in New York City on August 28, 1774, and lived her entire life on American soil. Her canonization was a landmark moment for the American Catholic Church, and her medal remains one of the most recognizable expressions of distinctly American Catholic identity.
What did St. Elizabeth Ann Seton found?
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton founded the first free Catholic school in the United States, opening it near St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore in 1808 before relocating to Emmitsburg, Maryland. She also established the Sisters of Charity of St. Joseph's, the first religious community for women founded in the United States, in 1809. Beyond those two institutions, she went on to open additional schools and two orphanages in the Baltimore area, laying the groundwork for what would become the American Catholic parochial school system.
When is St. Elizabeth Ann Seton's feast day, and why does it matter for Catholic schools?
St. Elizabeth Ann Seton's feast day is January 4, celebrated each year at the very start of the new calendar year and the beginning of the spring school semester. For Catholic school communities, the timing is especially meaningful — her feast day arrives just as teachers and students return from Christmas break, making it a natural moment for schools to invoke her patronage over the months of learning ahead. Many Catholic schools mark January 4 with a school Mass, and a Seton medal given around this date carries the added significance of her feast.
What is a good gift for a Catholic school teacher?
A St. Elizabeth Ann Seton patron saint medal necklace is one of the most thoughtful gifts you can give a Catholic school teacher because it connects their vocation directly to the woman who founded the American Catholic school system. Unlike generic teacher gifts, a Seton medal carries devotional weight — it is something a teacher can wear every day as both a professional emblem and a prayer. Our medals are made in the USA by Bliss Manufacturing, available in sterling silver, 14kt gold filled, and 14kt solid gold, and backed by a lifetime guarantee, so the gift will last as long as their teaching career.
Are St. Elizabeth Ann Seton medals made in the USA?
Every St. Elizabeth Ann Seton medal sold at rosarycard.net is manufactured in the United States by Bliss Manufacturing, one of the country's most trusted producers of Catholic religious jewelry. Bliss has a long track record of precision craftsmanship, and every medal we carry comes with a lifetime guarantee covering tarnish, breakage, and normal wear. Choosing a USA-made Bliss medal means you are investing in a piece of religious jewelry built to be passed down, not replaced.
The Story of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton
Elizabeth Ann Bayley was born on August 28, 1774, into a prominent Episcopalian family in New York City. She married William Magee Seton in 1794, and the couple had five children before financial ruin and illness overtook their household. When William's health collapsed from tuberculosis, the Setons traveled to Italy seeking recovery, but William died in Livorno in 1803. It was during that stay that Elizabeth observed the deep Eucharistic faith of Italian Catholic families, particularly the Filicchi family who sheltered her. That witness proved decisive. Upon returning to New York, she was received into the Catholic Church on March 14, 1805 — a conversion that cost her the financial support of nearly every Protestant family member and friend she had. Undeterred, she moved to Baltimore in 1808 at the invitation of Bishop John Carroll, opened a school for girls near St. Mary's Seminary, and the following year established a religious community in Emmitsburg, Maryland. She died of tuberculosis on January 4, 1821, at age forty-six. Pope Paul VI canonized her on September 14, 1975, making her the first person born in the United States to be raised to the altars.
Why Catholics Wear a St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Medal
A St. Elizabeth Ann Seton medal is worn as a tangible act of trust — an acknowledgment that the same woman who buried her husband, buried two of her daughters, and built an entire school system from near poverty is now interceding before God on your behalf. The medal typically depicts Mother Seton in her religious habit as a Sister of Charity, often with the inscription "St. Elizabeth Ann Seton" encircling the image, and sometimes accompanied by a small cross or book symbolizing her educational mission. Teachers and school administrators wear her medal as a professional patron, asking her intercession over their classrooms and students each day. Widows and those grieving the loss of a child or parent wear it as a sign that their suffering is not without meaning or company. Converts — especially those completing RCIA — wear it as a reminder that choosing the Catholic faith, even when it is costly, is a path walked by one of America's own saints. The medal functions not as a lucky charm but as a sacramental: a physical point of contact with a holy life that mirrors your own.
Our St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Medal Collection
Every St. Elizabeth Ann Seton medal at rosarycard.net is manufactured in the United States by Bliss Manufacturing, a company with decades of experience producing fine Catholic religious jewelry to exacting standards. Each medal comes with a lifetime guarantee — if it ever tarnishes, breaks, or fades under normal wear, we make it right. Our collection spans three metal options: sterling silver for a classic, heirloom-quality look; 14kt gold filled for warm gold color at an accessible price point; and 14kt solid gold for a lasting investment piece. Medals are available in multiple sizes — from petite charm sizes ideal for a delicate chain to larger oval medals suited for a statement necklace — and come with your choice of chain length. Orders over $40 ship free. For other American saints who championed education and service, explore our St. Katharine Drexel medals , our St. Frances Cabrini medals , and our St. John Baptist de la Salle medals — the patron saint of teachers.
Giving a St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Medal as a Gift
The most natural gift moment for a St. Elizabeth Ann Seton medal is the start of the Catholic school year — a teacher, principal, or school chaplain receiving one in late August carries her intercession into every class period that follows. Teacher Appreciation Week in May is a second high-traffic occasion, particularly for parents wanting to give something more lasting than a gift card. For RCIA candidates, the Easter Vigil is the defining moment: a Seton medal given at the reception into the Church honors their conversion journey by connecting them to the first American-born saint who made that same courageous choice. January 4, her feast day, falls just as the spring semester begins — making it a natural occasion for Catholic school communities to mark together. Buyers are typically parents of Catholic school students, fellow teachers, parish RCIA directors, and family members of new converts. Every order from rosarycard.net arrives in gift-ready packaging, and orders over $40 ship free, so the medal arrives ready to present.















