- Anthony Kohlmann
Anthony Kohlmann (
13 July 1771 –11 April 1836 ) was a GermanJesuit . He is known for his part in the establishment of confessional privilege in United States law. He spent nearly a quarter of a century in the USA as an educator.Life
Kohlmann was born at
Kaiserberg ,Alsace . At an early age he was compelled by the troubles of theFrench Revolution to go to live inSwitzerland , where at the college ofFribourg he completed his theological studies and was ordained priest. Soon after, in 1796, he joined the . With them he spent two years in Austria and Italy as amilitary chaplain . From Italy he was sent toDillingen in Bavaria, as director of an ecclesiastical seminary, then toBerlin , and next to Amsterdam to direct a college established by theFathers of the Faith of Jesus , with whom the Congregation of the Sacred Heart had united (11 April, 1799).The Society of Jesus in
Russia having been recognized (1801) byPope Pius VII, Father Kohlmann joined it and entered the novitiate atDunébourg on 21 June, 1803. A year later, in response to a call for additional workers in the United States, he was sent toGeorgetown, D.C. , where he was made assistant to the master of novices, and went on missionary tours to the several German congregations inPennsylvania andMaryland .Affairs in the Catholic Church in
New York having gone badly,Bishop Carroll picked him out as the person best qualified to introduce the needed reforms and to restore order, and with his fellow Jesuits, Benedict Fenwick and four scholastics, James Wallace, Michael White, James Redmond, and Adam Marshall, he took charge there in October, 1808. It was a time of great commercial depression in the city owing to the results of theEmbargo Act of 22 December, 1807. The Catholic population, he states in a letter written on 8 November, 1808, consisted "of Irish, some hundreds of French and as many Germans; in all according to the common estimation of 14,000 souls". Such progress was made under his direction that the cornerstone of a new church,old St. Patrick's Cathedral , the second church erected in New York City, was laid on 8 June, 1809. He started a classical school called the New York Literary Institution, which he carried on successfully for several years in what was then a suburban village but is now the site of St. Patrick's Cathedral on Fifth Avenue. In April, 1812, he also started a school for girls in the same neighbourhood, in charge ofUrsuline nuns who came at his instance for that purpose from their convent inCounty Cork ,Ireland .About the same time Father Kohlmann became the central figure in a lawsuit that excited national interest. He had been instrumental in having stolen goods restored to a man, who demanded in court that the priest should reveal from whom he had received them. Father Kohlmann refused to do this, on the ground that his information had been received under the seal of confession. The case was taken before the
Court of General Sessions , where after a trial the decision rendered byDe Witt Clinton was given in his favour. Its principle was later embodied in the State law passed on 10 December, 1828, which enacted that:"No minister of the Gospel or priest of any denomination whatsoever shall be allowed to disclose any confession made to him in his professional character in the course of discipline enjoined by the rules or practices of such denomination."
To a report of the case when published Father Kohlmann added an exposition of the teachings of the Church on
penance . (Sampson, "The Catholic Question in America", appendix, New York, 1813.) The book excited a long and vigorous controversy with a number of Protestant ministers, and was followed in 1821 by another learned work, "Unitarianism, Theologically and Philosophically considered", in which Father Kohlmann replied to the assertions ofJared Sparks and otherUnitarian leaders.New York had no bishop as yet, the first appointed having died in Italy before he reached his see, and Father Kohlmann governed as administrator for several years. In 1815, expecting the early arrival of the second bishop (Connolly), he returned to the college of his order at Georgetown, D. C., as master of novices, and in 1817 became superior.
In 1824, when
Pope Leo XII restored theGregorian University to the direction of the Society of Jesus, Father Kohlmann was summoned to Rome to take the chair of theology, which he filled for five years. One of his pupils then was the subsequentPope Leo XIII ; another became later Archbishop of Dublin, and the first Irish cardinal (Paul Cullen ). Leo XII and Gregory XVI both held Father Kohlmann in high esteem, and had him attached as consultor to the staffs of theCollege of Cardinals and several of the important Congregations, including that of Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs, of Bishops and Regulars, and of the Inquisition.The last part of his life he spent as a confessor in the
church of the Gesù atRome , where during the Lenten season of 1836 he overtaxed himself and brought on an attack of pneumonia that ended his career.References
*
John Gilmary Shea , "The Catholic Church in the U. S." (New York 1856);
*Bayley, "A Brief Sketch of the Early History of the Catholic Church in the Island of N. Y." (New York. 1870);
*Joseph Finotti , "Bibliog. Cath. Am." (New York, 1872);
*Farley, "History of St. Patrick's Cathedral" (New York 1908);
*"U. S. Cath. Hist. Soc., Hist. Records and Studies", I (New York, 1899), pt. i ;
*"The Catholic Family Almanac" (New York, 1872).External links
* [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/08686c.htm "Catholic Encyclopedia" article]
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