MarketPeter Richard Kenrick
Company Profile

Peter Richard Kenrick

Peter Richard Kenrick was an Irish Catholic priest who served as Bishop of St. Louis from 1843 to 1895. The see was made an archdiocese in 1847, when he was called as the first archbishop west of the Mississippi River. The archdiocese covered nearly all the territory of the Louisiana Purchase. He served in this position for nearly 50 years, until months before his death.

Early life
Peter Richard Kenrick was born in Dublin on August 17, 1806 to Thomas Kenrick and Jane Eustace Kenrick. His uncle, Reverend Richard Kenrick, was the curate of a Catholic church in Dublin. Reverend Francis Kenrick, Peter's brother, was also a priest. Thomas Kenrick, who worked as a scrivener, died in 1817. After Thomas' death, Richard Kenrick helped educate Peter, who soon became a scrivener himself. Deciding to become a priest also, Peter Kenrick in 1827 entered the Royal College of St. Patrick, the major seminary for the Irish Catholic Church in Maynooth for five years of study. == Priesthood ==
Priesthood
Peter Kenrick was ordained to the priesthood on March 6, 1832 by Archbishop Daniel Murray of Dublin in chapel at St. Patrick's College. After his ordination, Peter Kenrick served as a curate at St Patrick's Cathedral in Dublin and at a parish church in Rathmines. Francis, who had been serving as coadjutor bishop in the Diocese of Philadelphia since 1830, urged Peter to come work with him. However, Peter would not consider leaving Ireland until their mother died in 1832. Peter Kenrick embarked from Liverpool, England, on September 4, 1833 on the ship New York. He arrived in New York City on October 7th, then immediately proceeded to Philadelphia.Peter then accompanied Francis to the Second Provincial Council, a meeting of bishops in Baltimore, Maryland. After the council, Peter joined the faculty of the St. Charles Borromeo Seminary in Philadelphia. He and Francis were the only professors. In 1834, Peter Kenrick was named as assistant pastor at St. Mary's Church in Philadelphia. Since the parish trustees had fought with Francis a few years early, he wanted someone he could trust on the staff there. Francis sent Peter to Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in November 1837 to investigate the creation of a new diocese there. For the next three months, Peter served as pastor at St. Paul Parish in that city. He reported to Francis that the city was ready for a diocese. In June 1838, Peter sailed from New York to Ireland. He wanted to recuperate from the harsh winter in Pittsburgh, plus Francis had asked him recruit more priests and submit his writings to the Vatican for approval. Peter was also considering entering the Jesuits Order. After a month in Ireland, he traveled to London, Lyon in France and finally Rome.After abandoning his plan to become a Jesuit, Peter Kenrick to Philadelphia in 1840. == Coadjutor Bishop of St. Louis ==
Coadjutor Bishop of St. Louis
On April 4, 1841, Peter Kenrick was appointed coadjutor bishop of the Diocese of Saint Louis by Pope Gregory XVI. The Vatican was sending Bishop Joseph Rosati of Saint Louis to Haiti on a diplomatic mission and he wanted a bishop to run his diocese. Peter was consecrated bishop on November 30, 1841, in Philadelphia at St. Mary's Church by Rosati, with Francis serving as a co-consecrator. At the time, the Diocese of St. Louis covered vast stretches of the American Great Plains up to the Rocky Mountains. The Catholic population in St. Louis was primarily French, but with growing Irish and German numbers. It had 65 churches and 75 Native American missions. Arriving in St. Louis in December 1841, Peter soon discovered that the diocese was deeply in debt due to the construction of its cathedral. The diocese also needed more priests and more churches to serve its growing population. One of his first actions was to celebrate masses in the cathedral in English instead of French to assist the growing English-speaking population. He also tried to recruit a German-speaking priest. He sold off some church properties and successfully solicited donations from Catholic societies in Austria-Hungary and France. Peter in 1842 visited southern Missouri and Arkansas, then went west to Kansas City. He performed confirmations on 300 Potawatomi converts near present-day Sugar Creek, Kansas. Kendrick's travels convinced him that the Vatican needed to erect new dioceses in these areas if the Catholic Church was going to flourish. In April 1843, Peter attended the Fifth Provincial Council in Baltimore, where the bishops decided to ask the Vatican to create new dioceses in Chicago, Milwaukee and Little Rock, reducing the size of the Diocese of St. Louis. ==Bishop of St. Louis==
Bishop of St. Louis
In 1843, after several months of illness, Rosati died in Rome. Peter Kenrick automatically succeeded him on September 25, 1843 as the third bishop of St. Louis. In July 1863, Francis died in Baltimore. When the city authorities ordered the flying of the American flag from all churches, Peter refused. With end of the war in 1865, the Missouri Constitutional Convention, passed a measure requiring all clergy in the state to take a so-called "ironclad oath" to the US Government. Peter banned his clergy from taking the oath. One priest, Reverend John A. Cummings, went to jail rather than comply with law. He filed a suit, supported by Peter and Protestant clergy, that reached the United States Supreme Court. It ruled that it was unconstitutional for the government to demand that people take this oath. In 1866, while traveling to the Second Plenary Council in Baltimore, Peter stopped in Newport, Rhode Island, to spend some time by ocean, then visited Montreal, Quebec. ==Later life==
Later life
After harassment by his detractors and members of the curia made life difficult for him, Kenrick turned over the administration of the archdiocese to his coadjutor bishop, Patrick John Ryan, in 1871. When Ryan was appointed Archbishop of Philadelphia, Kenrick took back active administration of the archdiocese. During the period when the Knights of Labor, a strongly Roman Catholic labor union and the first national labor union, turned to violence in seeking their goals, Peter vocally opposed them and condemned their actions. However, the higher-ranking Cardinal James Gibbons, the Archbishop of Baltimore, overruled his objections. In 1893, Kenrick's attempt to name his coadjutor bishop failed when his nominee did not win the support of his fellow bishops. The Vatican named Bishop John Joseph Kain from the Diocese of Wheeling to fill the role instead. Kenrick's conflicts and failed communication with Kain lent a note of discord to his final years. While Kenrick continued as archbishop, Kain administered the archdiocese. With advancing age, Kenrick became increasingly infirm. In 1895, Pope Leo XIII removed Peter from ministry due to his increasing dementia. == Death and legacy ==
Death and legacy
Peter Kenrick died on March 4, 1896. One cardinal, eight archbishops, 20 bishops and 400 priests attended his funeral. He is buried in Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis. Kenrick had established this cemetery on the property of a farm he bought. The seminary of the Archdiocese of St. Louis, Kenrick-Glennon Seminary, formerly known as Kenrick Theological Seminary, is named in his honor. == Publications ==
Publications
The Holy House of Loretto (1840) • The Month of Mary (1840) • Validity of Anglican Ordinations examined (1841) ==References==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com