Katherine E. Price

Katherine E. Price, Countess of the Holy Roman Church was an American philanthropist and patroness of various Catholic institutions. She was ennobled in 1936 by Pope Pius XI, having been granted the rank of papal countess.

Katherine E. Price
Countess of the Holy Roman Church
Spouse(s)Lucian B. Price
ReligionRoman Catholic

Biography

Price was the wife of Lucian B. Price. After her husband's death, she became an active philanthropist, funding the construction of Catholic churches, schools, and other institutions in the United States. She was a distant cousin of Bishop Eugene J. McGuinness. A patroness of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Amarillo, Price donated funds to St. George's College to prevent the school from closing.[1] It was renamed the Price Memorial College in honor of her late husband.[2] Price traveled from her home in Greenwich, Connecticut to Texas for the dedication ceremony.[2] Price was also responsible for funding the construction of St. Elizabeth's Catholic Church in Lubbock, Texas, St. Catherine of Siena Catholic Church in Pauls Valley, Oklahoma, and St. Catherine of Siena Catholic Church in Wake Forest, North Carolina.[3][4] The latter two churches were named after Price's patron saint, Catherine of Siena.[5]

In April 1936 Price was elevated into the Nobility of the Holy See and made a papal countess by Pope Pius XI.[6]

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gollark: Hatchlings are mostly fine for sickness, right? They don't get affected much?
gollark: Yep, that hatchling is sick again...
gollark: "We have trained a neural network to badly approximate a simple formula. This is a new breakthrough in DC nonsense."
gollark: It would probably get around the reverse engineering T&C thing.

References

  1. Welch, Karen Smith. "Diocese tears down Price College". Amarillo Globe-News.
  2. "History". Holy Cross Catholic Academy.
  3. "Visit Lubbock » St. Elizabeth's Catholic Church". www.visitlubbock.org.
  4. "Parish History". St. Catherine of Siena Catholic Church.
  5. "Parish History". St. Catherine of Siena Parish.
  6. "The American Catholic Who's who". NC News Service. December 25, 1910 via Google Books.
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