Bishop of Portland in Maine On February 8, 1901, O'Connell was appointed the third bishop of Portland by
Pope Leo XIII. He chose for his episcopal motto "Vigor In Arduis" meaning "Strength in Adversity". He received his
episcopal consecration on May 19, 1901, from Cardinal
Francesco Satolli, with Archbishops
Edmund Stonor and
Rafael Merry del Val, in Rome at the
Basilica of St. John Lateran. Upon his arrival in Maine, he was given an official reception by Governor
John F. Hill.
Archbishop of Boston and Cardinal O'Connell was named
coadjutor archbishop of Boston with right of succession and
titular archbishop of
Constantina by
Pope Pius X on February 21, 1906. As coadjutor, he served as the designated successor of
Archbishop John Williams, then in declining health. He succeeded Williams as archbishop after his death on August 30, 1907. He arrived late to two
papal conclaves in a row, in
1914 and
1922, due to having to cross the
Atlantic Ocean by ship. He complained about it to
Pope Pius XI, who then lengthened the time period between the death of the pope and the start of the conclave. O'Connell was able to participate in the
1939 conclave. O'Connell favored a highly centralized diocesan organization, encompassing schools, hospitals, and asylums in addition to parishes. He wielded immense political and social power in Massachusetts, earning him the nickname "Number One". For instance, he was responsible for defeating a bill to establish a
state lottery in 1935, and for defeating a
referendum liberalizing state
birth control laws in 1942. The only politician who had anywhere near O'Connell's political clout was Massachusetts Governor (and future U.S. President)
Calvin Coolidge, but even Coolidge picked his battles carefully, preferring to ignore the O'Connell whenever possible. In the years leading up to the
Second World War O'Connell became a powerful force for the
neutralists in trying to keep the United States out of war in the pre-
Pearl Harbor era. ==Views==