Patrick John Ryan

Patrick John Ryan (February 20, 1831 – February 11, 1911) was an Irish-born prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as Archbishop of Philadelphia from 1884 until his death in 1911.

The Most Reverend

Patrick John Ryan
Archbishop of Philadelphia
ChurchRoman Catholic
ArchdiocesePhiladelphia
Appointed8 July 1884
In office1884–1911
PredecessorJames Frederick Wood
SuccessorEdmond Francis Prendergast
Orders
Ordination8 September 1852
by Peter Richard Kenrick
Consecration14 April 1872
by Peter Richard Kenrick
RankMetropolitan Archbishop
Personal details
Born(1831-02-20)February 20, 1831
Thurles, Ireland
DiedFebruary 11, 1911(1911-02-11) (aged 79)
OccupationCatholic bishop
Previous postCoadjutor Archbishop of St Louis (1872–1884)
Alma materCarlow College

Early life and education

Patrick Ryan was born in Thurles, County Tipperary, to Jeremiah and Mary Ryan.[1] He received his early education from the Christian Brothers at Thurles, and attended a private school in Dublin from 1842 to 1847.[2] In 1844, he led a delegation of students to Richmond Bridewell Prison, where he delivered an address to the imprisoned Daniel O'Connell.[2] He completed his theological studies at Carlow College in 1852, his education supported by The Foreign Mission Fund, and was ordained a subdeacon.[1] In the same year he left Ireland to come to the United States, where he became attached to the Archdiocese of St. Louis in Missouri.[2] He then served as a professor of English literature at the seminary in Carondelet for a year.[1]

Priesthood

Ryan was ordained to the priesthood by Archbishop Peter Richard Kenrick on September 8, 1853.[3] At age 21, he was below the age requirement for ordination but was granted a dispensation by Pope Pius IX.[2] He was then appointed an assistant rector at the Cathedral of St. Louis, and was advanced to rector in 1856.[1] In 1860, he was named pastor of the Church of the Annunciation in St. Louis, where he built a church and parochial school.[2] During the Civil War, he served as a chaplain at the Gratiot Street Prison.[2] Following the war, he was transferred to St. John's Church in St. Louis, and accompanied Archbishop Kenrick to the Second Plenary Council of Baltimore in 1866.[2] While on a visit to Europe in 1868, he delivered the English course of Lenten lectures in Rome at the invitation of Pius IX.[1] Upon his return to St. Louis later that year, he was made vicar general of the Archdiocese.[1] He administered the Archdiocese while Archbishop Kenrick attended the First Vatican Council.[2]

Episcopacy

Ryan in a photo and as sketched by journalist Marguerite Martyn for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, published December 19, 1909

On February 15, 1872, Ryan was appointed Coadjutor Archbishop of St. Louis and Titular Archbishop of Tricomia by Pius IX.[3] He received his episcopal consecration on the following April 14 from Archbishop Kenrick, with Archbishop Patrick Feehan and Bishop Joseph Melcher serving as co-consecrators.[3] His titular see was changed to Salamis on January 6, 1884.[2] After the death of Archbishop James Frederick Wood, Ryan was named the second Archbishop of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, on June 8, 1884.[3] His installation took place at the Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul on the following August 20.[3]

During his 27-year-long tenure, Ryan erected 170 churches and 82 schools; increased the number of priests by 322 and nuns by 1,545; and oversaw a rise in the Catholic population from 300,000 to 525,000.[2] During that time also the Roman Catholic High School for Boys was built, and put in operation; high school centers for girls taught by the different communities were established; a new central high school for girls was partly endowed and begun; St. Francis' Industrial School for Boys was endowed and successfully operated, the Philadelphia Protectory for Boys was erected; St. Joseph's Home for Working Boys was founded; a new foundling asylum and maternity hospital was built; a new St. Vincent's Home for younger orphan children was purchased with the archbishop's Golden Jubilee Fund of $200,000; a third Home for the Aged was erected; a Memorial Library Building, dedicated to the Archbishop, was begun at St. Charles Borromeo Seminary, Overbrook; and the three Catholic hospitals of the city doubled their capacity. He also established foreign churches in the diocese for the Italians, Poles, Greeks, Slovaks, Lithuanians, and several other nationalities. He founded two congregations for African Americans, and was appointed to the U.S. Indian Commission by President Theodore Roosevelt.[2] In 1888, he again visited Rome, where he preached the sermon at the laying of the cornerstone of St. Patrick's Church and presented Pope Leo XIII with a gift from President Grover Cleveland.[1]

Ryan died at age 79, nine days before his eightieth birthday.

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gollark: ```Usage: cat [OPTION]... [FILE]...Concatenate FILE(s) to standard output.With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input. -A, --show-all equivalent to -vET -b, --number-nonblank number nonempty output lines, overrides -n -e equivalent to -vE -E, --show-ends display $ at end of each line -n, --number number all output lines -s, --squeeze-blank suppress repeated empty output lines -t equivalent to -vT -T, --show-tabs display TAB characters as ^I -u (ignored) -v, --show-nonprinting use ^ and M- notation, except for LFD and TAB --help display this help and exit --version output version information and exitExamples: cat f - g Output f's contents, then standard input, then g's contents. cat Copy standard input to standard output.GNU coreutils online help: <https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/>Report any translation bugs to <https://translationproject.org/team/>Full documentation <https://www.gnu.org/software/coreutils/cat>or available locally via: info '(coreutils) cat invocation'```
gollark: GNU/AutoBotRobot is Turing-complete, implement THAT.
gollark: `cat`... with all the command-line options.
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References

  1. Johnson, Rossiter, ed. (1904). The Twentieth Century Biographical Dictionary of Notable Americans. IX. John Howard Brown. Boston: The Biographical Society.
  2. "Patrick John Ryan". Catholic Encyclopedia.
  3. "Archbishop Patrick John Ryan". Catholic-Hierarchy.org.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
James Frederick Bryan Wood
Archbishop of Philadelphia
1884–1911
Succeeded by
Edmond Francis Prendergast
Preceded by
Coadjutor Archbishop of St. Louis
1872–1884
Succeeded by
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