- Peter Richard Kenrick
Peter Richard Kenrick (
August 17 ,1806 -March 4 ,1896 ) was the first Catholicarchbishop west of theMississippi River .He was born and educated in Dublin, Ireland and ordained to the priesthood in 1832. The next year he travelled with his brother,
Francis Kenrick , who eventually became the head of theRoman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia , to the United States.In his early years as a priest in Philadelphia, Father Kenrick wrote several works relating to Catholic
theology and church history. One of his works, 'Validity of Anglican Ordinations examined', published in 1841, was not challenged for over a century. He held a number of posts in the Philadelphia church, until he was appointed coadjutor bishop ofSt. Louis, Missouri in 1841. At the time, the diocese included the entire area of theLouisiana Purchase , except forIowa ,Louisiana , andMinnesota . In 1847, when the diocese became an archdiocese, he became the first archbishop of the newly-created archdiocese. The city itself would grow almost thirty-fold over the term of his residency.During his tenure in St. Louis, he visited many parts of the state of
Missouri and actively encouraged the development of Catholicism and Catholic institutions in his diocese. He started a Catholic journal, opened a seminary in the then-independent city of Carondelet, Missouri, and invited a number ofRoman Catholic religious order s to work in the diocese.During the period of the
American Civil War and its aftermath, Kenrick maintained a neutral position in a city and state whose residents were of widely divergent opinions on the matter. After the war ended, he urged the priests in his diocese to refuse to take theironclad oath which was intended to ensure that no person who had supported the Confederate position would ever achieve a position of influence, and supported those who did so. One of these priests, the Reverend John A. Cummings, filed the case which theUnited States Supreme Court heard and prompted them to rule the ironclad oath unconstitutional.He took part in the second Plenary Council of Baltimore, where he advocated that the affairs of the Catholic Church in the United States be handled locally wherever possible. This position earned him a number of detractors and opponents. During the
First Vatican Council , he opposed the centralization of church authority inRome and did not support the declaration of thedogma ofPapal infallibility . When it was defined dogmatically, he accepted the opinion of the majority. His failure to support this issue increased the number and prominence of his detractors.After harassment by his detractors and members of the curia made life difficult for him, he turned over the administration of the archdiocese to his coadjutor bishop,
Patrick John Ryan , in 1871. Upon Ryan's being made the Archbishop of Philadelphia, the diocese which Kenrick's brother had previously headed, Kenrick took back active administration of his diocese.During the period when the
Knights of Labor , a strongly Roman Catholic labor union and the first national labor union, turned to violence, Kenrick vocally opposed them and condemned their actions. However, the higher-rankingJames Cardinal Gibbons , the Archbishop of Baltimore, overruled his objections.In 1893, Kenrick's attempt to name his coadjutor bishop failed when his nominee did not win the support of his fellow bishops.
John Joseph Kain was appointed to fill the role instead. His conflicts and failed communication with Kain lent a note of discord to his final years.He died on March 4, 1896, and is buried in Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis, which is a cemetery Kenrick had himself established on a farm he bought. The seminary of the Archdiocese of St. Louis,
Kenrick-Glennon Seminary , formerly known as Kenrick Theological Seminary, is named in his honor.References
* [http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=20563 Find A Grave for Peter Richard Kenrick]
*Christensen, Lawrence O., et al., "Dictionary of Missouri Biography". Columbia, MO and London:University of Missouri Press, 1999. ISBN 0-8262-1222-0
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08618a.htm Francis Kenrick and Peter Richard Kenrick]
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