Sister Rita, whose parents were born in the north of Ireland, loved Irish history and music. Hum a few bars of a song and she would continue by singing the words. She loved to sing and for many years was a member of the Fordham University choir for Sunday Mass.
Sister Rita McIvor, Sister Maria Immaculata, was born on March 4, 1931, in the Bronx, New York. She was one of three children, two girls and a boy of James and Susan McNamee McIvor. Rita attended Saint Anselm Elementary School in the Bronx and Cathedral High School in Manhattan and worked for one year before entering the Sisters of Charity of New York on September 8, 1949. Sister Immaculata received a BA in French from College (now University) of Mount Saint Vincent and an MA in Theology from Saint Bonaventure University in Saint Bonaventure, New York.
Sister Rita served for eighteen years as an elementary grade teacher and thirty years as an office assistant in a variety of responsibilities. Her teaching experience was in Saint Ignatius Loyola in Manhattan, Saint Mary in Wappingers Falls, Immaculate Conception in Stony Point, Resurrection in Rye, Saint Denis in Yonkers, and Saint Francis of Assisi in Mount Kisco. Her office experience was at Grace Institute and Saint Joseph Academy, both in Manhattan, and Saint Raymond Academy for Girls in the Bronx where she served as Business Manager for twenty-seven years.
When Sister Rita retired from active ministry in 2001, she offered volunteer services at the Sisters of Charity Center in the Bronx and the Center of Renewal and Education in Harriman, New York. She lived with the retirement community of Saint Patrick Villa in Nanuet and, later, Mount Saint Vincent Convent before moving to Cabrini of Westchester, Dobbs Ferry, in 2022. It is here she died on May 8, 2024, in the seventy-fifth year of commitment as a Sister of Charity of New York.
Sister Rita, whose parents were born in the north of Ireland, loved Irish history and music. Hum a few bars of a song and she would continue by singing the words. She loved to sing and for many years was a member of the Fordham University choir for Sunday Mass. Listening to music was a way to relax. As a friend said, “Music was inside her.” Sister Rita was very generous with her time and was often the first to respond to a need for help. For her, it was what community was about.
Sister Rita, you spoke of your death as “being called home”. The author of life is now calling you there. You will soon “grasp fully, with all the holy ones, the breadth and length and height and depth of Christ’s love . . .” (Eph 3:18). Life in God is yours without end and cannot be taken away. Pray for us.
Date of Death
May 8, 2024
Age
93
Wake
Thursday, May, 16, 2024
8:30-10:00 a.m.
Vigil Service at 9:30 a.m. (Livestreamed)
Mount St. Vincent Convent
venue.streamspot.com/217aa3db
Funeral
Thursday, May, 16, 2024
10:15 a.m. (Livestreamed)
Mount St. Vincent Convent
venue.streamspot.com/217aa3db
Burial
St. Raymond’s Cemetery, 2600 Lafayette Avenue, Bronx, NY
Missions
- St. John the Evangelist, Moriches, Teacher, Grade 6, 1952
- St. Ignatius Loyola, Manhattan, Teacher, Grade 1, 1952-56
- St. Mary, Wappingers Falls, Teacher, Grades 1-7, 1956-62
- Immaculate Conception, Stony Point, Teacher, Grade 8, 1962-1966
- Resurrection, Rye, Teacher, Grade 8, 1966-1967
- St. Denis, Bronx, Teacher, Grade 8, 1967-69
- Grace Institute, Manhattan, Clerk, 1969-1970
- St. Francis of Assisi, Mt. Kisco, Clerical Asst., Teacher, Grade 5, 1970-1971
- St. Joseph Academy, Manhattan, Secretary, Bursar, 1971-1973
- St. Raymond Academy, Bronx, Teacher, Religion, 1973-1990
- St. Raymond Academy, Bronx, Business Manager, 1991-2001
- Sisters of Charity Center Bronx, Volunteer Services, 2003-2004
- St. Vincent Catholic Medical Center, Westchester, Volunteer Services, 2003-2004
- Center of Renewal and Education, Orange & Sullivan, Staff, 2004-2011
Rest in Peace, Sister Rita.
My sincere condolences to you and the entire family for the demise of Sr Rita. May her soul rest in peace Amen. Together in prayers
I was blessed to spend time with Sr. Rita at both St. Patrick’s and Cabrini. I’d known her from her Fordham choir days, but these last years were special. She loved company and could remember people, places, dates, and the stories that linked them. On Easter Sunday, when I brought her the Triduum booklet from Fordham, she sang the hymns and was joined by others on her floor. Now she is part of the choir of angels!
Ah that smile. I first met Sr. Rita when she was at St. Raymond Academy where my Mom worked. Sr. Rita always made St. Ray’s feel like a second family for our family.
Over the years, she became part of our family joining in some of our most important family celebrations and losses. Sr. Rita’s smile is always what I remember because of the warmth and spirit that came with each one. The twinkle in her eyes made me sure she was sharing in the emotions of the moment.
When I went to the Mount and learned more about Charity charism, it was Sr. Rita and her smile that often came to mind.
May she rest in peace.
May she rest in peace.