- Mathias Clement Lenihan
-
Most Reverend
Mathias C. Lenihan, DDBishop of Great Falls Church Roman Catholic Church See Great Falls In Office August 26, 1904 — January 18, 1930 Predecessor None Successor Edwin Vincent O'Hara Orders Ordination December 20, 1879 Consecration September 21, 1904 Personal details Born October 6, 1854
Dubuque, IowaDied August 19, 1943 (aged 88)
Dubuque, IowaMathias Clement Lenihan, (October 6, 1854 - August 19, 1943) was a 20th century archbishop in the Catholic Church in the United States. He served as bishop of the Diocese of Great Falls in the state of Montana from 1904-30.
Contents
Biography
Early Life & Ministry
Born in Dubuque, Iowa, Lenihan was educated at St. Joseph College in Dubuque, St. John's College in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin and the Grand séminaire de Montréal in Canada.[1] He was ordained a Catholic priest on December 20, 1879 by for the Diocese of Dubuque. He was the first native born Iowan to be ordained a priest.[2] From the time of his ordination until 1904 he was involved in parish ministry in the diocese, and later archdiocese, of Dubuque. His first assignment was at Vail and his second was at Marshalltown. In Marshallton he founded St. Thomas Hospital in memory his brother, the Rt. Rev. Thomas Mathias Lenihan, who had served as bishop of the Diocese of Cheyenne.[3]
Bishop of Great Falls
On August 26, 1904 Pope Saint Pius X named him to be the first bishop of Great Falls. He was consecrated a bishop on September 21, 1904 by Archbishop John Joseph Keane of Dubuque. The co-consecrators were Bishops James John Keane of Cheyenne and Joseph Bernard Cotter, of Winona.[4] He was installed on November 5, 1904 at St. Ann Cathedral in Great Falls.
Bishop Lenihan served the diocese for 26 years. He was involved in temperance reform, building the parochial school system in the diocese, and constructing a new cathedral. The new St. Ann Cathedral in Great Falls was dedicated on December 15, 1907. He was instrumental in establisheing an orphanage staffed by the Sisters of Charity of Providence. The diocese also established several new parishes during his episcopate.[3]
Pope Pius XI accepted his resignation as bishop of Great Falls on January 18, 1930. He was named Titular Archbishop of Preslavus on February 14, 1930. He retired to Dubuque and died there on August 19, 1943.[5]
Catholic Church titles Preceded by
NoneBishop of Great Falls
1904–1930Succeeded by
Edwin Vincent O'HaraReferences
- ^ Delaney, John J, Tobin, James Edward (1961). Dictionary of Catholic Biography. Garden City, New York: Doubleday.
- ^ "Lenihan, Mathias Clement". www.encyclopediadubuque.org. http://www.encyclopediadubuque.org/index.php?title=LENIHAN%2C_Mathias_Clement. Retrieved 2010-05-15.
- ^ a b "Great Falls". www.newadvent.org. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06734a.htm. Retrieved 2010-05-18.
- ^ "Archbishop Mathias Clement Lenihan". www.catholic-hierarchy.org. http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/blenihanm.html. Retrieved 2010-05-12.
- ^ "The Beginning of Catholicism in Montana". www.dioceseofgfb.org. http://www.dioceseofgfb.org/index.phtml?p=history. Retrieved 2010-05-12.
Categories:- 1854 births
- 1943 deaths
- People from Dubuque, Iowa
- Loras College alumni
- Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Dubuque
- People from Great Falls, Montana
- American Roman Catholic bishops
- 20th-century Roman Catholic bishops
- American religious figures of Irish descent
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.