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St. Jerome is the Patron Saint of librarians.  He translated the Old Testament from Hebrew and the New Testament from Greek into Latin.  This translation is called the Vulgate.
St. Mary MacKillop, also known as St. Mary of the Cross, was canonized on October 17, 2010.  She is the first recognized Australian saint.  Her motto is said to have been "Never see a need without doing something about it."
The Patron Saint of England is St. George.  He is also the Patron of Portugal, Germany, Aragon, Genoa, and Venice, as well as knighthood and soldiers.  His feast day is April 23rd.
St. Sebastian is the Patron Saint of athletes.  His feast day is January 20th.  He is a well-known Roman Martyr.  He was an officer in the imperial army.
St. Catherine Caboure is the Promulgator of the Miraculous Medal.  Her fesast day is November 25th.

St. Francis of Assisi is teh Patron Saint of the environment.  He loved the outdoors and animals.  He knew tha tall were a part of God's creation.  His feast day is October 4th.

The Patron Saint of scientists is St. Albert the Great.  He was a famous 13th century Dominican philosopher and theologian.  He died in 1280.
St. Frances Xavier Cabrini is the first US citizen to be canonized.  She is the Patron of immigrants.  Her feast day is November 13th.
St. John Baptist de la Salle is the Patron Saint of teachers.  He lived from 1651 - 1719.  He opened a school for poor boys in 1679 in Rheims, France.  He is the Founder of the Christian Brothers, an order of teachers.  Archbishop O'Hara High School is a Christian Brothers school.
St. Elmo is the Patron Saint of sailors.  He is better known by the name Erasmus and was Bishop of Formiae, Italy.  The blue storm lanterns used on ships are also called St. Elmo lights.
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St. John Francis Regis

From Wikipedia:

St. John Francis Regis (Jean-François Régis) was born in Fontcouverte, (Aude) in the Languedoc region of southern France. His father, Jean Régis, had recently been ennobled as a result of service rendered during the Wars of the League. His mother, Marguerite de Cugunhan, was of a noble family. He was educated at the Jesuit College of Béziers. On December 8, 1616, in his nineteenth year, he entered the Jesuit novitiate at Toulouse and he took his vows two years later.

After finishing his course in rhetoric at Cahors, John Francis was sent to teach grammar at several colleges: Billom (1619–1622), Puy-en-Velay (1625–1627), and Auch (1627–1628). While he was teaching, he also pursued his studies in philosophy at the scholasticate at Tournon. Owing to an intense love of preaching and teaching the Faith, as well as the desire to save souls[4], Regis began his study of theology at Toulouse in 1628. Less than two years later, in 1630, he was ordained a priest at the age of thirty-one. The following year, having completed his studies, Regis made his Third Probation.
 
Regis was now fully prepared for his lifework and entered upon his apostolic career in the summer of 1631. As a newly ordained priest, he worked with bubonic plague victims in Toulouse. From May, 1632, until September, 1634, his headquarters was at the Jesuit College of Montpellier. Here he labored for the conversion of the Huguenots, visited hospitals, assisted the needy, withdrew from vice wayward women and girls, and preached Catholic doctrine with tireless zeal to children and the poor.
 
Regis established the Confraternities of the Blessed Sacrament, which organized charitable collections of money and food from the wealthy. He also established several hostels for prostitutes, and set up girls as lacemakers to give them an income.
 
In 1633, Regis went to the Diocese of Viviers at the invitation of the local bishop, Monsignor Louis II de la Baume de Suze, giving missions throughout the diocese. From 1633 to 1640 he evangelized more than fifty districts in le Vivarais, le Forez, and le Velay.
 
Regis laboured diligently on behalf of both priests and laymen. His preaching style was said to have been simple and direct. He appealed to the uneducated peasantry and numerous conversions resulted. Although he longed to devote himself to the conversion of the Indians in Canada, he remained in France all his life.
 
Regis suffered incredible hardships throughout for his apostolic journeys over rugged mountains in the depths of winter, and did not allow anything to stand in his way in the salvation of souls.
 
John Francis succumbed to illness during the winter of 1640, while he was contemplating the conversion of the Cévennes.
 
He died of pneumonia at age forty-three on December 30, 1640, at Lalouvesc (Ardèche), in France's Dauphiné region.
 
John Francis Regis was beatified by Pope Clement XI on May 18, 1719, and canonized by Pope Clement XII on April 5, 1737.
 
He is the patron saint of lacemakers.