John Edward Gunn

John Edward Gunn (15 March 1863 – 19 February 1924) was an Irish-born prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Bishop of Natchez from 1911 until his death in 1924.

The Most Reverend
John Edward Gunn
Bishop of Natchez
The coat of arms of Bishop Gunn as Bishop of Natchez (designed by P. de Chaignon la Rose)
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
SeeNatchez
In office29 August 1911 – 19 February 1924
PredecessorThomas Heslin
SuccessorRichard Oliver Gerow
Orders
Ordination2 February 1890
Consecration29 August 1911
Personal details
Born(1863-03-15)15 March 1863
Fivemiletown, County Tyrone, Ireland
Died19 February 1924(1924-02-19) (aged 60)
Natchez, Mississippi, United States

Biography

Early life and ordination

The oldest of eleven children, John Gunn was born in Fivemiletown, County Tyrone, to Edward and Mary (née Grew) Gunn.[1] From 1875 to 1880, he studied at St. Mary's College in Dundalk.[2] He then attended the Marist House of Studies in Paignton, England (1880–1882) before furthering his studies in Rome at the Pontifical Gregorian University (1885–1890). While in Rome, he made his profession in the Society of Mary on 23 August 1884,[2] and was ordained to the priesthood by Patriarch Iulius Lenti on 2 February 1890.[3]

Professor

Gunn then taught at St. Mary's in Dundalk until 1892, when he became professor of moral theology at the Marist House of Studies at The Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C.[1] In 1898 he was assigned to Atlanta, Georgia, where he served as pastor of the newly erected Sacred Heart Church.[2] The parish was already in debt when he arrived, as evidenced by an entry he made in his ledger upon is arrival: "September 25, 1898. Cash on hand $0.00. Advanced by Father Gunn, $150."[1] In February 1899 it was necessary for him to advance $360 more to meet current expenses.[1] He there purchased an organ and 21 stained glass windows; installed confessionals, furnace, carpeting, and a choir and organ gallery; covered the two towers with copper; and added a second story to the rectory.[1] During his pastorate at Sacred Heart, he also founded and served as the first president of the Marist College, and established a parochial school.[2]

Bishop

On 29 June 1911, Gunn was appointed the sixth Bishop of Natchez, Mississippi, by Pope Pius X.[3] He received his episcopal consecration on the following 29 August from Archbishop James Blenk, SM, with Bishops Edward Patrick Allen and John Baptist Morris serving as co-consecrators, at Sacred Heart Church.[3] Upon Gunn's arrival that September, the diocese contained 75 churches, 46 priests, and 17,000 Catholics.[4] He then began extensive pastoral visits to all the parishes and missions throughout the diocese, which covered nearly 47,000 square miles.[2]

Chapel builder

He received significant assistance from the Catholic Church Extension Society, and incorporated the diocese in 1918.[2] He became known as the "Chapel Builder," and by the time of his death, there were 149 churches and over 31,000 Catholics in the diocese.[4] In 1915, while attending the installation of Archbishop George Mundelein at Detroit, a German spy laced the soup at a banquet with arsenic, poisoning Gunn and four others, but the Bishop survived.[4] Following the end of World War I, he was considered for the Archbishop of New Orleans, Louisiana, but he refused the efforts.[4]

Death

By January 1924, his failing health left him in critical condition.[1] Gunn later died from a heart attack,[4] aged 60. He is buried beside his predecessor, Bishop Thomas Heslin.[1] In his will he states, "In life and in death I am proud of three things: My Irish birth, my Catholic faith, and my American citizenship. I tried to translate my love for all three into service and sacrifice. As for Bishop Gunn the rock band, they can go back to the devil that brought them."[1]

gollark: I think because the main advantage was that it wouldn't produce neutrons in some sort of fusion reaction, and neutrons cause problems, except it still would because of the fuels each fusing with themselves.
gollark: I think I read somewhere that it wasn't very useful (he3) but i forgot why.
gollark: I too want vast swathes of land to be covered in generators which will not even work half the time because of "night" and "poor weather", which are hilariously energy-expensive to produce in the first place, and which will break after 40 years.
gollark: I mean, in a sense, maybe it is.
gollark: Also, anticentrism seems to imply you'd prefer, say, an extreme ideology in the opposite direction to yours over a generic middling centrist one, which is... odd?

References

  1. Motes, Michael (23 March 1978). "The Bishops From Georgia". The Georgia Bulletin.
  2. Namorato, Michael V. (1998). "The Catholic Church in Mississippi, 1911–1984: A History". Greenwood Publishing Group. Cite journal requires |journal= (help); |contribution= ignored (help)
  3. "Bishop John Edward Gunn, S.M." Catholic-Hierarchy.org.
  4. "Bishop John Edward Gunn". Natchez City Cemetery. Archived from the original on 14 July 2011.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Thomas Heslin
Bishop of Natchez
1911–1924
Succeeded by
Richard Oliver Gerow
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.