Friday, December 29, 2017


Province of Milwaukee




Pope Pius IX created the Province of Milwaukee in 1875.    The Province consists of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee and four dioceses in Wisconsin—Green Bay, La Crosse, Superior, and Madison.  The Province has 1.4 million Catholics, 25 percent of the total population (as of 2015).  The Province had 1.7 million Catholics or 32 percent of the total population in 2000.



I have seen all of the Milwaukee cathedrals at least from the outside.  I have visited both basilicas and the shrine at Champion.  I felt privileged to be at the Marian shrine in Champion—the only approved Marian apparition site in the United States.





Map of the Province



Catholic History of Wisconsin




Jean Nicolet, a French Canadian, was the first non-Native American to see Wisconsin when he came to Green Bay and established a fur trading post in 1634.  In the mid-1650s, Medard Chouat des Groseilliers and Pierre-Esprit Radisson explored Green Bay and Chequamegon Bay (near Bayfield).  Rene Menard, a Jesuit missionary, came to northern Wisconsin in 1660, but died or was killed the following year.  Another Jesuit, Claude Allouez, founded a mission at La Pointe in 1665 and he and other Jesuits established missions at DuPere and Oconto, near Green Bay.  Another fur trading post was established at Prairie du Chien in 1673 by Louis Joliet, accompanied by Father Jacques Marquette as they made their famous exploration of the Mississippi River.  It is not known how many of the Native Americans were converted to the Faith during this time.  Over the next century, frequent wars between France and Great Britain, which also included the local Native-Americans, hindered the work of the missionaries and slowed settlement by Europeans.



Great Britain officially controlled the region from 1763 to 1783, but the British military stayed in the area until 1796 and British fur traders dominated the area until after the War of 1812.  The American government finally asserted control by building three Army forts in 1816, Fort Crawford at Prairie du Chien, Fort Howard at Green Bay, and Fort Winnebago at Portage.  Wisconsin had become part of the Northwest Territories in 1787 and at various times was part of the Territories of Indiana, Illinois, and Michigan, before becoming the Territory of Wisconsin in 1836.  Wisconsin became the 30th State in 1848.



Because of the British domination in the area, there were no resident priests in Wisconsin from about 1780 until Trappist monks from St. Louis reestablished the parish in Prairie du Chien in 1816 to serve the 700 Catholics there.  Father Gabriel Richard from Detroit rebuilt the church in Green Bay in 1825 to serve the 1,200 Catholics in that town.  Over the next two decades, many great missionary priests came to Wisconsin, including Samuel Mazzuchelli, Theodore Van den Broeck, and Frederick Baraga.



Having gained Territorial status, Wisconsin grew quickly.  Wisconsin had 31,000 residents in 1840, but by the end of the decade, there were almost 300,000 residents, a third of whom were foreign-born (and many of these were German).  Most of the new residents settled in the southeast portion of the State.  Milwaukee was founded in 1833 by Solomon Juneau, who operated a fur trading post there.  (Juneau’s cousin, Joe, founded Juneau, Alaska.)  The first Mass in Milwaukee was celebrated that same year in Juneau’s home by Father Florimond Bonduel.  Within 10 years, Milwaukee was the largest town in Wisconsin and there were enough Catholics in the State to justify Pope Gregory XVI’s creation of the Diocese of Milwaukee in 1843.  By the late 1860s, Wisconsin’s population was close to one million and Pope Pius IX created the Dioceses of Green Bay and La Crosse in 1868.  Neither town was among the largest in the State—La Crosse had a population of 7,800 and Green Bay 4,700 compared to Milwaukee’s 71,000, Fond du Lac’s 12,800, and Oshkosh’s 12,700—but both were the largest towns in their part of the State.



Pope Pius IX created the Province of Milwaukee in 1875, making Milwaukee an archdiocese.  By the turn of the Century, Wisconsin had over two million people, about a quarter of whom were Catholic.  Pope Pius X created the Diocese of Superior in 1905 to serve the Catholics in the far northern part of the State.  Superior was a growing Great Lakes port with a population of over 30,000 at the time.  Finally, with the State’s population exceeding three million in 1940, including over 800,000 Catholics, Pope Pius XII created the Diocese of Madison in 1946—Madison had been Wisconsin’s capital since 1838.





Archdiocese of Milwaukee




The Archdiocese of Milwaukee consists of 10 counties in southeastern Wisconsin. The archdiocese has 574,000 Catholics (25 percent of the total population) in 199 parishes, as of 2015.



Archbishops of Milwaukee



John M. Henni (1805-1881) 

·         Born in Switzerland and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Cincinnati in 1829.

·         First and only Bishop of Milwaukee (1844-1875) and the first Archbishop of Milwaukee (1875-1881). 



Henni became the first Bishop of Milwaukee in 1844—four years before Wisconsin became a State.  Bishop Henni’s Diocese, which then consisted of Wisconsin and a portion of Minnesota, had about 20,000 Catholics, but only a few churches and priests.  Bishop Henni moved quickly to build new churches, including the Cathedral of St. John in Milwaukee, new schools, as well as hospitals—Saint Mary's Hospital in Milwaukee opened in 1859—and other charitable institutions.  He also established St. Francis Seminary in 1845 and by 1853 there were 100,000 Catholics served by 64 priests.  German-speaking himself, Henni took a special interest in the many German Catholic immigrants who settled in Wisconsin in the middle of the 19th Century.  He established a German parish—St. Mary’s—in Milwaukee, brought in German religious orders to open German schools, and established a German Catholic newspaper.  He frequently had to publically defend the Church from written attacks from anti-Catholic groups.  He became the first Archbishop of Milwaukee in 1875, when the Province of Milwaukee was created.  He encouraged the Jesuits to establish what is now Marquette University in 1880.  Archbishop Henni died in 1881.



Michael Heiss (1818-1890) 

  • Born in Bavaria, ordained a priest in Europe in 1840, and came to Milwaukee in 1844.
  • Archbishop of Milwaukee (1881-1890). 
  • Also served as first Bishop of La Crosse (1868-1880) and coadjutor archbishop of Milwaukee (1880-1881).

Ill health caused Archbishop Henni to ask the Vatican to appoint a coadjutor Archbishop and he suggested Michael Heiss.  Some English-speaking Catholics in the Archdiocese and some American bishops objected to another German archbishop, but the Vatican appointed Heiss as coadjutor Archbishop in 1880 and he became Archbishop in 1881 upon the death of Henni.  Heiss was a noted theologian and as Archbishop became a strong administrator.  He put the Archdiocese of a firm financial footing, paid off the Archdiocese’s debts, and established a school board to administer Archdiocesan schools.  Like other Wisconsin bishops, he successfully fought for the repeal of a Wisconsin law—favored by anti-Catholic groups—that mandated the teaching of English in all Wisconsin schools.  Many American bishops at this time favored a more “American” Catholic Church—one in which American Catholics would be defined more by their assimilation into American society, and less by their ethnic heritage.  As the spiritual leader of many German Catholics, Archbishop Heiss firmly opposed this Americanization.  Heiss died in 1890.



Frederick X. Katzer (1844-1903) 

  • Born in Austria and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Milwaukee in 1866.
  • Archbishop of Milwaukee (1891-1903).
  • Also served as Bishop of Green Bay (1886-1891). 

Archbishop Katzer was Austrian and his appointment was opposed by those bishops favoring a more American Church.  Archbishop Katzer continued to protect the heritage of German Catholics and also welcomed large numbers of Catholic immigrants from Eastern Europe (especially Poland) and Southern Europe and established separate parishes for each nationality.  He supported Catholic education and strongly opposed the growing socialist movement.  The first Wisconsin council of the Knights of Columbus was established in 1900.  Katzer also wrote at least one play—in German—The Combat of the Present Age.  Archbishop Katzer died in 1903.



Sebastian G. Messmer (1847-1930) 

  • Born in Switzerland and ordained a priest in Europe in 1871.
  • Archbishop of Milwaukee (1903-1930). 
  • Also served as a Bishop of Green Bay (1892-1903). 

There were over 200,000 Catholics in the Archdiocese when Archbishop Messmer was appointed and ethnic diversity became more of a problem.  Messmer narrowly averted a schism by a group of Polish Catholics through the appointment of a Polish auxiliary bishop.  Messmer centralized Archdiocesan offices and established guidelines for the administration of parishes, regardless of their ethnic makeup.  Messmer established many charitable institutions, built more than 40 new schools (including Milwaukee’s first central Catholic high school, now named for him), and encouraged the opening of Mount St. Mary’s College for women.  He established the first parishes in the Archdiocese for African-Americans and for Mexican-Americans.  Messmer invited more than two dozen religious orders to work in the Archdiocese.  He also encouraged lay organizations, helped form the Catholic Hospital Association, and established an English language Archdiocesan newspaper.  He supported temperance, but opposed prohibition as an attack on the Eucharist.  He appointed the first Catholic chaplain at the University of Wisconsin and wrote or edited many books and papers.  He opposed socialism and women’s suffrage.  Archbishop Messmer died in Switzerland in 1930.



Samuel A. Stritch (1887-1958) 

  • Born in Nashville, Tennessee, and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Nashville in 1910.
  • Archbishop of Milwaukee (1930-1939).
  • Also served as Bishop of Toledo, Ohio (1921-1930), Archbishop of Chicago (1939-1958), and for three months in 1958 as Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith at the Vatican.  (He was the first American named to a high-level position at the Vatican.) 

Stritch was the first Archbishop of Milwaukee to be born in the United States.  Stritch, who was only 43 at the time he was installed as Archbishop, served Milwaukee in the height of the Great Depression.  He expanded charitable activities, but cut back on building plans—he refused to restore St. John’s Cathedral after a major fire in 1935.  His concern for Catholic education led him to insist that parochial school teachers meet the same standards as public school teachers.  Stritch hosted the first National Catholic Social Action Conference in 1938, which promoted the Catholic Action movement—a movement that invited greater participation by the laity in the life of the Church through organizations like the Holy Name Society, the Sodality, and the Catholic Youth Organization.  He did insist on strict controls by bishops, however.  He was also a leader of the National Catholic Welfare Conference, the predecessor to the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.  He became Archbishop of Chicago in 1939 and was named a Cardinal in 1946.



Moses E. Kiley (1876-1953) 

  • Born in Canada and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Chicago in 1911.
  • Archbishop of Milwaukee (1940-1953). 
  • Also served as Bishop of Trenton, New Jersey (1934-1940). 

Archbishop Kiley led the Archdiocese through World War II, during which 30 Archdiocesan priests served as military chaplains.  Kiley renovated the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist in time for the Archdiocese’s centennial in 1943, rebuilt an orphanage, and made needed repairs to St. Francis Seminary.  However, he was generally cautious about spending money and left most of the construction needed to accommodate large population shifts—something experienced by all U.S. Catholic dioceses in the post-World War II time period—to his successor.  As Catholics became more interested in various devotions and novenas, he established a Catholic Family Life Bureau.  Kiley died in 1953.



Albert Meyer (1903-1965) 

  • Born in Milwaukee and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in 1926.
  • Archbishop of Milwaukee (1953-1958). 
  • Also served as Bishop of Superior (1946-1953) and Archbishop of Chicago (1958-1965).  Named a Cardinal in 1959. 

Archbishop Meyer was the first Milwaukee native to become Archbishop of Milwaukee.  The Archdiocese grew dramatically during the five years that Meyer served as Archbishop.  Over 100,000 new Catholics led Meyer to undertake a three million dollar construction program that resulted in over 20 new parishes and almost 40 new schools.  He began the process to eliminate parishes serving a single ethnic group.  He instituted a religious information program that brought many converts to the Church and encouraged greater lay participation in the Church.  He became Archbishop of Chicago in 1958 and was named a Cardinal in 1959.



William E. Cousins (1902-1988) 

  • Born in Chicago and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Chicago in 1927.
  • Archbishop of Milwaukee (1958-1977). 
  • Also served as auxiliary bishop of Chicago (1948-1952) and Bishop of Peoria, Illinois (1952-1958). 

Cousins served as Archbishop during a period of great social change at both the national level and within the Church.  Cousins attended the Second Vatican Council and implemented the changes resulting from the Council, such as the ordination of permanent deacons and a greater role for the laity in Church governance.  He also successfully guided the Archdiocese through difficult times related to the struggle of African-Americans for civil rights and protests against the Vietnam War.  He supported the right of African-Americans to live wherever they wanted, which was a contentious issue in Milwaukee at that time.  Archbishop Cousins retired in 1977.



Rembert G. Weakland, O.S.B. (born 1927) 

  • Born in Pennsylvania and ordained a Benedictine priest in 1951.
  • Archbishop of Milwaukee (1977-2002). 
  • Also served as abbot-primate of the Benedictine Confederation (1967-1977). 

Archbishop Weakland closed a preparatory seminary and converted it to offices and a retirement home for priests.  His renovation plans for the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist were completed in 2002, despite much opposition.  Archbishop Weakland established a parish for Native Americans and started missions for Hmong and Lao refugees. Weakland retired in 2002 shortly after it was revealed that he used $450,000 of Archdiocesan funds to prevent a lawsuit by a former male lover.  Court documents released in 2009 revealed that Weakland shredded reports about sexual abuse by priests and allowed priests guilty of child sexual abuse to continue as priests without warning parishioners or alerting the police.



Timothy M. Dolan (born 1950)

  • Born in St. Louis and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of St. Louis in 1976.

·    Archbishop of Milwaukee (2002-2009).

  • Also served as rector of the North American College in Rome (1994-2001), auxiliary bishop of St. Louis (2001-2002), and serves as Archbishop of New York (since 2009).  He was named a Cardinal in 2012.
Archbishop Dolan increased the number of seminarians, wrote two books, and hosted a television program on the Catholic Faith.  He also had to deal with the clergy sexual abuse scandal.  In 2009, the Archdiocese paid $27 million to settle lawsuits related to sexual abuse by Archdiocesan employees.  There were at least a few hundred victims of as many as 60 priests.  The Archdiocese declared bankruptcy in 2011.



Current Archbishop



Jerome E. Listecki was appointed Archbishop of Milwaukee by Pope Benedict XVI in 2009.  He was born in Chicago in 1949 and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Chicago in 1975.  He previously served as auxiliary bishop of Chicago (2000-2004) and Bishop of La Crosse (2004-2009).















The Cathedral




Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist

812 N. Jackson Street
Milwaukee, Wisconsin  53202



St. John was one of the twelve Apostles, one of the four Evangelists, and the brother of the Apostle James the Great.  He is thought to be the author of one of the Gospels, three Epistles, and the Book of Revelation.  He took care of the Blessed Virgin Mary from the time of Jesus’ death to the time of her death.  According to tradition, he died of old age around 100 A.D. in Ephesus in modern day Turkey.  His feast day is December 27.



Great Saint, who was present at the Agony of Jesus, in the Garden of Olives, and upon the Cross, be present also at the agony of His members. Give this charitable assistance to all the dying, for whom I intercede this day, especially to those who have been recommended to our prayers. Intercede for them, and obtain for them, the grace of a holy death. O beloved disciple of Jesus, ask the same favor for us, and for all dear to us. At the hour of our agony, be near us and protect us. Prepare us by a holy life, and by the imitation of your virtues, for that great moment which shall decide our eternal destiny. Above all, obtain for us, a tender and real devotion to the Agonizing Heart of Jesus, and to the compassionate Heart of Mary, so that, having honored them on earth, we may love and praise them eternally with you in Heaven. Amen.



The first celebration of the Mass in Milwaukee was in 1837 in the home of Solomon Juneau.  St. Peter’s church was built in 1839 and served as Bishop Henni’s first cathedral starting in 1844.  Construction of the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist commenced in 1847 and was completed in 1852.  The Cathedral is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  St. Peter’s was eventually relocated to the present site of St. Peter and Paul’s Church.  St. John’s Cathedral was designed by Victor Schulte in the German Zopstil style using a light colored Cream City brick.  The baroque bell tower was rebuilt in 1893.  The Cathedral was extensively damaged by a fire in 1935 (only the bell tower and portions of the exterior walls survived).  Restoration was completed in 1943.  A major renovation was completed in 2001, which included painting the Cathedral in the colors of terra cotta, gold, ivory, and taupe.






The first picture is from Wikipedia, the second from the Cathedral website and the last is mine.


The Cathedral’s altar is located near the center of the nave.  The six-foot square altar is made of Italian marble and rests on a platform of Tennessee marble.  Over the altar is a large crown of thrones designed by Arnaldo Pomodoro of Italy and a bronzed fiberglass crucifix designed by Giuseppe Maraniello.  The cathedra, or Archbishop’s Chair, is made of collamendino rossa marble taken from the old communion rail.  The Cathedral’s baptismal pool is in the shape of a tomb signifying our journey from death to new life in Baptism.



The Blessed Sacrament Chapel contains the bronzed tabernacle resting on three pillars of Breccia Serravezza marble.  Within the Chapel is a shrine to St. Pope John XXIII with a statue crafted by David Wanner, a local sculptor.  The Chapel of St. Joseph the Worker is used for daily Mass and contains wooden statues of St. Joseph and St. Therese, the Little Flower.  The Cathedral’s 13 stained-glass windows were made by the T.C. Esser Company of Milwaukee.  They portray the Twelve Apostles and St. Paul.  The French Medieval-style windows are constructed of Norman slab glass and German and English antique glass.  Above the windows are portraits of the Archbishops of Milwaukee.  The Stations of the Cross are made of Venetian mosaic inlay and are replicas of those found in St. Ann’s Church in Munich, Germany.  The Cathedral has two pipe organs—one located in the apse and the other in the gallery.  The gallery organ, with 3,586 pipes, was built by Robert Noehren and installed in 1966.



A detailed description of the Cathedral, including explanations of the symbolism and the history of various items can be found on the Cathedral’s website at www.stjohncathedral.org.  Addition information can be obtained the Archdiocese’s website at www.archmil.org. The Cathedral is located in downtown Milwaukee and has three weekend masses.









All pictures are from the Cathedral website, except the last which is from pinterest. 



Also located in the Archdiocese















There are two minor basilicas in the Archdiocese.  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.


 


The Basilica of St. Josaphat is in Milwaukee.  After a fire destroyed the first St. Josaphat Church in 1889, its pastor, Father William Grutza, made plans to build a much larger church to serve his large Polish parish.  He hired Erhard Brielmaier as his architect and bought the remains of the recently demolished U.S. Post Office and Customs House in Chicago.  The new Neo-Renaissance church was built in large part with the stone and other materials shipped from Chicago to Milwaukee on 500 flatcars.  The new church was dedicated in 1901, although the interior decorations, primarily done by Conrad Scmitt and Gonippo Raggi, were not completed until 1928.  The beautifully decorated church, which seats over 2,000, is administered by the Conventual Franciscan Friars.  Pope Pius XI designated the church as a minor basilica in 1929—the third U.S. church to be so honored.  The Basilica is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.  Additional information and pictures can be found on the Basilica’s website at www.thebasilica.org.  
















The first six pictures are from the basilica website and the rest a mine.

The Basilica of Holy Hill, National Shrine of Mary, Help of Christians, is in Hubertus.  Irish and German Catholics settled near Hubertus in the middle of the 19th Century and in 1863 built a small log chapel on top of what became known as Holy Hill.  The Chapel was dedicated to Our Lady, Help of Christians.  A brick chapel was built less than 20 years later and the current twin-spired Neo-Romanesque church was completed in 1931.  The church was designed by Herman Gaul of Chicago and houses a life-size statue of Our Lady of Holy Hill that was made in Germany for the 1876 Philadelphia World’s Fair and brought to Holy Hill in 1878.  Above the entrance to the upper church are 8-foot marble statues of St. Mary Help of Christians and of St. Joseph. Inside the upper church, St. Teresa of Jesus and St. John of the Cross, founders of the Discalced Carmelites, are depicted in mosaics.  The church has been administered by the Discalced Carmelite Friars since 1906.  Many pilgrims have come to Holy Hill seeking a cure for their illnesses and disabilities.  Pope Benedict XVI designated the church as a minor basilica in 2006.  The basilica website, www.holyhill.com, has a tour of the basilica.
















The first five pictures are from the basilica website and the rest are mine.


Diocese of Green Bay




The diocese consists of 16 counties in northeastern Wisconsin.  The diocese has 326,000 Catholics (33 percent of the total population) in 157 parishes as of 2015.

Bishops of Green Bay




Joseph Melcher (1806-1873) 

  • Born in Austria, ordained a priest in Europe in 1830, and later became a priest for the Diocese of St. Louis, Missouri.

·    First Bishop of Green Bay (1868-1873).

  • Declined an appointment as the first Bishop of Quincy, Illinois (now the Diocese of Springfield) in 1855. 

In 1868, the newly created Diocese of Green Bay had 40,000 Catholics served by over 60 churches, a dozen parish schools, and 26 priests.  The first Bishop, Joseph Melcher, served for five years before his death in 1873.



Francis X. Krautbauer (1824-1885) 

·         Born in Germany and ordained a priest in Germany in 1850.

·         Bishop of Green Bay (1875-1885).



Bishop Krautbauer’s Diocese included Catholics from many different nationalities.  He built almost three dozen churches, including St. Francis Xavier Cathedral in Green Bay, and increased the number of priests from 63 to 96.  Bishop Krautbauer focused on the development of parochial schools and at the time of his death in 1885, there were 44 schools educating 5,300 students.



Frederick X. Katzer (1844-1903) 

·         Born in Austria and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Milwaukee in 1866.

·         Bishop of Green Bay (1886-1891). 

·         Also served as Archbishop of Milwaukee (1891-1903).



Katzer served only briefly before becoming Archbishop of Milwaukee in 1891.  While in Green Bay, Katzer successfully fought for the repeal of a Wisconsin law that mandated the teaching of English in all Wisconsin schools. 



Sebastian G. Messmer (1847-1930) 

·         Born in Switzerland and ordained a priest in Austria in 1871.

·         Bishop of Green Bay (1892-1903). 

·         Also served as Archbishop of Milwaukee (1903-1930).



The Swiss-born Messmer became known for his support for German Catholics in an American Church dominated by the Irish.  As Bishop, he built several schools, including some for German children, and opened several charitable organizations.  He supported rural settlements of Catholics and he championed the placement of Marquette’s statue in the U.S. Capitol.  Messmer invited a Dutch priest to establish the Norbertine Order in the United States, which led to the establishment of St. Norbert College in DePere.  Messmer became Archbishop of Milwaukee in 1903.



Joseph J. Fox (1855-1915)

·         Born in Green Bay and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Green Bay in 1879.

·         Bishop of Green Bay (1904-1914).



Fox was the first American-born Bishop of the Diocese.  The Diocese had 135,000 Catholics at this time served by over 100 churches.  Fox worked to strengthen Catholics schools in the Diocese.  Bishop Fox resigned due to poor health in 1914.



Paul P. Rhode (1871-1945) 

·         Born in Poland and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Chicago in 1894.

·         Bishop of Green Bay (1915-1945). 

·         Also served as auxiliary bishop of Chicago (1908-1915).



Rhode became the first Polish-American to become a bishop when he was consecrated as an auxiliary bishop of Chicago in 1908.  He served as Bishop of Green Bay and served for 30 years, the longest tenure of any Green Bay bishop.  Rhode organized the Diocese’s schools and appointed a superintendent.  He also strengthened Catholic Charities and child welfare programs.  Rhode started 10 parishes and 19 schools and encouraged lay organizations.  Bishop Rhode died in 1945.



Stanislaus V. Bona (1888-1967)

·         Born in Chicago and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Chicago in 1912.

·         Bishop of Green Bay (1945-1967). 

·         Also served as Bishop of Grand Island, Nebraska (1932-1944) and coadjutor bishop of Green Bay (1944-1945).



As coadjutor bishop, Bona became Bishop upon the death of Bishop Rhode.  Bona built a minor seminary, Holy Family College, four high schools, and 67 elementary schools.  He also established a Diocesan newspaper and broadened the Diocesan Catholic Charities program so that it met the needs of migrant workers.  He attended all four sessions of the Second Vatican Council.  Bishop Bona died in 1967.



Aloysius J. Wycislo (1908-2005)

·         Born in Illinois and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Chicago in 1934.

·         Bishop of Green Bay (1968-1983). 

·         Also served as auxiliary bishop of Chicago (1960-1968).



I have little information on Bishop Wycislo except that he was an author of several publications.  Bishop Wycislo retired in 1983.



Adam J. Maida (born 1930) 

·         Born in Pennsylvania and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Pittsburgh in 1956.

·         Bishop of Green Bay (1983-1990).

·         Also served as Archbishop of Detroit (1990-2009).  Pope John Paul II named him a Cardinal in 1994.



Bishop Maida convened a Diocesan synod in 1988 and created an educational endowment fund and a diocesan planning council.  Maida appointed the first female chancellor for the Diocese and the first female parish director.  He also merged some parishes and schools.  Bishop Maida was appointed Archbishop of Detroit in 1990.



Robert J. Banks (born 1928) 

·         Born in Massachusetts and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Boston in 1952.

·         Bishop of Green Bay (1990-2003). 

·         Also served as auxiliary bishop of Boston (1985-1990).



Bishop Banks emphasized spiritual renewal for both priests (Emmaus program) and the laity (Renew 2000).  He sought lay participation by frequent visits to each parish and encouraged priests and laity to make each Sunday Mass a joyous and uplifting celebration.  Banks maintained ecumenical relationships with Protestant leaders, encouraged vocations to the priesthood and religious life, and strengthened ministry to the young, newcomers, and Hispanics. He was a leader in Catholic education and served as chairman of the National Catholic Education Association.  Bishop Banks retired in 2003.



David A. Zubik (born 1949)

·         Born in Pennsylvania and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Pittsburgh in 1975.

·         Bishop of Green Bay (2003-2006).

·         Also served as auxiliary bishop of Pittsburgh (1997-2003) and serves as Bishop of Pittsburgh (since 2006).



Bishop Zubik increased the number of vocations to the priesthood, worked to improve evangelization efforts, and put programs in place to protect children from sexual abuse.  Bishop Zubik was named Bishop of Pittsburgh in 2006.



Current Bishop



David L. Ricken was appointed Bishop of Green Bay by Pope Benedict XVI in 2008.  He was born in Kansas in 1952 and ordained a priest in for the Diocese of Pueblo, Colorado, in 1980.  He previously served as an official with the Vatican’s Congregation for the Clergy (1996-1999), coadjutor bishop of Cheyenne, Wyoming (1999-2001), and Bishop of Cheyenne (2001-2008).



The Cathedral



St. Francis Xavier Cathedral

139 S. Madison Street
Green Bay, Wisconsin 
54301



St. Francis Xavier (1506-1552) was one of the Church’s greatest missionaries.  Born in Spain, he studied at the University of Paris, where he met St. Ignatius Loyola and became, in 1534, one of the original members of the Society of Jesus, or Jesuits.  Ordained to the priesthood in 1537, he ministered in Venice and Rome, before sailing for the East Indies in 1541.  After a several month stopover in Mozambique, he arrived in the Portuguese colony of Goa, India, in 1542.  For the next 10 years, he preached the Gospel and tended to the poor and the sick.  He traveled around India, as well as to today’s Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Japan, and possibly the Philippines.  After a brief return to Goa in 1552, he sailed for China.  During a stop at the island of Sancian, just six miles off the coast of China, he became ill and died.  He was canonized in 1622 and is the patron saint of foreign missions and of several countries, including India and Japan.  His feast day is celebrated on December 3.



Almighty and everlasting God, we thank you for your Servant Francis, whom you called to preach the Gospel to the peoples of Asia. Raise up, we pray, in this and every land heralds and evangelists of your kingdom, that your Church may proclaim the unsearchable riches of our Savior Jesus Christ; who lives and reigns with you and the Holy Spirit, one God, now and forever.



Bishop Melcher came to Green Bay as its first Bishop in 1868 and selected the church of the Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary (known as St. Mary’s) to be his cathedral.  This wood-framed church had been built in 1851 by German immigrants.  The current cathedral was built between 1876 and 1881 and replaced St. Mary’s.  The new cathedral was rededicated to St. Francis Xavier, the patron saint of Bishop Krautbauer, who was then bishop.   The Cathedral is built in the Romanesque style and is modeled after a church in Munich, Germany.  The bell towers were added in 1904.





The first picture is from the Cathedral website and the second is from Wikipedia.


The most striking object in the Cathedral is a 40 foot by 25 foot mural of the Crucifixion painted in 1883 by Johann Schmitt, an immigrant from Germany, and located on the rear wall of the sanctuary.  Josef Albrecht painted eight pictures in the early 20th Century depicting the Beatitudes.  There are also paintings on the ceiling of the four evangelists.



The main altar is carved from white Carrara marble.  A side altar dedicated to Our Mother of Perpetual Help is the only altar remaining from 1881. In addition to Our Lady, it honors those who have served in the armed services.  A mosaic of Our Lady is above this altar.



The Cathedral’s stained glass windows were designed by the Tyrol Art Glass Company of Austria and the Columbia Art Glass Company of Ohio.  The Rose Window was installed in the 1950s and is dedicated to the Mystical Body of Christ.  The window is made from over 4,000 pieces of glass and was made by the Columbia Art Glass Company.   The pipe organ was installed by the Wickes Organ Company of Illinois in 1982 and it has 56 ranks, 4 manuals and 3,282 pipes.



There is an audio-visual tour of the Cathedral on its website, sfxcathedralgb.com.  The Diocese’s website is gbdioc.org.  The Cathedral is located in downtown Green Bay and celebrates two weekend masses.









All pictures are from the Cathedral website.



Also located in the Diocese



I am making another exception to only talking about cathedrals and basilicas.  Given that this next church is the site of the only approved Marian apparition in the United States, I thought it worthy to be included.



In Robinsonville (now called Champion), Wisconsin, a young Belgian immigrant woman named Adele Brise, who was 28 years old, was walking through a wooded area on October 9, 1859, when she saw a beautiful woman standing between a maple and a hemlock tree. She saw the lady again on her way to Mass, and walked past her again. After Mass she told her priest about the apparition, and he told her to ask the Lady "In God's name, who are you and what do you want of me?" When Adele walked past the spot again on October 17, the Lady was there, and Adele asked what she was told by the priest. The Lady replied, "I am the Queen of Heaven who prays for the conversion of sinners." Our Lady of Good Help gave Adele the mission to teach the children of the area their Catechism, which Adele did faithfully. Soon after, Adele's father built a small chapel between the trees, and later two more churches were built on the spot before the present brick church was built in 1942.



On October 8, 1871, the greatest fire disaster in the history of the United States—the Peshtigo Fire—killed 1,500 to 2,500 people and destroyed 1.5 million acres of land in Wisconsin.  The only place left untouched near Champion was the Chapel and Shrine property of Our Lady of Good Help where Adele and other believers had gone to seek refuge and pray. It is reported that the fence around the property was charred on the outer side but untouched on the inner side.  Many cures have been recorded at the Shrine.  In 2010, Bishop David Ricken of Green Bay approved the apparition as worthy of belief, as the first, and so far only, Marian apparition approved in the United States at the local level.









All pictures are by me.



Diocese of La Crosse



The diocese consists of 19 counties in western Wisconsin.  The diocese has 166,000 Catholics (18 percent of the total population) in 160 parishes as of 2015.



Bishops of La Crosse



Michael Heiss (1818-1890) 

·         Born in Bavaria, ordained a priest in Europe in 1840, and came to Milwaukee in 1844.

·         First Bishop of La Crosse (1868-1880). 

·         Also served as coadjutor archbishop of Milwaukee (1880-1881) and Archbishop of Milwaukee (1881-1890).



Bishop Heiss took charge of the new Diocese of La Crosse in 1868.  The Diocese at that time covered all of Wisconsin northwest of the Wisconsin River.  There were about 30,000 Catholics, 47 churches, and 18 priests.  Heiss spent much of his time visiting these widespread parishes and missions.  He attended the First Vatican Council (1869-1871) and built several new churches, including the first Cathedral of St. Joseph.  Heiss convened the first Diocesan synod in 1871.  He built 22 schools and helped establish the Franciscan Sisters of Perpetual Adoration to teach in the schools. Heiss became coadjutor Archbishop of Milwaukee in 1880 and became Archbishop in 1881.  At that time, the Diocese had about 45,000 Catholics served by 59 priests.



Kilian C. Flasch (1831-1891) 

·         Born in Germany and ordained a priest in 1859 for the Diocese of Milwaukee.

·         Bishop of La Crosse (1881-1891). 



Bishop Flasch continued to build new churches for the Diocese.  He was a strong advocate of parish schools and was a member of the Committee on Schools at the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore in 1884.  Within the Diocese, he built 36 new schools and established the second Catholic school board in the United States.  Flasch served on the Board of the Catholic University of America, although he initially opposed its creation.  Flasch’s tenure as Bishop of cut short after he succumbed to a long illness in 1891. 

 

James Schwebach (1847-1921)  

·         Born in Luxembourg and ordained a priest in 1870 for the Diocese of La Crosse.

·         Bishop of La Crosse (1892-1921). 



Bishop Schwebach continued to build churches, schools, and hospitals for the increasing number of Catholics in the Diocese.  He also built St. Michael’s Home for orphans.  Bishop Schwebach died in 1921.



Alexander J. McGavick (1863-1948) 

·         Born in Illinois and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Chicago in 1887.

·         Bishop of La Crosse (1921-1948). 

·         Also served as auxiliary bishop of Chicago (1899-1921).



Bishop McGavick, the first Bishop of Lacrosse born in the United States, led the Diocese through the Great Depression and the Second World War.  Despite these difficult times, Bishop McGavick was able to build several new churches and schools and he encouraged parishes to pay off their debts.  He established the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, the Catholic Youth Organization, and the Council of Catholic Women within the Diocese.  McGavick established a Diocesan newspaper and was noted for his ability to preach.  He died in 1948.



John P. Treacy (1890-1964) 

·         Born in Massachusetts and ordained a priest in 1918 for the Diocese of Cleveland, Ohio.

·         Bishop of La Crosse (1948-1964). 

·         Also served as coadjutor bishop of La Crosse (1945-1948).



As coadjutor bishop, Treacy became Bishop upon the death of Bishop McGavick, although Treacy had served as administrator of the Diocese since 1946.  As Bishop during the post-war years, Treacy built Holy Cross Seminary in 1951, the Cathedral of St. Joseph the Workman, as well as many other churches, schools, and other buildings.  He called a Diocesan Synod and attended the first two sessions of the Second Vatican Council.  Bishop Treacy died in 1964 of a heart condition.



Frederick W. Freking (1913-1998) 

·         Born in Minnesota and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Winona, Minnesota, in 1938.

·         Bishop of La Crosse (1964-1983). 

·         Also served as Bishop of Salina, Kansas (1957-1964)



Bishop Freking implemented the changes from the Second Vatican Council (including the creation of a priests’ senate and a lay ministry training program) and also built or renovated many churches, schools, religious education centers, and other buildings.  He ordained 59 priests during his time as Bishop.  He established the Bethany-St. Joseph Care Center for the elderly run jointly by the Diocese and the Lutheran church.  Bishop Freking served a two-year term as president of the National Catholic Rural Life Conference and he reduced the Diocesan debt.  Bishop Freking retired in 1983.



John J. Paul (1918-2006) 

·         Born in La Crosse and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Lincoln, Nebraska, in 1943.

·         Bishop of La Crosse (1983-1994). 

·         Also served as auxiliary bishop of La Crosse (1977-1983).



Bishop Paul called the Fourth Diocesan Synod in 1986 to implement the provisions of the 1983 Revised Code of Canon Law. This called for a diocesan infrastructure of consultative bodies and commissions which would be designed around the themes of sacred worship, family life, justice and peace, and education.  Paul also greatly increased the number of Diocesan seminarians.  Bishop Paul retired in 1994.



Raymond L. Burke (born 1948) 

·         Born in Richland Center and ordained a priest in 1975 for the Diocese of La Crosse.

·         Bishop of La Crosse (1994-2003). 

·         Also served as Archbishop of St. Louis (2003-2008), the Vatican’s Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura (2008-2014), and serves as Patron of Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of Saint John of Jerusalem of Rhodes and of Malta.

·         He was named a Cardinal in 2010.



Bishop Burke built a shrine dedicated to Our Lady of Guadalupe overlooking the Mississippi River near La Crosse.  He also headed the National Catholic Rural Life Conference for a term and convened the Fifth Diocesan Synod in association with the Jubilee Year 2000.  Burke founded a group of Augustinian priests dedicated to traditional liturgies and installed a shrine to the Sacred Heart in St. Joseph’s Cathedral to encourage spiritual devotions.  Bishop Burke was appointed Archbishop of St. Louis in 2003. 



Jerome E. Listecki (born 1949) 

·         Born in Chicago and ordained a priest in 1975 for the Archdiocese of Chicago.

·         Bishop of La Crosse (2004-2009). 

·         Also served as auxiliary bishop of Chicago (2000-2004) and serves as Archbishop of Milwaukee (since 2009).



Bishop Listecki began a developmental campaign that raised $50 million and he formulated a planning process to restructure parishes.  He also raised money for Gulf Coast and local flood relief.  He completed the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe.  Listecki was named Archbishop of Milwaukee in 2009.



Current Bishop



William P. Callahan, OFM, Conv., was appointed Bishop of La Crosse by Pope Benedict XVI in 2010.  He was born in Chicago in 1950 and ordained a Franciscan priest in 1977.  He previously served as auxiliary bishop of Milwaukee (2007-2010). 


The Cathedral



St. Joseph the Workman Cathedral

530 Main Street

La Crosse, Wisconsin 54601



St. Joseph was the husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the foster father of Jesus.  He was a carpenter and taught this trade to Jesus.  Devotion to St. Joseph dates to the early days of Christianity in the Eastern churches, but only in the last 500 years has Joseph gained his deserved respect in Western Christendom.  He is the patron saint of many countries, as well as being the patron saint of fathers and of a happy death, since he presumably died in the presence of Jesus, the Son of God, and Mary, the Mother of God.  He is also the patron saint of workers.  St. Joseph’s feast day is March 19.  Pope Pius XII instituted the Feast of St. Joseph the Worker in 1955 and it is celebrated on May 1.



O Glorious St. Joseph, model of all who are devoted to labor, obtain for me the grace to work in the spirit of penance in expiation of my many sins; to work conscientiously by placing love of duty above my inclinations; to gratefully and joyously deem it an honor to employ and to develop by labor the gifts I have received from God, to work methodically, peacefully, and in moderation and patience, without ever shrinking from it through weariness or difficulty to work; above all, with purity of intention and unselfishness, having unceasingly before my eyes death and the account I have to render of time lost, talents unused, good not done, and vain complacency in success, so baneful to the work of God.  All for Jesus, all for Mary, all to imitate thee, O Patriarch St. Joseph!  This shall be my motto for life and eternity.  Amen.  [Pope St. Pius X]



St. Joseph parish was established in 1863—La Crosse’s second parish—to serve the needs of German-speaking Catholics.  Ground was broken for the church building in 1864 at the corner of Sixth and Main, but actual construction did not begin until 1869.  It was completed in 1870 with some urgency because it had been selected to be the Cathedral for the new Diocese of La Crosse in 1868.  (The first parish, St. Mary’s, served St. Joseph’s parishioners until their own church was completed.)  The current Cathedral, dedicated to St. Joseph the Workman, was completed in 1962 on the site of the former Cathedral and was designed by Edward J. Schulte, a Cincinnati architect.




The top picture is from the Cathedral website and the bottom is from Wikipedia.


The Gothic Revival Cathedral is made of limestone and has a steeple that rises 216 feet from the street to the top of its aluminum cross.  The Cathedral is 61 feet high, 276 feet long, and 120 feet wide.  The roof is supported by 22 Gothic arches made of Bedford stone and the Celtic ceiling design is made from gold leaf and is inspired by the Irish Book of Kells.  The main altar is made of Botticino marble and stands on a Verte-Issore (green) marble platform with Aurisine (buff-gold) marble accents.  Carl Wyland, a German artisan, designed and built the 1,500 pound bronze canopy over the altar.



The Blessed Sacrament Chapel has black marble walls with gold designs in the ceiling.  The front of the altar is made of gold-colored mosaic glass.  The Chapel contains the burial vaults of Diocesan bishops.  Our Lady’s chapel has a gold leaf ceiling and three stained glass windows depicting apparitions of Our Blessed Mother.  The Stations of the Cross were made in Germany of Mosaic stone.  The Cathedral has two pipe organs built by the Noack Organ Company of Massachusetts and installed in 2010.  The main organ has 58 stops and four manuals and the small organ has 14 shops and two manuals.



The Cathedral website, cathedralsjworkman.org, has an architectural tour and a video of the windows.  The Diocesan website is dioceseoflacrosse.com.  The Cathedral of St. Joseph the Workman is located in downtown La Crosse and has four weekend masses.  The Cathedral seats 1,100.





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



Diocese of Superior




The diocese consists of 16 counties in northwestern Wisconsin.  The diocese has 69,000 Catholics (16 percent of the total population) in 103 parishes as of 2015.



Bishops of Superior



Augustine F. Schinner (1863-1937) 

  • Born in Milwaukee and ordained a priest in 1886 for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee.
  • First Bishop of Superior (1905-1913).
  • Also served as the first Bishop of Spokane, Washington (1914-1925). 

Bishop Schinner’s new Diocese had 39,000 Catholics in the Diocese served by 39 Diocesan and 17 religious order priests in 93 churches and 33 chapels. By the time he resigned in 1913, there were over 50,000 Catholics served by more than 150 churches and chapels and about 80 priests.  These Catholics consisted of Anglo-Americans, Native Americans, and immigrants from Germany, Poland, and other countries in Europe.  Bishop Schinner opened several parish schools to provide Catholic children with a Catholic education and invited religious orders to administer several of the schools.  He met with President Theodore Roosevelt to resolve an education issue involving Native American children.  Schinner traveled throughout his rural Diocese, sometimes on a horse-drawn sleigh through deep snow.  He resigned in 1913 because he thought the lake air was making him less efficient.  He became Bishop of Spokane, Washington, in 1914.



Joseph M. Koudelka (1852-1921) 

  • Born in Austria and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Cleveland, Ohio, in 1875.
  • Bishop of Superior (1913-1921). 
  • Also served as auxiliary bishop of Cleveland (1908-1911) and auxiliary bishop of Milwaukee (1911-1913). 

Bishop Koudelka built 10 parish churches, 22 mission churches, three hospitals, one orphanage, and several schools.  He increased the number of priests from 86 to 98 during his 8 years as Bishop.  One ordained priest was a member of the Chippewa tribe, the second Native American priest in the United States.  Koudelka also encouraged Catholics to emigrate to northern Wisconsin and he established a diocesan Catholic Charities bureau.  Bishop Koudelka was investigated by the U.S. Justice Department during the First World War for being sympathetic to Germany.  He was exonerated when it became clear that these false accusations were brought by disgruntled priests in the Diocese.  Bishop Koudelka died in 1921.



Joseph G. Pinten (1867-1945) 

  • Born in Michigan, and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Marquette, Michigan, in 1890.
  • Bishop of Superior (1921-1926). 
  • Also served as Bishop of Grand Rapids, Michigan (1926-1940). 

Bishop Pinten began construction of the Cathedral of Christ the King.  He also bought a home for himself, but it gave it to a community of religious Sisters when he learned their residence was overcrowded.  Pinten was named Bishop of Grand Rapids, Michigan, in 1926.



Theodore M. Reverman (1877-1941) 

  • Born in Kentucky and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Louisville, Kentucky, in 1901.
  • Bishop of Superior (1926-1941).  

Bishop Reverman dedicated the new Cathedral in 1927, but had to deal with financial difficulties during the Great Depression.  He was able to open 7 new schools as the Diocese experienced modest growth.  He also established the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine in 1939 to serve those not attending Catholic schools.  Reverman also invited the Sisters of Mercy of the Holy Cross and the Sisters of St. Joseph to open hospitals in the Diocese.  Bishop Reverman died in 1941.



William P. O'Connor (1886-1973) 

  • Born in Milwaukee and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in 1912.
  • Bishop of Superior (1942-1946). 
  • Also served as the first Bishop of Madison (1946-1967). 

Bishop O’Connor was known for his humor, which was helpful as he led the Diocese during the Second World War—he had served as a military chaplain during the First World War.  He urged Catholics to pray for peace and dispensed them from Lenten rules on fast and abstinence during the War (as did many other U.S. bishops).  He established three new parishes and expanded the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine.  He was named the first Bishop of Madison in 1946.



Albert Meyer (1903-1965) 

  • Born in Milwaukee and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in 1926.
  • Bishop of Superior (1946-1953).
  • Also served as Archbishop of Milwaukee (1953-1958) and as Archbishop of Chicago (1958-1965).  Named a Cardinal in 1959. 

Bishop Meyer, coming from Milwaukee, initially set rules for priests (i.e., that young priests should not own a car) that did not work well in his Diocese and he rescinded them.  He built several new churches and schools and established a diocesan newspaper, the Council of Catholic Women, and encouraged vocations to the priesthood—he ordained 13 new priests.  Meyer also produced a set of sermon outlines that were used by priests statewide.  He was named Archbishop of Milwaukee in 1953.



Joseph Annabring (1900-1959) 

  • Born in Hungary and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Superior in 1927.
  • Bishop of Superior (1954-1959).   

Bishop Annabring was the first priest of the Diocese to become its bishop.  Annabring established the Family Life Bureau to promote Christian practices in the home, a lay group for men, the St. Thomas More Institute for adult education, and Our Lady of the Lake Retreat House.  He also started a program to encourage vocations to religious life and a commission to increase lay participation in the Mass.  He built 20 churches and 15 schools and led the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Diocese in 1955.  He died of heart failure in 1959.



George A. Hammes (1911-1993) 

  • Born in St. Joseph’s Ridge, Wisconsin, and ordained a priest for the Diocese of La Crosse in 1937.
  • Bishop of Superior (1960-1985). 

Bishop Hammes attended all sessions of the Second Vatican Council and instituted changes based especially in the areas of liturgy, role of the laity, and ecumenism.  He also made efforts to explain these changes to Catholics.   These changes included the ordination of permanent deacons, the use of English at Mass, and the institution of anticipatory Mass on Saturday evening, the establishment of lay advisory councils at the Diocese and parish levels, and the establishment of an advisory council of religious sisters.  Hammes wrote guidelines for ecumenism and participated in ecumenical events.  He also decreed that non-Catholic Christians could receive the Eucharist under certain conditions.  Bishop Hammes ordained 78 priests, but he also had to cluster some parishes due to a shortage of priests.  One cluster was led by a religious sister.  Hammes was also forced to close 17 schools, including four high schools, due to declining enrollment.  He opened religious education centers to counter the loss of these schools.  Bishop Hammes retired in 1985.



Raphael M. Fliss (1930-2015) 

·         Born in Milwaukee and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in 1956.

·         Bishop of Superior (1985-2007). 

·         Also served as coadjutor bishop of Superior (1979-1985).



Fliss became Bishop upon the retirement of Bishop Hammes.  Although he ordained 21 priests, Bishop Fliss had to contend with a shortage of priests.  He managed this through the appointment of lay people to Diocesan and parish positions that would formerly have been held by priests.  He nevertheless had to close more than three dozen parishes.  Fliss appointed a Diocesan finance council for better accountability.  Bishop Fliss began a lay catechist training program, an office of religious education, and several evangelization programs, including Renew, Teens Encounter Christ, and Cursillo.  He also established a review board to handle allegations of child abuse by any Diocesan priest, employee, or volunteer.  In 2005, Bishop Fliss led the celebration of the Diocese’s 100th anniversary and the 340th anniversary of the establishment of Christianity in the Upper Midwest.  He retired in 2007. 



Peter F. Christensen (born 1952) 

·         Born in California and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of St. Paul and Minneapolis in 1985.

·         Bishop of Superior (2007-2014). 

·         Serves as Bishop of Boise, Idaho (since 2014).



Bishop Christensen stressed the importance of Catholic schools and began a special collection to help fund existing Catholic schools.  He also began a capital campaign in 2013 to help pay for the care of retired priests, the education of seminarians, the needs of underfunded schools and parishes, and the care of the poor and disadvantaged.  Christensen ordained 10 priests and 22 permanent deacons, but he also had to cut Diocesan expenses resulting in staff layoffs.  He established the School of Servant Leadership in 2011 to help clergy and laity deepen their commitment to the Gospel.

Bishop Christensen was named Bishop of Boise, Idaho, in 2014.



Current Bishop



James P. Powers was appointed Bishop of Superior by Pope Francis in 2015.   He was born in Baldwin, Wisconsin, in 1953 and ordained a priest for the Diocese of Superior in 1990.  He previously served the Diocese as a pastor and as vicar general.  Prior to becoming a priest, Powers worked on his family’s farm.



The Cathedral



Cathedral of Christ the King

1410 Baxter Avenue

Superior, Wisconsin 54880



The cathedral’s name refers to Jesus Christ as king of all creation.  As King, all people owe him honor, praise, and fidelity, in all aspects of our lives.  The Feast of Christ the King is celebrated on the last Sunday of the Church year.



O Lord our God, You alone are the Most Holy King and Ruler of all nations. We pray to You, Lord, in the great expectation of receiving from You, O Divine King, mercy, peace, justice and all good things. Protect, O Lord our King, our families and the land of our birth. Guard us we pray Most Faithful One. Protect us from our enemies and from Your Just Judgment. Forgive us, O Sovereign King, our sins against you. Jesus, You are a King of Mercy. We have deserved Your Just Judgment. Have mercy on us, Lord, and forgive us. We trust in Your Great Mercy. O most awe-inspiring King, we bow before You and pray; May Your Reign, Your Kingdom, be recognized on earth. Amen.


Sacred Heart parish was established in 1886 and became the Cathedral parish in 1905 with the creation of the new Diocese.  Sacred Heart Cathedral was a small frame building.  Christ the King Cathedral was dedicated in 1927 and the parish was a merger of the former Sacred Heart and St. Joseph parishes.  The completion of the new Cathedral’s interior would take another decade.



Picture is by me.


The Cathedral is of Italian Romanesque design and is built primarily of limestone.  The Cathedral has a terrazzo floor and coffered ceiling.  The most dominant feature inside the Cathedral is a glass tessera tile mosaic of Christ the Pantocrator (Lord of Creation) that is over the tabernacle.  The tabernacle is covered with a wooden canopy and is separated from the sanctuary by a wrought iron screen that creates a separate chapel.  Within the sanctuary, the main altar, ambo, and cathedra (Bishop’s chair) are made of Botticino marble. 



The Cathedral has 95 stained-glass windows which were installed in 1938.  They feature various subjects including Christ the King, the Mother of God, St. Augustine, Old Testament figures, saints, the gifts of the Holy Spirit, and the seven sacraments.  The octagonal baptismal font is made of Carnelian granite.  A mosaic of Mary as Mother of God is on the ceiling of the west transept and a mosaic of St. Augustine of Hippo is on the east transept ceiling.



There are chapels dedicated to St. Joseph, St. Mother Theresa of Calcutta, Blessed Solanus Casey, and St. Kateri Tikakwitha.  A six-foot, 500 pound, bronze statue of St. Kateri was made by Sister Margaret Beaudette, a Sister of Charity, of the DePaul Studio in New York.  Bronze Stations of the Cross were designed by Wiktor Szostalo. 



The Cathedral website, www.superiorcathedral.org, offers a tour of the Cathedral and has details about the renovation that began in 2001.  The Diocesan website, www.catholicdos.org, has extensive biographies of the Bishops.  The Cathedral is located near downtown Superior and has three weekend masses.  The parish elementary school has 260 students.



Both pictures are from the Cathedral website.



Diocese of Madison




The diocese consists of 11 counties in south central Wisconsin.  The diocese has 284,000 Catholics (28 percent of the total population) in 110 parishes as of 2015.



Bishops of Madison


William P. O'Connor (1886-1973) 

  • Born in Milwaukee and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in 1912.
  • First Bishop of Madison (1946-1967). 
  • Also served as Bishop of Superior (1942-1946). 

Bishop O’Connor built a seminary, enlarged the Cathedral of St. Raphael, and convened a Diocesan synod.  He also invited religious orders to serve in the Diocese and organized a priests’ senate (in response to the Second Vatican Council).  Bishop O’Connor retired in 1967.



Cletus F. O'Donnell (1917-1992) 

  • Born in Iowa and ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of Chicago in 1941.
  • Bishop of Madison (1967-1992). 
  • Also served as auxiliary bishop of Chicago (1960-1967). 

Bishop O’Donnell implemented the decrees of the Second Vatican Council, established an office of marriage and family life, and a support group for divorced Catholics.  Bishop O’Donnell died in 1992.



William H. Bullock (1927-2011) 

  • Born in Minnesota and ordained a priest in 1952 for the Archdiocese of St. Paul.
  • Bishop of Madison (1993-2003). 
  • Also served as auxiliary bishop St. Paul and Minneapolis (1980-1987) and Bishop of Des Moines, Iowa (1987-1993). 

Bishop Bullock closed the Diocesan seminary and converted it to a diocesan center.  He also wrote pastoral letters concerning Church teaching on euthanasia, suicide, and the right to life.  He retired in 2003.



Current Bishop



Robert C. Morlino was appointed Bishop of Madison by Pope John Paul II in 2003.  He was born in Pennsylvania in 1946, ordained a Jesuit priest in 1974, and became a diocesan priest for the Diocese of Kalamazoo, Michigan, in 1983.  He previously served as Bishop of Helena, Montana (1999-2003).



The Cathedral



St. Raphael’s Cathedral
404 E. Main Street
Madison Wisconsin 53703



St. Raphael is an archangel—“one of the seven angels who enter and serve before the Glory of the Lord.”  He plays a prominent role in the Book of Tobit in the Old Testament—curing Tobit’s blindness, protecting Tobiah on his journey, and facilitating the marriage of Tobiah and Sarah.  He is the patron saint of travelers, the blind, those in love, and health care workers, including physicians, nurses, and health inspectors.  His feast day is celebrated on September 29—along with two other archangels, Michael and Gabriel.



St. Raphael, archangel, you protected Tobias as he journeyed to a distant land. How natural, therefore, for us to pray for your powerful help for safe travel and a happy return. This is what we ask for ourselves, as well as for all loved ones who are far from home. Please protect us and all travelers. Spread your loving wings of protection over us and guide us as we journey both near and far from home. Amen



St. Raphael’s parish began in the 1848—the first parish in Madison—and served Irish immigrants who had settled in Madison.  The parish met in private homes and in the State Capitol building until the first small wooden church was completed in 1850.  Construction of a larger Romanesque-Revival building began in 1854 and was completed in 1862, at a cost of $30,000.  This church became the Cathedral of the Diocese of Madison upon its creation in 1946.  Sadly, the Cathedral was destroyed by arson in 2005 and three years later, Bishop Robert Morlino combined St. Raphael’s parish with two other downtown parishes—Holy Redeemer and St. Patrick—to form a new Cathedral parish.  Holy Redeemer was established in 1857 to serve German speakers and St. Patrick’s was established in 1888 to serve English speakers (mostly Irish).  St. Patrick’s is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.



Bishop Morlino has announced that a new Cathedral will be built on the site of the old St. Raphael’s, but no further action has been taken.  Until the completion of the new Cathedral, the Cathedral parish meets in the two existing downtown churches.  St. Patrick’s has two weekend masses and Holy Redeemer has five weekend masses—including three in Spanish.  The parish cathedral website is isthmuscatholic.org and the Diocesan website is www.madisondiocese.org.

The first picture is of Holy Redeemer, the second is St. Patrick, and the last is the former St.Raphael Cathedral.  All pictures are from the Cathedral website.