On 26 June 1894, the Holy Father, Pope
Leo XIII, entrusted him with the
episcopate of Dacca (now
Dhaka, Bangladesh) in Eastern Bengal, British India, following the sudden death of the first bishop, Bishop Augustin Louage. He was the third of his Order to have had this position. He was consecrated to it on 16 September 1894 at the
Basilica of the Sacred Heart, Notre Dame by the Bishop of
Nashville, Tennessee,
Joseph Rademacher, with the assistance from two other bishops,
Henry Joseph Richter of
Grand Rapids, Michigan and
James Schwebach of
La Crosse, Wisconsin. He left at midnight for a trip that would take him to New York City, to Rome for an audience with the Pope and eventually to Dacca. He was then thirty-seven years old, making him very likely the youngest bishop in the Church at that time. He was also the first American bishop ever sent on mission to Asian lands. With great courage, he left the United States — his second homeland, whose nationality he had acquired in 1883 — for British India. Having enjoyed success in the New World, his episcopate in Dacca, and later in the Philippines, would be marked by trials and desolation; yet he faced them with rare courage and energy. During the first two years of his episcopate in Dacca, he consolidated the foundations of the Congregation of Holy Cross’s mission in Bengal. But before he could see the fruits of his work, a terrible earthquake — comparable to the
Lisbon earthquake of the 18th century — struck in June 1897, destroying everything he had built. Confronted with this calamity, he exclaimed, like the holy man Job: “The Lord has given, the Lord has taken away.” Then came the time for rebuilding, in which he personally took part, drawing up the plans for his own modest cathedral, smaller than those of Christian countries. He also decided to undertake a year-long tour of Western countries to raise funds and alert his Christian brethren to the desperate state of his diocese. He thus established networks in many Western nations. Bishop Hurth was indeed a very sociable man who knew many prominent figures. It was during this time that he contracted
malaria, a disease that would afflict him throughout his life, compounded later by
varicose veins in one leg. Despite his illnesses, Bishop Hurth remained highly active both in his diocese and in the Church of India. For example, he participated in two major Eucharistic Congresses, in Goa and Bangalore, where he served as president. He was personally acquainted with
Lord Kitchener, commander of the
British Indian Army. In 1908, he wrote an article in English about his diocese for an American publication,
The Catholic Encyclopedia. After several trips to Europe to restore his health, he was finally forced to resign on 15 February 1909, and had to wait two years of devoted service before his successor was appointed. On the same day, he was appointed as the Titular Bishop of Milopotamus. His new title might be in Ancient Greece but he was in good company. The previous holder was an Englishman,
Nicholas Wiseman, before he became a
Cardinal and the first
Archbishop of Westminster. But Hurth did not forget India. In 1911, when he returned to Cincinnati, he was interviewed by a local newspaper. When he was asked about India, he said that, since the conditions were changing slowly in India, "it was only a question of time when caste would no longer exist and child marriage would be abolished." He was in the city for the 5th National
Eucharistic Congress of the Catholic Church of America. ==The Bishop of Nueva Segovia==