George Albert Guertin

George Albert Guertin (February 17, 1869 August 6, 1931) was an American Roman Catholic bishop.

Biography

Guertin was born in Nashua, New Hampshire, of French Canadian parentage.[1] After attending St. Hyacinthe College in Quebec and St. Charles College in Sherbrooke, he studied at St. John's Seminary in Brighton, Massachusetts; he was the first alumnus of St. John's to become a bishop.[2]

He was ordained to the priesthood by Bishop Denis Mary Bradley on December 17, 1892.[3] He was a curate in Manchester and Lebanon before serving as pastor of St. Anthony's Church.[1]

On January 2, 1907, Guertin was appointed the third Bishop of Manchester by Pope Pius X.[3] He received his episcopal consecration on the following March 19 from Archbishop Diomede Falconio, with Bishops Matthew Harkins and Michael Tierney serving as co-consecrators.[3] His tenure lasted for over 24 years (the longest in the history of the Manchester Diocese), and spanned the industrial changes of the early twentieth century, the hardship of World War I, the economic distress of mill closings, and ultimately the Great Depression.[1]

He died at age 62.

gollark: Perhaps it was trained on every time I randomly said "Interesting fact: X" and those all turn out to be really important.
gollark: Why would the *bot* have been trained on me talking about random abandoned cities?
gollark: Why would I know about random abandoned cities?!
gollark: How would this work?
gollark: Well, I am heavpoot, and heavpoot wrote it...

References

Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
John Bernard Delany
Bishop of Manchester
19071931
Succeeded by
John Bertram Peterson
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