Diocese of Burlington Dioecesis Burlingtonensis | |
---|---|
Catholic | |
Location | |
Country | United States |
Territory | Vermont |
Ecclesiastical province | Boston |
Metropolitan | Boston |
Coordinates | 44°28′47″N73°12′53″W / 44.47972°N 73.21472°W |
Statistics | |
Area | 9,135 sq mi (23,660 km2) |
Population - Total - Catholics | (as of 2015) 661,000 125,500 (19%) |
Parishes | 74 |
Information | |
Denomination | Catholic |
Sui iuris church | Latin Church |
Rite | Roman Rite |
Established | July 29, 1853 by Pope Pius IX |
Cathedral | Cathedral of Saint Joseph |
Patron saint | Immaculate Conception Saint Joseph |
Secular priests | 135 |
Current leadership | |
Pope | Francis |
Bishop-elect | John Joseph McDermott |
Metropolitan Archbishop | Seán Patrick O'Malley |
Map | |
Website | |
www |
The Diocese of Burlington (Latin : Dioecesis Burlingtonensis) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church for Vermont in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Boston. [1]
The Diocese of Burlington was erected on July 29, 1853, by Pope Pius IX. The mother church of the diocese is the Cathedral of Saint Joseph in Burlington, Vermont.
The northern region of Vermont was largely settled in the 18th century by Catholic French Canadians who migrated south from the British Province of Quebec. In 1784, after the conclusion of the American Revolution, Pope Pius VI moved to remove American Catholics from the jurisdiction of the Diocese of London. He erected the Prefecture Apostolic of the United States, which included what was then the Vermont Republic. In 1789, the Vatican placed Vermont, along with the rest of the United States, under the jurisdiction of the Diocese of Baltimore.
During the late 18th century, out of convenience, the bishops of Quebec continued to minister to Catholic settlers and Native Americans, mainly in northern Vermont. In 1801, Bishop John Carroll of Baltimore formally accepted the offer of Bishop Pierre Denaut of the Diocese of Quebec to care for French-speaking Catholics in Vermont. Pope Pius VII erected the Diocese of Boston in 1808, transferring Vermont to the new American diocese. [2]
In the early 19th century, there were no Catholic priests residing in Vermont. Francis Matignon of Boston visited Burlington in 1815 and counted about 100 Catholic Canadians living there. Around 1818, Marie Migneault from Chambly, Quebec, came to Vermont and ministered to the settlers by Lake Champlain for several years. Bishop Jean-Louis de Cheverus, the first Bishop of Boston, later appointed Migneault as vicar-general of that part of the diocese. Migneault continued as vicar general until 1853. Joseph Fenwick from the Diocese of Boston visited Windsor, Vermont, in 1826. James Fitton of the Archdiocese of Boston made a short visit to Burlington in 1829.
In 1830, now Bishop Fenwick of the Diocese of Boston sent Jeremiah O'Callaghan to Vermont to serve as its first resident priest. He visited successively Wallingford, Pittsford, and Vergennes, then settled in Burlington. His territory extended from Rutland, Vermont in the south to the Canadian border in the north, a distance of about 100 miles (160 km) and from Lake Champlain in the west to the Connecticut River in the east. Fenwick made his first visit to Vermont as bishop in 1830. In 1832, O'Callaghan erected in Burlington the first Vermont church of the 19th century. It was consecrated by Fenwick that same year.
In 1837, John Daley was sent by the Diocese of Boston to southern Vermont. He is described as an "eccentric, but very learned man". He usually made his headquarters at Rutland or Middlebury, Vermont, but spent most of his time traveling the state as a missionary. Daley went wherever Catholics lived without any particular schedule. Daley ministered in Vermont until 1854 and died in New York in 1870. An 1843 census showed the Catholic population of Vermont to be 4,940. As immigration from Europe and particularly Ireland to the United States increased at this time, the Catholic population in Vermont Catholic population also rose.
In 1850, Pope Pius IX elevated the Diocese of New York to a metropolitan archdiocese, assigning the Diocese of Boston, with its Vermont parishes, as a suffragan see. [3]
In 1852, at a meeting of the bishops of the Ecclesiastical Province of New York, the bishops decided that Vermont should have its own diocese. They made this proposal to the Vatican, with Burlington to be the see city. Bishop John Fitzpatrick of the Diocese of Boston recommended Louis de Goesbriand, vicar-general of the Diocese of Cleveland, as the first bishop of Burlington.
On July 29, 1853, Pope Pius IX erected the Diocese of Burlington, taking Vermont from the Diocese of Boston. He designated the new diocese as a suffragan of the Archdiocese of New York, and appointed De Goesbriand as bishop.
In 1853, De Goesbriand arrived at Burlington. He was installed there the following day by Bishop Fitzpatrick. After his installation, De Goesbriand visited the entire diocese. He found about 20,000 Catholics scattered throughout Vermont. In 1855, he visited France and Ireland to recruit more priests for the diocese, bringing back several volunteers.
The first diocesan synod was held at Burlington in 1855. De Goesbriand appointed Thomas Lynch as vicar-general of the diocese in 1858. De Goesbriand started construction of the gothic Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in 1861.
On February 12, 1875, Pope Pius IX elevated the Diocese of Boston to a metropolitan archdiocese [4] and transferred the Diocese of Burlington from the Archdiocese of New York to the new archdiocese. [5]
In the 1870s, De Goesbriand bought a 25 acres (10 ha) parcel of land on North Avenue in Burlington from a former editor of the Burlington Free Press . In 1878, under the supervision of future Bishop John Michaud, the diocese constructed the St. Joseph orphanage there.
By 1881, DeGoesbriand had a dozen priests to serve 6,000 congregants scattered throughout Vermont. [6] In 1891, the diocese had the highest ratio of French speaking priests to francophone parishioners (1:1610) in New England. [7] De Goesbriand served as bishop of Burlington for 38 years. In 1892, due to his age and failing health, he requested the appointment of a coadjutor bishop by the Vatican to assist. Pope Leo XIII appointed Michaud, then pastor of a parish of Bennington, Vermont, to this post. Handing many of his responsibilities to Michaud, De Goesbriand retired to St. Joseph's orphanage. [1] When De Goesbriand died in 1899, Michaud automatically succeed him as bishop of Burlington. De Goesbriand spent his entire family fortune constructing churches and orphanages in the diocese and assisting the poor; he died with only four dollars left to his name. [8]
Michaud completed and dedicated the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception in 1867. He built the Fanny Allen Hospital in Colchester, Vermont and staffed it with nuns from the Religious Hospitalers of St. Joseph. The Sisters of Charity from Providence, Rhode Island, operated another new hospital in St. Johnsbury, Vermont. The Loretto Home for the Aged in Rutland was served by the Sisters of St. Joseph. In 1904, Michaud invited the male Society of Saint Edmund to establish Saint Michael's College at Winooski Park, Vermont. In 1905, the Daughters of Charity of the Sacred Heart of Jesus came to Newport, Vermont, to open a mission, where they served as teachers, nurses and catechists. [9] During his tenure, Michaud expanded the number of churches in Vermont from 72 to 94. The diocese had 75,000 Catholics, 102 priests, 286 religious sisters, and 20 parochial schools serving about 7,000 students.
Michaud died in 1908. In 1910, Pope Pius X appointed Joseph Rice, then pastor of St. Peter's Parish in Northbridge, Massachusetts, as the new bishop of Burlington. Rice placed De Goesbriand Memorial Hospital in Burlington under the care of the Religious Hospitallers of St. Joseph, and opened three high schools and Trinity College in Burlington. In November 1925, during a period of anti-Catholic agitation throughout the United States, the Ku Klux Klan burned a cross on the steps of St. Augustine's Church at Montpelier, Vermont.
After Rice's death in 1938, Pope Pius XI appointed Matthew Brady from the Diocese of Hartford as his replacement. Brady erected 12 new parishes in Fairfax, Gilman, North Troy, Orleans, and South Burlington, all in Vermont. When Brady was appointed bishop of the Diocese of Manchester by Pope Pius XII in 1944, the next bishop was Edward Ryan from the Archdiocese of Boston. In 1945, Ryan purchased a 7 acres (2.8 ha) parcel adjacent to St. Joseph's orphanage and created the Don Bosco School for delinquent boys.
In 1954, Pius XII appointed Robert Joyce as the first auxiliary bishop of Burlington. When Ryan died in 1956, Pius XII named Joyce as his replacement. With Joyce's retirement in 1971, Pope Paul VI appointed John Marshall as the next bishop.
In 1972, an arsonist burned the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception. Marshall built a new cathedral with the same name on the same site in 1977. [10] [11] [12] In 1974, Marshall closed St. Joseph's orphanage and eventually sold the property. It is now a condominium project known as 'Liberty House.' [13] In 1981, the Immaculate Heart of Mary Abbey was founded in Westfield, Vermont. [14]
In 1992, Pope John Paul II appointed Auxiliary Bishop Kenneth Angell from the Diocese of Providence as the new bishop of Burlington. Under Angell, Catholic schools in the diocese experienced a 24% drop in enrollment between 1998 and 2008, from 3,190 to 2,431 students. [15] Faced with a shortage of priests in Burlington, and a decline in weekly mass attendance, Angell consolidated Sacred Heart and St. Francis de Sales Parishes in Bennington as well as St. Cecilia and St. Frances Cabrini in East Barre, and closed Our Lady of the Lake in St. Albans.
In 1999, the Vatican elevated Saint Joseph Church in Burlington as the co-cathedral of the diocese. [16] Burlington became one of only four American dioceses to have two active cathedral churches in the same city. [17] In 2005, Pope John Paul II appointed Salvatore Matano from the Diocese of Providence as coadjutor bishop of the diocese. When Agnell retired several months later, Matano automatically became the new bishop of Burlington. In 2010, Matano ordained four priests, the highest number in the diocese in decades. [18]
In 2014, Pope Francis appointed Auxiliary Bishop Christopher J. Coyne from the Archdiocese of Indianapolis as the next diocesan bishop. He replaced Matano, who was appointed bishop of the Diocese of Rochester. Coyne's installation was celebrated on January 29, 2015, at the Co-Cathedral of Saint Joseph. In 2018, Coyne announced that the diocese was selling the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception due to a long period of low attendance. Its members were transferred to St. Joseph's, which became the sole cathedral in the diocese. [19]
In June 2023, Francis appointed Coyne as coadjutor archbishop of the Archdiocese of Hartford. [20] Msgr. John McDermott was named bishop of the diocese on May 6, 2024. [21]
In the 1990s, the Diocese of Burlington was sued by multiple former residents of St. Joseph's Orphanage, claiming abuse by the staff. Managed by the Sisters of Providence, St. Joseph's had closed in 1974. Over 100 former residents stated that they had been physically, sexually and emotionally abused by nuns, priests and lay staff workers from the 1940s through the 1970’s. These abuses included being tied to trees, whipped, locked in small boxes, raped, beaten, burned with cigarettes and matches, hung upside down outside windows and tossed into water to "sink or swim". [13] Nuns would enter the dorms after children were asleep, pull them from their beds and beat them. Children in the 2nd Nursery, ages 2–5, were locked in a closet the nuns called “The Dark Menagerie.” There was a visiting priests quarters the children refer to as “The Red Room.” Polaroids of children were kept in an apothecary cabinet draws. Members of the Diocese were able to choose children to visit them. These visits included various forms of sexual abuse.
Lawyers for the diocese originally asked the court to throw out the St. Joseph lawsuits, claiming that the victims' allegations could not be corroborated. However, statements from four nuns and two priests who worked at St. Joseph's weakened those arguments. Additionally, five out of eight priests at St. Joseph's were also accused by victims of sexual abuse in unrelated litigation. The diocese ultimately paid over $300,000 to settle the claims of 60 former residents. [13] Almost all of these settlements were in the form of an offer from the Diocese of $5000.00, the most they would willingly pay the former children who they controlled 24 hours a day. After 1/3 was paid to their lawyer, most actually received $3333.00. Many former residents took it as there was no way to get past the statute of limitations at the time.
Anything children entered the orphanage with was taken away never to be scene again. (Exceptions were made in those few cases where children were put there by parents using it as a boarding school). Kids were immediately given a number which they were told they had to answer to when it was called. This number was marked in all the clothes which were chosen by the nuns for them to wear. (An X next to the number meant that piece of clothing was theirs to keep. Usually it was not until children were in the Eighth grade that their clothes would receive an X as they would be leaving the orphanage before the next school year and would need some clothes to take with them. Any mail coming and going was opened and read. Any mistake usually was met with a beating. Failure to eat everything at meals resulted in one nun holding the child while another held the kid’s nose closed and forced the food down their throat. Vomiting during a meal was considered an act of defiance and the nuns would force the child to eat the vomit, even off the floor. The nuns used any fears a child had against them, looking for ways they can torture the kids. A child who they worked hard unsuccessfully to make cry had onion juice squirted into her eyes. The children worked everyday cleaning every bit of the orphanage, including helping to care for the babies in the First Nursery and young kids in the Second Nursery. Failure to do the their jobs efficiently resulted in punishment. Children whose parents were divorced or unmarried were told they were the Devil’s children and they needed to be punished. This seems to be a strong belief throughout the Diocese as the only value it ever saw in its orphans were what services they could provide the Diocesan members.
In 1994, the diocese was sued by Michael Gay, who claimed to have been sexually molested by Edward Paquette during the 1970s. Paquette had an early history of sexual abuse of children from his tenures in the Diocese of Fall River and the Diocese of Fort Wayne-South Bend. In 1971, the Indiana diocese ordered Paquette to undergo electroconvulsive therapy to treat his pedophilia. Convinced that Paquette was cured, Bishop Marshall brought him into the Diocese of Burlington in 1972. He was finally suspended from priestly duties in 1978.
The diocese settled Gay's lawsuit for $965,000 in 2006, then settled two more lawsuits for $8.75 million and $3.6 million. Paquette was laicized in April 2009. [22] In February 2010, the diocese announced that it would sell its headquarters in Burlington and Camp Holy Cross in Colchester to pay sexual abuse victims. [23] In May 2010, the diocese settled 26 lawsuits by former altar for sexual abuse by its clergy for $17.65 million.
The diocese in 2013 settled 11 more sexual abuse cases for an undisclosed account. Nine of those cases were filed by victims of Paquette. [24]
The diocese in August 2019 released the names of 40 clergy since 1950 who had been "credibly accused" of sex abuse. Most of these men were deceased and none were in active ministry. [25] [26] Much of the abuse occurred at St Josephs, and all but one of these named acts took place before 2000. [25]
Vermont Attorney General T.J. Donovan released an investigative report on St. Joseph's Orphanage in December 2020. A 2018 Buzzfeed article had claimed that staff had murdered residents there. [27] The attorney general report found no evidence that any murders occurred at the facility. However, the investigation did find substantial evidence of physical and sexual abuse of the residents. [28] This was not a surprise to some former residents as trips to the hospital were accompanied by at least one nun who would explain any injury as the child’s fault or that of another child. Deaths through the fault of the nuns were also likely to be explained the same way. Nuns were always believed over a child, although few children were likely to contradict anything said by the nuns, being warned not to say anything that could hurt ”the good name of the orphanage.”
In May 2022, the diocese settled a lawsuit brought by a man who claimed to have been sexually assaulted by Roger W. Carlin. The plaintiff, filing the lawsuit in 2021, said that Carlin abused him at St. John Vianney church in South Burlington between 1966 and 1967. [29]
As of 2023, the Diocese of Burlington had a Catholic population of approximately 110,000, with 36 active priests, 44 permanent deacons and 15 religious ministering in 68 parishes. [30] The parishes are divided into 12 deaneries:
Year | Pop. | ±% p.a. |
---|---|---|
1815 | 100 | — |
1843 | 4,940 | +14.95% |
1853 | 25,000 | +17.60% |
1881 | 6,000 | −4.97% |
1899 | 75,000 | +15.06% |
1980 | 157,000 | +0.92% |
2005 | 149,000 | −0.21% |
2010 | 118,000 | −4.56% |
Robert Francis Joyce (1954-1956), appointed Bishop of Burlington
As of 2023, the Diocese of Burlington included 12 Catholic schools with an enrollment (including catechetical students) of approximately 2,500. [30] Student enrollment dropped 24% from 3,190 to 2,431 from 1999 to 2008. [33] Dave Young is the superintendent of schools. [34]
In 2005, the Diocese of Burlington had net assets of $5,679,217. This figure includes assets acquired "at cost." [36] An insurance company has estimated that it would cost $400 million to replace the physical assets of the diocese, including churches, schools, and nursing homes. [37]
The Vermont Catholic Charities had total net assets of $3,874,935. [38]
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Louis Joseph Marie Théodore de Goesbriand was a French-born prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as the first bishop of the Diocese of Burlington in Vermont from 1853 until his death in 1899.
John Stephen Michaud was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as bishop of the Diocese of Burlington in Vermont from 1899 until his death in 1908.
Edward Francis Ryan was an American prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as bishop of the Diocese of Burlington in Vermont from 1945 until his death in 1956.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain : Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Diocese of Burlington". Catholic Encyclopedia . New York: Robert Appleton Company.
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