February 4, 1932 - August 7, 2024
Photo courtesy of Webster University Archives
A memorial Mass for Sister Barbara Ann Barbato SL will be celebrated at 10 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 26, at Nerinx Hall High School in Webster Groves, Mo., a St. Louis suburb. Burial will be at Calvary Cemetery.
Memorials may be made to the Sisters of Loretto for our mission, c/o Loretto Motherhouse, 515 Nerinx Road, Nerinx, KY 40049 or as an online gift at www.lorettocommunity.org.
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A Denver native Sister Barbara Ann (formerly Sister Mary Bernard) Barbato died peacefully Aug. 7 from pancreatic cancer at her home in St. Louis. A longtime history professor and staff member at Webster University in St. Louis, she was often cited as a “favorite” by students and alumni. Sister Barbara Ann was 92 and in the 72nd year of her Loretto commitment.
Sister Barbara Ann was born Feb. 4, 1932, in Denver. She was one of three children of parents Jenna Mae (Julian) and Lewis Barbato. Growing up in Denver, she attended Blessed Sacrament and Cathedral High School. She was received into the Sisters of Loretto at the Foot of the Cross on Dec. 8, 1952. Sister Barbara Ann earned a bachelor’s degree in history in 1952 at Loretto Heights College, Denver, a doctorate in European history in 1964 at St. Louis University and a master’s in management in 1981 at Webster University. An honorary doctoral degree was conferred on her by Webster in 2015 as part of the university’s centennial celebration.
Sister Barbara Ann, Webster University Professor Emerita from 2003 until her death, taught history for more than 40 years at the college founded in 1915 by the Sisters of Loretto. In St. Louis, she taught at St. Ann’s Parish Grade School, 1955-1956, and from 1958-1961, taught students typing, history and English at Nerinx Hall High School. In 1963, she began her college faculty ministry at Webster University, retiring in 2001. At the university’s main campus and its locations in Geneva and on the NATO Base in Iceland, she taught courses in history and international relations, in teacher-preparation, in social sciences and in business management. Among her many other university roles, Barbara Ann served as education administrator; coordinator, mentor and adviser for the graduate program in international studies; and as interim dean of students.
She was a pioneer in education in the 1960s and 1970s, designing “non-traditional” learning experiences for students. One of her projects had students deciding their own content for 15 hours of credit. While she and her co-faculty members only ran the project for one semester, it resulted in Sister Barbara Ann becoming the director of the Center for Individualized Studies. She was also a pioneer in assessing students’ prior learning. Sister Barbara Ann directed Webster’s Center for Individualized Studies from 1972–1979, and many alumni today credit this program for their success in college and post-graduation. Elsewhere, Sister Barbara Ann taught at Bishop Toolen High School in Mobile, Ala., 1956-1958,and Loretto Academy in Kansas City, Mo., 1967-1969.
Throughout her ministry of working for peace and justice, she stood up for issues she was passionate about, including protesting at the 1968 Democratic Convention in Chicago, organizing workshops on civil rights in the 1970s, and being involved in Vietnam teach-ins in St. Louis. Achieving certification, Sister Barbara Ann regularly served as a first responder and dispatcher for the American Red Cross Disaster Action Team and on an as-needed basis with Disaster Service Human Relations in Mass Care sheltering and feeding, 2003-2012. She was active on a number of trustee/director boards and committees, including Nerinx Hall High School and The Sarah Community, Bridgeton. Within her congregation, she was a trustee of the Charitable Trust Fund, had served on the Investment Committee and did communications work in St. Louis. She was a longtime Shrewsbury resident and member of St. Michael the Archangel Parish, where she served as an Eucharistic minister at most weekday Masses.
Sister Barbara Ann said she knew from the time she was in second grade that she was going to be a nun. Reflecting on her many years as a Sister of Loretto, she said, “Loretto has been a wondrous experience. I really learned from people who took time to teach me. They taught me in such a wonderful way. I was very fortunate and always felt like a spoiled child of God.”
Preceding her in death were her parents and her brother, Lewis Barbato Jr. She is survived by her sister, Mary Catherine Johnson of Denver, dear friend, Annie Stevens CoL, and many nieces and nephews.