Henry Cleary

Henry William Cleary OBE (15 January 1859 – 9 December 1929) was the sixth Roman Catholic Bishop of Auckland from 1910 to 1929.[1]

Life

Henry Cleary was born in County Wexford, Ireland. He was educated at St. Aidan's Academy, Enniscorthy, St Peter's College, Wexford and St. Patrick's College, Maynooth. He attended the Roman Seminary and the seminary of St. Sulpice in Paris. Cleary was ordained in 1885.[2]

From 1885 to 1888, Cleary was a professor of modern languages at St. Peter's, and a member of the Society of Volunteer Diocesan Missionaries of the Blessed Sacrament. In 1888, he went to Australia due to poor health, and from 1888 to 1897 was involved in parish work at Ballarat, Victoria. From 1898 to 1910, he served as the editor of the New Zealand Tablet.[2]

Cleary was appointed Bishop of Auckland in 1910. He was very active in the Australian Catholic Truth Society, and in ministering to the Maori people in their own language. He was author of numerous pamphlets and brochures, and a contributor to various newspapers, periodicals, and the Catholic Encyclopedia.[2]

Bibliography

A selection of the works published by Henry William Cleary.

  • Orange Society, Catholic Truth Society, London, 1899.
  • Mrs. Slattery: the romance of sham nun , NZ Tablet, Dunedin, 1900.
  • Joseph Slattery: the romance of an unfrocked priest, NZ Tablet, Dunedin, 1900.
  • Catholic marriages: the decree of 2 August 1907: a popular explanation of the decree, the text of a controversy on the decree in the Christchurch "Press", 3 March to 2 April 1908 (with notes and comments) and, an exposition of the Catholic teaching in Dunedin, N.Z., N Z Tablet, 1908.
  • Impeached nation: being a study of Irish outrages, NZ Tablet, Dunedin, 1909.
  • God or no-God in the school?: a pastoral letter by … the Bishop of Auckland, a discussion thereon in the Evening Post, Wellington (N.Z.), and a critical examination of the discussion, Hiscocks & Sons, Auckland, 1911.
  • Bible-in-schools- movement, in its relation to taxpayers, parents, teachers and pupils: a lecture / delivered in the Town Hall, Wellington Friday, 13 December 1912, Evening Post Office, Wellington, 1912.
  • Prussian militarism at work: a letter, Barclay & Fry, London, 1917.
  • 'The Month': a journal devoted to Catholic interests (Cleary was founding editor from 1918–29; journal ceased in 1934).
  • Catholics and the marriage laws, Catholic Supplies, Wellington, 1920.
  • Forged murder-"oaths": an exposure of impostures flung against the Catholic clergy and laity, in the New Zealand House of Representatives, on 26 June 1923, by Mr. V.H. Potter MP: a reprint of articles in "The Month" (Auckland, N.Z.) by the Rt. Rev, The Catholic Depot, Auckland, 1923.
  • Catholic Church and party politics: Canon James's charge of votes-jobbery: letter to the Anglican Archbishop and Primate, Whitcombe & Tombs, Auckland, 1928.

References

Sources

Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
George Lenihan
sixth Roman Catholic Bishop of Auckland
1910–1929
Succeeded by
James Liston
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