- Rudolph Gerken
infobox bishopstyles
name=Rudolph Gerken
dipstyle=The Most Reverend
offstyle=His Excellency
relstyle=Monsignor
deathstyle=none |Rudolph Aloysius Gerken (
March 7 ,1887 —March 2 ,1943 ) was an Americanprelate of theRoman Catholic Church . He served as Archbishop of Santa Fe from 1933 until his death.Biography
Rudolph Gerken was born in Dyersville,
Iowa , as the sixth of the seven children of William and Elizabeth (née Sudmeier) Gerken. However, in 1889, his mother died and William then married Carolina Wuebbelt, with whom he had six more children. Raised on afarm , Gerken studied at Pio Nono College in Milwaukee,Wisconsin , and St. Joseph's College in Rensselaer,Indiana . He moved toTexas , where he taught in Scotlandpublic school s from 1910 to 1912.Gerken later decided, through the encouragement of Bishop Joseph Lynch, to embark on an ecclesiastical career whilst teaching at the
University of Dallas ; his brother Leo also became a priest. He studiedtheology at Kenrick Seminary in St. Louis,Missouri , where he also taughtlanguage s, before being ordained to the priesthood by Bishop Lynch onJune 10 ,1917 . He then served as pastor of Sacred Heart Church in Abilene (1917-1919) and of St. Rita’s Church in Ranger (1919-1926), and was made dean andconsultor of the Diocese of Dallas in 1924.On
August 25 ,1926 , Gerken was appointed the first Bishop of Amarillo,Texas byPope Pius XI . He received his episcopal consecration onApril 26 ,1927 from Bishop Lynch, with Bishops Christopher Byrne andFrancis Kelley serving as co-consecrators, in Sacred Heart Cathedral. He assumed as his episcopalmotto , "Not me but you, O Lord." During his tenure in Amarillo, Gerken oversaw the construction of thirty-five churches and foundedPrice Memorial College , of which he was also president.He was later named the seventh Archbishop of Santa Fe,
New Mexico onJune 2 ,1933 . As Archbishop, Gerken established anotherdiocese and several parishes, sought to provide relief to American prisoners of war inJapan duringWorld War II , and presided over the marriage of actressJane Wyatt and Edgar Ward in 1935.The Archbishop, after suffering a
stroke that left his right side paralyzed, died at St. Vincent's Hospital in Santa Fe, only five days shy of his fifty-sixth birthday.He was a Rotarian and was known to quote
Aristotle and St. Francis of Assisi.External links
* [http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bgerken.html Catholic-Hierarchy]
* [http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~tdlarson/gerken/william/ArchbishopRAGerken.htm Gerken-Larson Heritage]
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