Following Bishop Corrigan's promotion to
Coadjutor Archbishop of
New York in October 1880, Wigger was appointed the third
Bishop of Newark by
Pope Leo XIII on July 11, 1881. He received his
episcopal consecration on the following October 18 Shortly afterwards, Wigger declared, "In the
Church of God there is no distinction of
race,
color or
tongue." Wigger was fiercely hostile to
alcohol abuse, and even ordered in 1884 that the
last rites of the Church be denied to those who sold alcohol to minors or drunkards. The brewers were German and the saloon keepers Irish, but some viewed Wigger's hostility to drink as an
anti-Irish bias. He also met conflict with the German-speaking immigrant population who were attracted to non-Catholic societies and religions; the Bishop was committed to preserve the faith of the German immigrants. A central figure in the
Cahensly controversy, he also insisted on German parishes, with their own schools, and the preservation of German culture. Wigger appointed his first
vicar general in 1885, attended the
Third Council of Baltimore, and held the fifth diocesan
synod in November 1886, at which strict regulations were enacted in regard to
funerals and attendance at
parochial and
public schools. He even threatened
excommunication against Catholic parents who sent their children to non-Catholic schools, and unsuccessfully attempted to introduce
state legislation to secure the state's support for
Catholic schools. One of Wigger's greatest achievements was the construction of the
Cathedral of the Sacred Heart. The
City of Newark wanted to buy the site for the new
Newark High School in 1896, but the Bishop rejected the idea. He
broke ground in January 1898, and laid the
cornerstone in June 1899.
Later life and death After celebrating
Christmas Mass at St. Patrick's Cathedral in 1900, Wigger was stricken with
pneumonia and went abroad in search of rest and health. On his return he resumed his duties but later died in his bedroom at Seton Hall, aged 59. His
funeral Mass was celebrated by Archbishop Corrigan, and his remains were buried in the priests' plot in the
Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in
East Orange. ==References==