Monday, February 20, 2017


Province of denver


Pope Pius XII created the Province of Denver in 1941.    The Province consists of the Archdiocese of Denver and three dioceses in Colorado and Wyoming.  The Province has 848,000 Catholics, 15 percent of the total population.  In 2000, there were 585,000 Catholics or 13 percent of the total population.

I have only seen one of the four cathedrals in this province—the Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception in Denver and I did not get a chance to go inside during my last visit to Denver in 1986.

A note about a sad subject.  The clergy sexual abuse scandal resulted in many victims.  Sadly, some Catholic bishops abused children (usually before they were bishops), some took strong action against the clergy abuse and others did less.  Many bishops had to deal with lawsuits resulting from activities that took place before they were bishops.  In my blog, I will report on legal actions that were taken to include creditable accusations or lawsuits against a bishop, and lawsuits, bankruptcies, and other legal actions taken by a Diocese as a result of past sexual abuse by diocesan employees.  Many groups have accused bishops of “not doing enough.”  I will not report on these accusations because they are often vague and I do not know what an individual bishop may or may not have done or why regarding individual priests.

Map of the Province


Colorado


Catholic History of Colorado


Spanish explorers likely came to Colorado as early as 1541, but it was not until 1706 that Juan de Ulibarri claimed the land for Spain.  A fur trader, James Purcell, was the first American to come to Colorado in 1803.  More American explorers and fur traders followed, but the first permanent settlement was not made until 1851 at San Luis.  The discovery of gold in 1858 led to increased settlement—several towns were established over the next three years, including Denver.  Eastern Colorado had become a part of the United States as a result of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, but it was not until 1848 that the Nation gained full control of Colorado.  Congress created the Territory of Colorado in 1861 and Colorado became the 38th State in 1876.

Part of Colorado came under the jurisdiction of the Vicariate Apostolic (a missionary diocese) of the Indian Territory East of the Rocky Mountains in 1850—a territory covering all or part of 8 future states—and the first Catholic church was built in Canejos in 1858.  Colorado was transferred to the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Santa Fe in 1860 who that same year sent Fathers Joseph Machebeuf and John Raverdy to Denver.  Pope Pius IX established the Vicariate Apostolic of Colorado and Utah in 1868 and appointed Machebeuf as the Vicar Apostolic.  Colorado became the Vicariate Apostolic of Colorado two years later with Machebeuf remaining in charge.  Colorado’s population grew from 34,000 in 1860 to 412,000 in 1890 and the Church served many ethnic groups including Mexicans, Irish, Italians, Germans, and Slovaks.

Pope Leo XIII created the Diocese of Denver in 1887, consisting of the State of Colorado, and appointed Machebeuf as the first Bishop.  Denver was Colorado’s capital and largest city with a population of about 100,000.  By 1940, Colorado’s population had grown to 1.1 million.  Pope Pius XII created the Province of Denver the following year, thus raising Denver to an Archdiocese, and also created the Diocese of Pueblo for the Catholics in the southern half of the State.  Pueblo was then Colorado’s second largest city.  By 1980, Colorado’s population had risen to 2.9 million and Pope John Paul II created the Diocese of Colorado Springs in 1983.


Archdiocese of Denver


The Archdiocese of Denver consists of 25 counties in northern Colorado. The archdiocese has 570,000 Catholics (16 percent of the total population) in 123 parishes.

Bishops of Denver

Joseph P. Machebeuf (1812-1889), Vicar Apostolic of Colorado and Utah (1868-1870),
Vicar Apostolic of Colorado (1870-1887), and first Bishop of Denver (1887-1889). 
·         Born in France and ordained a priest in France in 1836.

Joseph Machebeuf, known as the Apostle of Colorado, was sent by the Bishop of Santa Fe in 1860 to minister to the few Catholics who then lived in Colorado and Utah.  He traveled throughout these territories in a covered wagon which served as both chapel and home.  He was put in charge of the Vicariate Apostolic (a missionary diocese) of Colorado and Utah in 1868 (Utah was split off in 1871) and was named the first Bishop of Denver in 1887.  Machebeuf built St. Mary’s Church in Denver in 1860—the first Catholic church in the town and went on to build over 100 churches and chapels.  He increased the number of priests from 3 in 1860 to 64 in 1889 and invited religious orders to establish schools.  He also invited the Jesuits to take charge of many of the parishes in southern Colorado in 1871.  Machebeuf established St. Vincent Orphanage, Sacred Heart College (now Regis University), St. Joseph Hospital in Denver and 10 other hospitals.  He died in 1889.

Nicholas C. Matz (1850-1917), Bishop of Denver (1889-1917). 
  • Born in France and ordained a priest in 1874 for the Vicariate Apostolic of Colorado and Utah.
  • Also served as coadjutor bishop of Denver (1887-1889).
The Catholic population increased from 40,000 to 110,000 under Bishop Matz and he increased the number of parishes from 49 to 88.  These new Catholics were not only Irish and Spanish, but Italian, German, and Polish as well, and Bishop Matz opened several ethnic parishes to serve them.  He also welcomed St. Frances Xavier Cabrini who opened a school at an Italian parish, an orphanage, and what is now known as the Mother Cabrini Shrine in Golden.  He also built St. Thomas Seminary and the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception and started The Denver Catholic Register.  He convened the first diocesan synod in 1890.  He opposed the formation of a miners union and faced opposition from some of his priests for the debt incurred from his building program.  He died in 1917 following a period of poor health.

J. Henry Tihen (1861-1940), Bishop of Denver (1917-1931).  
  • Born in Indiana and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of St. Louis in 1886.
  • Also served as Bishop of Lincoln, Nebraska (1911-1917).
Bishop Tihen increased the number of priests in the Diocese by 55 in 13 years and established over 20 new parishes, as well as new schools and other Catholic institutions, including three hospitals.  He supported the war effort through school programs and war bonds during the First World War and defended the Church against anti-Catholic attacks by groups such as the Ku Klux Klan.  He also established Catholic Charities of Denver in 1927.  He supported labor unions and the right of women to vote.  He resigned in 1931 (due to poor health) at which time there were 135,000 Colorado Catholics and 229 priests.

Archbishops of Denver

Urban J. Vehr (1891-1973), Bishop of Denver (1931-1941) and first Archbishop of Denver (1941-1967). 
·         Born in Ohio and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Cincinnati in 1915.

Vehr was named the first Archbishop of Denver in 1941 and was at that time the youngest U.S. bishop.  Archbishop Vehr led the Archdiocese for 36 years through the Great Depression, the Second World War, and the economic boom following the War.  During the Depression, he sent priests to minister to Catholics in Colorado’s two dozen Civilian Conservation Corps camps.  He built 200 churches and schools and 200 other buildings to keep pace with a 300 percent increase in the number of Catholics in the Archdiocese.  He began an Archdiocesan development program, expanded St. Thomas Seminary, and ordained 162 priests.  He also built many new schools and united all Catholic schools under a school superintendent.  Due to poor health, Vehr was unable to attend the Second Vatican Council and he retired in 1967.

James V. Casey (1914-1986), Archbishop of Denver (1967-1986). 
·         Born in Iowa and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Dubuque, Iowa, in 1939.
·         Also served as auxiliary bishop of Lincoln, Nebraska (1957) and Bishop of Lincoln (1957-1967).

Archbishop Casey enthusiastically implemented the decrees of the Second Vatican Council.  He established over a dozen new Catholic organizations, such as the Samaritan House Homeless Shelter, to encourage greater involvement and control in the Church to nuns and the laity and to meet the needs of the poor and disadvantaged.  Just days before his death, he urged the State Legislature to enact a law that would provide clean water and portable toilets for migrant workers.  He also started an Hispanic ministry.  He opened 24 new parishes but also had to close or consolidate some Catholic schools.  He opposed the War in Vietnam and moved out of the Archbishop’s mansion to humbler quarters.  He suffered a ruptured artery in 1984 and never fully recovered.  He died from a cerebral aneurysm in 1986.

Francis Stafford (1932-    ), Archbishop of Denver (1986-1996). 
·         Born in Baltimore and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Baltimore in 1957.
·         Also served as auxiliary bishop of Baltimore (1976-1982), Bishop of Memphis, Tennessee (1982-1986), President of the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for the Laity (1996-2003), and served as the Vatican’s Major Penitentiary of the Apostolic Penitentiary (2003-2009).

The Archdioceses had 330,000 Catholics when Archbishop Stafford became Archbishop.  He hosted World Youth Day in 1993, which including a visit from Pope John Paul II.  He also established Redemptoris Mater Archdiocesan Seminary.  He began a development campaign and developed a strategic plan for Catholic schools.  Archbishop Stafford was appointed the President of the Vatican’s Pontifical Council for the Laity in 1996 and was named a Cardinal by Pope John Paul II in 1998.

Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap., (1944-    ), Archbishop of Denver (1997-2011). 
·         Born in Kansas and ordained a Capuchin priest in 1970.
·         Also served as Bishop of Rapid City, South Dakota (1988-1997) and serves as Archbishop of Philadelphia (since 2011).

Charles Chaput was appointed the fourth Archbishop of Denver in 1997.  He is the second Native American to become a bishop, and the first to be a diocesan ordinary.  He was also the youngest U.S. archbishop at the time of his appointment in Denver.  I don’t know what Archbishop Chaput did in Denver, except that he established St. John Vianney Theological Seminary in 1999.  He was named Archbishop of Philadelphia in 2011. 

Current Archbishop

Samuel J. Aquilla was appointed Archbishop of Denver by Pope Benedict XVI in 2012.  He was born in California in 1950 and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese in 1976.  He previously served as coadjutor bishop of Fargo, North Dakota (2001-2002) and Bishop of Fargo (2002-2012).

The Cathedral


Cathedral Basilica of the Immaculate Conception
1530 Logan Street
Denver, Colorado  80203

Many Christians believe that humans are born into sin—known as original sin.  This sin is erased through baptism and the saving grace of Jesus Christ.  Catholics believe that Mary, through the grace of God, was conceived without the stain of original sin—the Immaculate Conception.  She was given the honor because of her role as the Mother of God.  The Feast of the Immaculate Conception is celebrated on December 8.

O Most gracious Virgin Mary, beloved Mother of Jesus Christ, our Redeemer, intercede with him for us that we be granted the favor which we petition for so earnestly in this novena.  O Mother of the Word Incarnate, we feel animated with confidence that your prayers in our behalf will be graciously heard before the throne of God. O Glorious Mother of God, in memory of your joyous Immaculate Conception, hear our prayers and obtain for us our petitions. (State your intention here...)  O Mary of the Immaculate Conception, Mother of Christ, you had influence with your Divine Son while upon this earth; you have the same influence now in heaven. Pray for us and obtain for us from him the granting of my petition if it be the Divine Will. Amen.

Joseph Machebeuf, later the first Bishop of Denver, built St. Mary’s Church in 1860—the first Catholic church in the city.  This 1,900 square-foot brick church was located at 15th and Stout streets, then on the edge of town, now the site of a parking garage.  This humble church became Machebeuf’s cathedral when he became Vicar Apostolic of Colorado and Utah in 1868.  The Bishop lived in a 155 square-foot wooden shack behind the Cathedral with one other priest.  By 1864, this humble Cathedral had an organ and an 800-pound bell.  Machebeuf continued to make improvements to the Cathedral until his death in 1889.  The building was demolished in 1890.  Bishop Nicholas Matz built a new Cathedral that year at 1842 Logan Street—it is now the Samaritan Shelter.  This Romanesque brick and red sandstone building also housed the parish school.  Ground was broken for the current Cathedral in 1902 and was completed in 1912 at a cost of about half a million dollars paid for mostly by wealthy parishioners.  The Cathedral is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  Pope John Paul II designated the Cathedral as a minor basilica in 1979.  Basilica is an honorary title bestowed on a church by the Pope because of the church’s antiquity, dignity, historical importance, or significance as a center of worship.


From Wikipedia

The French Gothic cathedral was designed by Leon Coquard of Detroit and Aaron Gove and Thomas Walsh of Denver.  The design was inspired by the 13th-century Saint Nicholas Collegiate church of Munster, Moselle, France; the birthplace of Bishop Matz.  The Cathedral measures 195 by 116 feet and its exterior walls are made Indiana Bedford limestone.  The foundation is made from Gunnison granite.  The bell towers rise 210 feet above street level and have 15 bells ranging from a 3,500-pound D flat to a 525-pound G flat.

The altars, statues, as well as the pulpit (or ambo), Archbishop’s chair, and communion rail are made from Italian Carrara marble.  Colorado Yule marble was used for the confessionals, steps, and other features.  The vaulted ceiling is 68 feet from the floor. 

Side altars are dedicated to the Blessed Mother, St. Joseph, and the Sacred Heart.  There is a chapel dedicated to St. Paul and Children's Chapel with a Guardian Angel Shrine.  The Cathedral has a Kimball pipe organ.

The most magnificent feature of the Cathedral is its 75 stained glass windows—claimed to be more than any other church of any denomination in the United States.  They were designed and made by F.X. Zettler of Munich, Germany.  These beautiful windows feature scenes from the life of Jesus Christ, his Apostles and Evangelists, and his Blessed Mother.  Details are as delicate as thin eyelashes on the figures.  The two large trancept windows contain over 20,000 pieces of colored glass.  Zettler’s secrets for making these exquisite windows were lost when his facility was destroyed during the Second World War.






The first three are from flickr.com and the last two from the Cathedral website

Much additional detail about the Cathedral can be obtained from its website denvercathedral.org, including the windows.  The Archdiocesan website is archden.org.

The Cathedral is located near the Colorado State Capitol and has five weekend masses.  The Cathedral seats 800.  Each year the Cathedral provides 50,000 to 60,000 lunches to the poor and homeless. 

Diocese of Pueblo


The diocese consists of 29 counties in southern Colorado.  The diocese has 129,000 Catholics (19 percent of the total population) in 53 parishes.

Bishops of Pueblo

Joseph C. Willging (1884-1959), first Bishop of Pueblo (1942-1959). 
  • Born in Iowa and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Dubuque in 1908.
As Bishop during the period of growth following the Second World War, Bishop Willging increased the number of parishes by 50 percent and built schools and hospitals.  He increased the number of Diocesan priests from 84 to 151—an average of four new priests a year—and invited religious orders of nuns to administer schools and other institutions.  He died of a heart attack in 1959.

Charles A. Buswell (1913-2008), Bishop of Pueblo (1959-1979). 
·         Born in Oklahoma and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Oklahoma City and Tulsa in 1939.

Bishop Buswell attended all sessions of the Second Vatican Council and was an enthusiastic supporter of the changes brought about by the Council.  He encouraged ecumenism and social justice and formed advisory boards of both clergy and laity.  He also began a fund to support Diocesan programs.  Perhaps his most controversial action was closing all 12 of Pueblo’s Catholic schools because financial issues would have meant that only the children of the wealthy could attend.  He resigned in 1979.

Arthur N. Tafoya (1933-    ), Bishop of Pueblo (1980-2009). 
·         Born in New Mexico and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Santa Fe in 1962.

Bishop Tafoya established a series of plans to establish goals for the Diocese in light of declining numbers of Catholics and priests.  He also emphasized lay participation through the establishment of a permanent deaconate program and a training program for lay leadership.  He also started a foundation to fund Diocesan programs and reopened five parochial schools.  He sold the Bishop’s residence in 1989 due to the Diocese’s poor financial situation.  He vocally opposed the War in Iraq, calling it unjust.  He retired in 2009.

Fernando Isern (1958-    ), Bishop of Pueblo (2009-2013). 
·         Born in Cuba and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Miami, Florida, in 1993.

Bishop Isern served only a short time before resigning in 2013 due to poor health.  He instituted perpetual adoration at the Shrine of St. Therese and made pastoral visits to all of the parishes and missions of the Diocese. 

Current Bishop

Stephen Berg was appointed Bishop of Pueblo by Pope Francis in 2014.  He was born in Montana in 1951 and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Fort Worth in 1999.  He previously served as a pastor, moderator of the curia, and vicar general for the Diocese of Fort Worth.

The Cathedral

Cathedral of the Sacred Heart
414 West 11th Street
Pueblo, Colorado  81003

St. John Eudes was a 17th Century French priest who preached the loving nature of the Sacred Heart of Jesus.  Later in the same century, a French nun, St. Margaret Mary Alacoque had visions of Jesus revealing that his Sacred Heart was filled with love and mercy for all people.  The Feast of the Sacred Heart of Jesus is celebrated on the Friday after the second Sunday after Pentecost.  Many Catholics also show devotion to the Sacred Heart by attending Mass and receiving the Body and Blood of Christ on the first Friday of each month.

O Sacred Heart of Jesus, for whom it is impossible not to have compassion on the afflicted, have pity on us miserable sinners and grant us the grace which we ask of you, through the Sorrowful and Immaculate Heart of Mary, your tender Mother and ours.

Father Joseph Machebeuf and other priests visited Pueblo starting in the early 1860s, celebrating Mass in homes or at the County Courthouse.  The first Catholic parish was established in 1872 and a church was completed in 1873, three years after Pueblo was incorporated.  The church was dedicated to St. Ignatius and was located at 13th and West Streets.  This church was destroyed by fire in 1882 and a second church was built on Grand, between 10th and 11th Streets.  This church was also dedicated to St. Ignatius by the Jesuit priests who served it.  The current red-brick Gothic building was built (at a cost of $48,000) next to St. Ignatius Church (which then became the parish hall) and was dedicated to the Sacred Heart of Jesus upon its completion in 1913.  Sacred Heart became the Cathedral for the new Diocese of Pueblo in 1941.

From the Diocese's Facebook page

From Wikipedia

The Cathedral’s stained glass windows depicting biblical scenes are the work of the late Emil Frei of St. Louis.  A rose window depicts St. Cecilia, the patron saint of music.  The main entrance is flanked by two towers, one of which has a steeple reaching to 135 feet. The Cathedral has a bronze sculpture of Saint Therese of Lisieux by Colorado artist Huberto Maestas.  In 1989, the Cathedral was added to the National Register of Historic Places.

The Cathedral website, shcathedral.qwestoffice.net, has a five-minute tour of the Cathedral.  Also see the Diocesan website at dioceseofpueblo.org.  The Cathedral is located near downtown Pueblo and serves a parish of 1200 families with four weekend masses.

From thecatholicphotographer.com

Diocese of Colorado Springs


The diocese consists of 10 counties in east central Colorado.  The diocese has 170,000 Catholics (16 percent of the total population) in 37 parishes.

Bishops of Colorado Springs

Richard C. Hanifen (1931-    ), first Bishop of Colorado Springs (1983-2003). 
  • Born in Denver and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Denver in 1959.
  • Also served as auxiliary bishop of Denver (1974-1983).
Bishop Hanifen doubled the number of parishes in the Diocese to keep up with the growing number of Catholics.  He established the diocesan newspaper, The Catholic Herald, and appointed lay people to serve in leadership positions.  His encouragement of ecumenism led to his co-founding of the Center for Christian-Jewish Dialogue.  He retired in 2003.

Current Bishop

Michael J. Sheridan was appointed coadjutor bishop of Colorado Springs by Pope John Paul II in 2001 and became Bishop in 2003.  He was born in St. Louis in 1945 and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of St. Louis in 1971.  He previously served as auxiliary bishop of St. Louis (1997-2001).

The Cathedral

St. Mary’s Cathedral
22 West Kiowa Street
Colorado Springs, Colorado  80903

The Cathedral is named for Mary, the Mother of God.

Hail Mary, full of grace. The Lord is with thee. Blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.  Holy Mary, Mother of God, pray for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death.  Amen.

Father (later Bishop) Joseph Machebeuf celebrated the first Mass in Colorado Springs in 1873, two years after the town was established.  For the next two decades, Mass would be said in whatever space was available.  St. Mary’s parish was established in 1887, and the following year, the town’s Catholics bought property (for $3,100) and began construction of a church.  By 1891, services could be held in the basement pending final construction in 1898.  St. Mary's became the Cathedral of the new Diocese of Colorado Springs in 1984. The Cathedral is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

Diocese website

Wikipedia

The Gothic Revival Cathedral was designed by the architectural firm of Pease and Barber.  The bell towers were built in 1902 and the spires were added in 1907.  Most of the stained-glass windows were installed in 1924 and the rose window was redone in 1930.  Renovations in 2002-2003 added space to the Cathedral, changed the appearance of the Cathedral’s interior, and replaced the pipe organ.  Some addition detail can be found on the Cathedral’s website at stmaryscathedral.org.  Also see the Diocesan website at diocs.org.

Cathedral website

flickr.com

pinterest.com

St. Mary’s Cathedral is located in downtown Colorado Springs and has six weekend masses, including one in Spanish.

Wyoming

Catholic History of Wyoming 


Spanish explorers and French Canadian fur traders may have come to Wyoming, but the first recorded visit by a non-Native American, was by John Colter.  Colter, an American who had been a member of the Lewis and Clark expedition, explored Wyoming in 1806 and 1807 and gave the first account of the Yellowstone area.  Fur traders continued to come to Wyoming for the next several decades, and fur traders established Fort Laramie as a fur trading center in 1834.  The Oregon Trail opening in 1841 and the Union Pacific Railroad came in 1867.  The U.S. Army had established forts as early as 1849—a year after all of Wyoming had become part of the United States—and fought with Native Americans for control of the area until 1876.  Congress created the Territory of Wyoming in 1868, which at the time had about 9,000 residents.  Wyoming became the 44th State in 1890, at which time the population had risen to 63,000. 

Father Pierre De Smet celebrated the first Mass in Wyoming in 1840, which was attended by Native Americans and fur traders attending a “Rendezvous” near present-day Daniel.  Eastern Wyoming became part of the Vicariate Apostolic of the Indian Territory (a missionary diocese that included all or part of 8 future states) in 1850 and later became part of the Vicariate Apostolic of the Nebraska Territory.  Western Wyoming was under the jurisdiction of the Archbishop of Oregon City (now Portland).  All of Wyoming became part of the newly created Diocese of Omaha, Nebraska, in 1885 and became the Diocese of Cheyenne in 1887.  Cheyenne, then as now, was Wyoming’s capital and largest city. 

Diocese of Cheyenne 


The diocese consists of the State of Wyoming.  The diocese has 58,000 Catholics (10 percent of the total population) in 37 parishes.

Bishops of Cheyenne 


Maurice F. Burke (1845-1923), first Bishop of Cheyenne (1887-1893). 
·         Born in Ireland and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Chicago in 1875.
·         Also served as Bishop of St. Joseph, Missouri (1893-1923). 

Maurice Burke was named the first Bishop of Cheyenne in 1887.  When Bishop Burke arrived in Cheyenne that year, he found that his new Diocese had about 7,500 Catholics (including 3,000 Shoshone and Arapaho served by St. Stephen’s Indian Mission), 8 parishes and 28 missions, served by four diocesan priests and one Jesuit priest.  The Sisters of the Holy Child Jesus had two schools in Cheyenne and the Sisters of Charity of Leavenworth operated St. Joseph’s Hospital and a school in Laramie.  Anti-Catholic groups, such as the “Know Nothings” were very active at the time, which forced the Sisters of Charity to leave Wyoming.  Burke was so discouraged after his first two years as Bishop that he asked Rome to dissolve the Diocese.  His request was studied, but not granted.  Two years later, things had improved slightly—there were 9 priests and the number of missions had increased to 43.  Many of these missions were built in settlements along the newly built Union Pacific Railroad line.  He was named Bishop of St. Joseph, Missouri, in 1893.
   
Thomas M. Lenihan (1844-1901), Bishop of Cheyenne (1897-1901). 
·         Born in Ireland and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Dubuque, Iowa, in 1868. 

Four years passed before Pope Leo XIII named Thomas Lenihan as the second Bishop of Cheyenne.  Lenihan established a few new parishes and schools and organized the administration of the Diocese.  Despite poor health, he traveled throughout the Diocese, but his heart and kidney ailments eventually caused his death in 1901.  His younger brother, Mathias, served as Bishop of Great Falls, Montana.
  
James J. Keane (1856-1929), Bishop of Cheyenne (1902-1911). 
·         Born in Illinois and ordained a priest for the Diocese of St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1882.
·         Also served as Archbishop of Dubuque, Iowa (1911-1929).

Bishop Keane brought the Diocese into conformance with legal standards by incorporating each parish with a board that included lay members and by bringing order to the assignment of priests.  In 1909, he invited the Conventual Franciscans to administer St. James parish in Douglas, which included more than a dozen missions in four counties.  Immigrants seeking good farms and jobs in the timber, coal, iron, and oil and gas industries, swelled Wyoming’s population in the first decade of the 20th Century Keane received help from the Catholic Church Extension Society to build the new churches needed because of these new immigrants.  He recruited priests to serve in Wyoming and he built the current St. Mary’s Cathedral in 1907.  He was also noted for his skills as a preacher and retreat director.  Keane was named Archbishop of Dubuque, Iowa, in 1911. 

Patrick A. McGovern (1872-1951), Bishop of Cheyenne (1912-1951). 
·         Born in Nebraska and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Omaha in 1895. 

Bishop McGovern served as bishop for almost four decades.  An orphan himself, he established St. Joseph Children’s Home at Torrington in 1930 to care for Wyoming’s orphans and staffed by Franciscan Sisters.  He convened two Diocesan synods for priests to establish procedures for governance of the Diocese and he successfully increased the number of Diocesan priests.  A man of few words, McGovern often sent official notices to his priests on postcards.  Bishop McGovern frequently suffered from poor health and died in 1951. 

Hubert M. Newell (1904-1987), Bishop of Cheyenne (1951-1978). 
  • Born in Denver and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Denver in 1930.
  • Also served as coadjutor bishop of Cheyenne (1947-1951).
Bishop Newell attended the Second Vatican Council and implemented the resulting liturgical changes, including the establishment of a diocesan pastoral council and the commission of lay ministers of the Eucharist.  He promoted the Council of Catholic Women, the Knights of Columbus, and the Catholic Youth Organization.  He established a board of education for Catholic schools and started publication of the Wyoming Catholic Register in 1952.  He built new churches and schools and limited the terms of pastors, ending the practice of life-time appointments.  Newell retired in 1978.

Joseph Hart (1931-    ), Bishop of Cheyenne (1978-2001). 
·         Born in Missouri and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Kansas City-St. Joseph in 1956.
·         Also served as auxiliary bishop of Cheyenne (1976-1978). 

Bishop Hart ordained 25 priests and began the permanent deaconate program in the Diocese.  He encouraged lay participation in the Church through the establishment of parish pastoral councils and finance committees.  He also called the third Diocesan Synod to involve the laity in helping solve problems in the Diocese.  He also established a fund-raising program and welcomed the Benedictine nuns of Perpetual Adoration who established a monastery in 1983.  Bishop Hart retired in 2001.  The following year, he was accused of sexual misconduct while he served as auxiliary bishop of Cheyenne, but was cleared of these charges.  In August 2008, the Kansas City-St. Joseph Diocese paid a $10 million settlement to a group of sexual abuse victims, some of whom cited Hart as responsible for their abuse.

David L. Ricken (1952-    ), Bishop of Cheyenne (2001-2008). 
  • Born in Kansas and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Pueblo in 1980.
  • Also served as an official with the Vatican’s Congregation for the Clergy (1996-1999), coadjutor bishop of Cheyenne (1999-2001), and serves as Bishop of Green Bay, Wisconsin (since 2008).
According to Wikipedia, Ricken co-founded the Wyoming Catholic College and established the Wyoming School of Catholic Thought and John Paul II Catholic School in Gillette. He also built a new building for St. Mary's Catholic School in Cheyenne.  Ricken was named Bishop of Green Bay, Wisconsin, in 2008. 

Paul D. Etienne (1959-    ), Bishop of Cheyenne (2009-2016). 
  • Born in Indiana and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Indianapolis in 1992.
·    Serves as Archbishop of Anchorage, Alaska, since 2016.

I have no information on Bishop Etienne. 

Current Bishop 

Currently vacant. 

The Cathedral 

St. Mary Cathedral
2107 Capitol Avenue
Cheyenne, Wyoming 82003
 

The Cathedral is named for Mary, the Mother of God.

Hail, holy Queen, Mother of Mercy! Our life, our sweetness, and our hope! To thee do we cry, poor banished children of Eve, to thee do we send up our sighs, mourning and weeping in this valley of tears.  Turn, then, most gracious advocate, thine eyes of mercy toward us; and after this our exile show unto us the blessed fruit of thy womb Jesus; O clement, O loving, O sweet virgin Mary. Pray for us, O holy Mother of God that we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.

Cheyenne was established along the Union Pacific Railroad in 1867 and shortly thereafter the Army established Camp Carlin and Fort Russell (now Warren Air Force Base).  The Bishop of Omaha sent Father William Kelly to Cheyenne in 1867 to serve the Catholics in Wyoming and portions of Nebraska and Utah.  The following year, Kelly built a small wooden frame church at the northeast corner of 21st and O’Neil Streets and dedicated it to St. John the Baptist.  This was the second parish in Wyoming.  Twelve years later, a new brick church was completed at the northeast corner of 19th Street and Carey Avenue that could seat 300 people—at the time Cheyenne had 3,500 people including about 50 to 75 Catholic families.  This church became the first Cathedral of the new Diocese of Cheyenne in 1887 and was at the same time given the name St. Mary’s Cathedral.  The current Cathedral was completed in 1909 (at a cost of about $100,000) and was needed to serve a larger parish. The Cathedral is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. 

From the Diocesan website

The Early English Gothic building is made of white/gray sandstone from Iron Mountain, Wyoming, and measures 210 feet long by 70 feet wide.  A single tower rises 106 feet above the street.  The Cathedral has several stained-glass windows describing Biblical events.  The origin of these windows is unknown, but thought to be Dresden, Germany.  A large Madonna window was imported from Europe and donated by the Knights of Columbus.  The ceiling rises 70 feet above the floor and the ribs are made of oak.  The sanctuary walls are faced with pink travertine marble and a metal baldachin rises over the main altar.  A Visser-Rowland tracker pipe organ was installed in 1992 and has 2,825 pipes.  The casework is made of red Appalachian oak.

The cathedral website, stmarycathedral.com has much addition detail about the design of the Cathedral.  Also see the Diocesan website at dioceseofcheyenne.org.  The Cathedral is located in downtown Cheyenne and seats 650.  It has six weekend masses.  St. Mary’s School serves 200 elementary school children.

Cathedral website

Cathedral website

Cathedral website

Cathedral website

Cathedral website

Pinterest