Local Catholic Biographies
Indiana
If you know of a web site for a biography
of a Catholic with an Indiana connection,
please
let me know.
The following book, by Rt. Rev. Alerding, is currently being transcribed,
and published online. If you would like to contribute additional
Local Catholic information and resources, please contact the webweaver.
+ The Diocese of Fort Wayne, 1857--Sepember 22--1907, A Book
of Historical Reference, 1669-1907. By the Rt. Rev. H. J. Alerding.
Fort Wayne: The Archer Printing Co. 1907.
+ TABLE OF CONTENTS
+
See also: The Catholic
Indiana History and Bibliography page.
Explorerers and Missionaries
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Spanish
Conquistadors in North America (De Soto from 1539)
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Pioneer
Priests of Indiana:
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1687: January -
Memoir
for the Marquis de Seignelay Regarding the Dangers
That
Threaten Canada and the Means to Remedy Them. (Document Text)
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1697:
The
Life of a Montagnais Missionary (1639-1702), by François de Crespieul,
online at Canada History.
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Father
Pierre Gibault (1737 - 1802): called the "Patriot Priest" for his contributions
to the American cause during the Revolutionary War.
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Right
Reverend Simon Bruté: appointed first Bishop of Vincennes in
1834.
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Bishop
Simon Gabriel Bruté: on St. Dennis' site.
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Bishop
Maurice De St. Palais: on St. Dennis' site.
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Father
Julian Benoit (1808-1885): Julian Benoit was born at Septimoncel,
France, which was in the Diocese of St. Claude was first appointed
to serve at Leopold (near Evansville, IN), he was later appointed to serve
at Rome (on the Ohio River), then
Chicago
from which he attended Lockport, Joliet and other towns along the canal,
and again at Leopold before being appointed as First
Vicar General of the Diocese of Fort Wayne Fort Wayne, IN in 1840.
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Very Rev. Edward
Sorin, (b. 6 Feb 1814, at Ahuillé, near Laval, France; d. 31
Oct 1893, at Notre Dame, U.S.A.) the founder of the University
of Notre Dame.
-
To read additional history of the University
of Notre Dame du Lac, which was founded in 1842, from the 1911 Catholic
Encyclopedia Online, select this link.
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Reminiscences
of a Pioneer Priest in the Diocese of Vincennes [Indiana, U.S.A.],
by The Very Rev. August Bessonies, V. G. (born in France in 1815) - this
page includes a biography of the Very Rev. August Bessonies.
-
Catholic
Biographies: Archdiocese of Cincinnati, Ohio - site by by David
J. Endres. includes the following:
-
Rev.
Joseph H. Ferneding, 1802-1872 (pioneer priest in southern Indiana
and southern Ohio), Priest in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati, 1842 to 1872
and Vicar General, 1844-1872 By Robert F. Niehaus.
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Source: "History of the Catholic Church in Indiana". Col. Charles
Blanchard. (Editor and Compiler). Logansport, Indiana : A.
W. Bowen & Co., 1898. (pp. 378 - 382).
-
History
of the Sisters of Providence which were founded Oct. 22, 1840, at Saint
Mary-of-the-Woods, Indiana, by Blessed
Mother Theodore Guerin and a group of five Sisters
of Providence from Ruille-sur-Loir, France.
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Right Rev. Joseph
Dwenger, C. PP. S., D.D.: The Second Bishop of the Diocese of Fort
Wayne.
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The Right Rev.
Joseph Rademacher, D.D.: The Third Bishop of the Fort Wayne Diocese.
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The Right Rev.
Herman Joseph Alerding, D.D.: The Fourth Bishop of Fort Wayne
- as transcribed from his own History
of the Diocese of Fort Wayne.
-
Bishop
Herman J. Alerding (1845-1924): Fourth Bishop of Fort Wayne Diocese.
-
Bishop
John Francis Noll (1925-1956)
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The
Reuilles of Old Besancon, by Michael Roy Morow and Alyce Jane Morow:
"...In old census records and in other records, one will find members of
the Reuille family with the last name spelled as "Rouille," "Rust," "Roy,"
"King" (the Anglicized version of "Roy")..."
-
Cincinnati
Catholic Historical and Genealogical Research: Roman Catholic
Resources in Cincinnati and Hamilton County, Ohio - by David
J. Endres.
David Endres has the following and more on his
wonderful site!
-
Saint
Mary-of-the-Woods College - Library
Saint Mary-of-the-Woods, IN 47876-0068
Phone: (812) 535-5212
E-mail: PR-SMWC@smwc.edu "Founded:
1840 by the Sisters of Providence..."
-
Sisters of
St. Benedict: Our Lady of Grace Monastery [Est. 1956]
1402 Southern Ave. - Beech
Grove, IN 46107 Phone: (317) 787-3287.
-
Monastery of the
Immaculate Conception - [Est. 1915, Church completed and dedicated
in 1924] Sisters of
St. Benedict
802 E. 10th Street - Ferdinand,
IN 47532-9239 Phone: (812) 367-1411.
includes the History
of the Ferdinand Benedictines.
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
[+ Return
to Local Catholic Indiana page +]
+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +
HON. MICHAEL H. FARRELL
from: "History of the Catholic Church in Indiana". Col. Charles
Blanchard. (Editor and Compiler). Logansport, Indiana : A.
W. Bowen & Co., 1898. (pp. 471 and 472).
HON. MICHAEL H. FARRELL, a very popular and highly
respected citizen and dealer in marble, granite, etc., at No. 208 West
Washington street, Indianapolis, is a native of Cambridge City, Ind., was
born April 22, 1854, and is a son of Dominick and Katherine (Powell) Farrell,
the former a native of county Longford, and the latter of county Tipperary,
Ireland.
These parents came to America single and were
married in Richmond, Ind. Dominick Farrell was a contractor in railroad
work and assisted in constructing the first telegraph line in the west,
and also constructed three sections of the Panhandle railway. They
had born to them four children, viz: Francis, Thomas, Michael H.
and Margaret. Of these, Francis is a telegraph operator in Chicago,
Ill.; Thomas is an engineer on the Big Four railway, with his residence
in St. Louis, Mo.; Michael H. is the gentleman with whom this memooir will
have most to do, and Margaret is deceased. Both parents ended their
days in the Catholic faith in Cambridge City, the mother dying in 1886,
aged seventy-four, and the father in 1889, at the age of seventy-nine years.
Michael H. Farrell was educated in the public
schools of his native city, there learned the marblecutter's trade, and
there grew to manhood. In 1880 he came to Indianapolis and opened
his marble yard, in which he now gives constant employment to four men.
He at once formed a connection with the democratic party of Indianapolis,
having been a member of the same in Cambridge City, became very popular,
and on this ticket was elected to the state legislature in 1884, served
from 1885 to 1887, and was especially active and earnest in pressing several
bills through that august body. He also served as a member of the
city board of aldermen from 1889 until 1891, or until its abrogation, and
in 1890 was elected a member of the board of county commissioners, in which
he served three years. Since that time he has not aspired to official
position, yet has taken an active part in promoting the success of his
party at each succeeding election. He now devotes his entire time
and attention to his business affairs, which he never neglected at any
time, but during his official career gave to it his personal and close
supervision.
The marriage of Mr. Farrell took place at Cambridge
City, October 11, 1877, to Miss Theressa Metz, Rev. J. B. Kelly officiating.
Mrs. Farrell is a native of Hamilton county, Ohio, and has blessed her
husband with five children, viz: Catherine, Francis, Edward, Thomas
and Vincent. The family are members of St. Bridget's church, under
the pastorate of Rev. D. Curran, and are a representative family in church,
social and political circles. Mr. Farrell, by close attention to
his business and through skill, industry and thrift, has secured a fair
competence, and the productions of his yard are unsurpassed for excellent
workmanship by any in the state of Indiana."
THE LARKIN BROTHERS
from: "History of the Catholic Church in Indiana". Col. Charles
Blanchard. (Editor and Compiler). Logansport, Indiana : A.
W. Bowen & Co., 1898. (pp. 867 and 868).
THE LARKIN BROTHERS, merchants of Loogootee, Ind.,
and doing the most extensive trade in the place, are the children of Patrick
and Mary E. (Montgomery) Larkin and are both natives of the state of Indiana.
Patrick Larkin, the father of these two brothers,
was born in county Kilkenny, Ireland, in 1809, and when a young man of
twenty-one came to the United States and for several years was a cotton
broker in New York. He married, in that city, a Miss Bowen, and a
few years later came to Indiana and settled on a farm near Montgomery.
Here his wife died in 1848, leaving three children, vis: Mary, who
married Henry Campbell, but died in Loogootee, without issue; Elizabeth,
who united with the Sisters of Providence, and is now known as Sister Mary
Borgia, and Anna, who was married to James Adams, resides in Louisville,
Ky., and is the mother of six children. In 1850 Mr. Larkin married,
for his second wife, Miss Mary E. Montgomery, a native of Montgomery, Daviess
county, Ind., and to this union were born six children, of whom two only
reached the years of maturity--John L. and Patrick B., who constitute the
firm of Larkin Brothers, as noted at the opening of this sketch.
Mr. Larkin was called from earth April 27, 1867, a devoted member of the
Catholic church, and his widow still makes her home on the old homestead
of 400 acres, near Loogootee, on which the family settled in 1860.
John F. Larkin, the elder of the two surviving
children of Patrick and Mary (Montgomery) Larkin, was born at Mount Pleasant,
Martin county, Ind., July 29, 1858, was educated in the schools of Loogootee
in the preparatory branches, and then passed two years in the university
of Notre Dame. He remained on the home farm until 1882, when the
firm of Larkin Brothers was established, and he still manages the homestead,
without in any manner neglecting his mercantile interests. In May,
1881, he married Miss Ella Crane, a native of Washington, Ind., and a daughter
of Patrick Crane, and this union of Mr. and Mrs. Larkin has been blessed
with eight children, viz: Mary, William, Clara, Helen, Alice, Frank,
Anna and Joseph.
Patrick B. Larkin, brother of John F., was
born in Loogootee November 14, 1860, was educated in its parochial schools
and at the university of Notre Dame, and for a year after leaving college
worked on the home farm, and then joined his brother in 1882, as previously
remarked, in mercantile trade. In 1885 he married Miss Anna Reynolds,
and this union has been blessed with two children, viz: Bernard,
born December 19, 1886, and Earnest, born January 4, 1894.
The firm of Larkin Brothers has met with marked
success; it began in a small way, but now owns a double store-building
and carries the largest stock of general merchandise owned in the town
of Loogootee. They are extremely popular young business men, being
polite and attentive to their patrons, and their social standing is with
the best people in the country.
JOHN F. MACK
from: "History of the Catholic Church in Indiana". Col. Charles Blanchard.
(Editor and Compiler). Logansport, Indiana : A. W. Bowen & Co.,
1898. (pp. 971 and 972).
JOHN F. MACK, of Indianapolis, was born in Michigan
City, Ind., May 13, 1867, a son of John and Mary (Hayes) Mack, natives
of Ireland and Canada, respectively. The father was born in the year
1835, and for many years followed railroading as a locomotive engineer.
He removed his family from Michigan City, in 1867 to Pittsburg, Pa., thence
three years later to Indianapolis, and later again became a resident of
Michigan City, of which place he was a resident when he met his death,
November 30, 1874, in a collision on the O. & M. road at Milan, Ind.;
the widow then removed to Indianapolis, where she still lives.
Of a family of five children born to John and
Mary Mack, John F. was the first in order of birth; James died in infancy;
William, a confectioner by occupation, resides in West Indianpolis; Thomas
died at the age of seven, and Margaret, a young lady, is still at home.
Mrs. Mack was born in the year 1844, and is a daugher of Andrew and Johanna
(Quinlin) Hayes, both natives of Ireland, where their marriage occurred.
Mr. Hayes served in the late Rebellion as private in the Thiry-fifth Indiana
infantry, and died, from the effects of a wound, some years after the close
of the war; his wife died in early life and is remembered as a most estimable
lady and a sincere Christian.
The subject of this sketch was eight and a
half years old when his father died, in consequence of which he was early
thrown upon his own resources. While still quite young he manifested
a decided inclination toward railroading, and in due time learned to operate
a locomotive, which part of the service he followed for a period of eleven
years on the Belt line. During the A. R. U. strikes of 1894 he left
the road, was reinstated in April, 1896, but resigned his position in October
of the same year, since which date he has given his attention to other
vocations.
Mr. Mack is a single man, and, with the other
members of his mother's family, belongs to the Assumption church, in the
founding of which he took an active part. He was a member of the
board of trustees when the parish was organized and during the erection
of the beautiful house of worship, and has otherwise been prominent in
all matters tending to its best interest and development. He is also
a charter member of the Y. M. I., No. 274, of which he is corresponding
secretary. His sister, Margaret, is organist of the church, and also
one of its most zealous and conscientious members. Politically, Mr.
Mack is a democrat and an ardent advocate of free silver, which he believes
to be for the best interest of the country.
"History of the Catholic Church in Indiana". Col. Charles Blanchard.
(Editor and Compiler). Logansport, Indiana : A. W. Bowen & Co.,
1898. (pp. 980 and 981).
"Rev. William A. Maher, assistant rector at St. Patrick's church, Indianapolis,
and eminent as an educator in former years, was born in county Tipperary,
Ireland, September 29, 1860. Rev. Father Maher received his elementary
education in the Christian Brothers' parochial school at Thurles, in his
native county, and his classical education in St. Patrick's college, in
the same town; the latter was supplemented by a course of four years at
Black Rock branch of the University of Ireland, and his philosophical and
final preparation for the priesthood was in the seminary of the Holy Ghost
at Chevilly, near Paris, France, and here he was ordained July 14, 1889,
by Bishop Dubois. He was at once dispatched to Trinidad, British
West Indies, where he had already passed nearly six years, prior to ordination,
as a professor in St. Mary's college, Port of Spain, Trinidad, this institution
being affiliated with the university of Cambridge. His second visit
thither was in the capacity of clergyman, but his health became impaired,
and his retirement became necessary within a few months. From 1890
until 1894, he was a professor in the institution de Mesnieres, near Dieppe,
France, and in the last-named year he came to the United States and took
charge of a sophomore class in the Catholic college at Pittsburg, Pa.,
until the end of the scholastic year, 1895, when he entered upon his duties
as assistant rector of St. Patrick'--his first work, exclusively, in the
church ministry, all his previous labors having been performed in the capacity
of educator, in which he reached an eminence, honorable and enviable.
As pious as learned, Father Maher has become greatly endeared to his flock,
and his services, it is gratifying to add, are fully appreciated by his
superior."
Right Rev. Fintan MUNDWILER, O. S. B.
Transcribed from : "History of the Catholic Church in Indiana".
Col. Charles Blanchard. (Editor and Compiler). Logansport,
Indiana : A. W. Bowen & Co., 1898. (pp. 378 - 382).
RIGHT REV. FINTAN MUNDWILER, O. S. B., late abbot of St. Meinrad's Benedictine
abbey, Spencer county, Ind., and whose name was carried beyond the walls
of his holy institution far out into the world as that of a saintly and
self-sacrificing superior, was born July 12, 1835, at Dietiken, a small
town of Switzerland. His parents, Jacob and Anna Marie (Seiler) Mundwiler,
were zealous Catholics, and were desirous of having their son reared in
an atmosphere of sanctity and learning. For this purpose they intrusted
him, at the age of fourteen years, to the care of the world-famed Benedictine
abbey of Einsiedeln, and upon the completion of his classical course he
entered the Novitiate of Einsiedeln, where, October 14, 1855, he made his
solemn profession. September 11, 1859, he was ordained priest by
Bishop Arnota, and a year later Abbot Henry sent him, in company with Rev.
Martin Maby, O. S. B. (the late bishop of St. Cloud), to the American missions.
He was at once appointed, after arrival, as prefect at St. Meinrad's college,
but was later sent to Terre Haute, where he established the congregation
of St. Benedict and built its first church. Many of the older citizens
of Terre Haute remember the beautiful traits of character evinced by the
then young priest, and how his kindness and zeal secured the love and admiration
of all classes.
On the recall of Father Mundwiler to St. Meinrad,
he was placed in charge of the missions in Spencer, Perry and Dubois counties,
Ind., and later was appointed professor of dogmatic theology in the seminary.
In 1869, when the monastery was raised to the dignity of an abbey, by Pius
IX, Father Mundwiler was appointed prior, master of novices, and professor
of the seminary, and the duties of each position he performed with noteworthy
skill.
In February, 1880, Abbot Marty was consecrated
bishop of the diocese of Sioux Falls, and two days later Prior Mundwiler
was elected abbot of St. Meinrad. His career during the eighteen
years of his incumbency of this high office is marked with events that
will make his name memorable in the annals of the diocese of Vincennes
and in the histor of the Catholic church in America. It was during
his administration that the large stone college-building was erected, and
the stone crypt in 1887. He also effected the erection of the Helvetio-American
congregation of Benedictines, and was chosen its first treasurer; the monastery
at Speilerville, Ark. (now New Subjaco abbey); the priory of St. Joseph's
in Louisiana, and the priory of St. Gall, in North Dakota.
September 2, 1887, occurred the great fire
which destroyed entirely the abbey of St. Meinrad, with its annexes; but
with unwonted and wonderful energy, Rev. Abbot Mundwiler rebuilt the abbey
within two years, and also began the construction of Jasper college for
secular students--the chapel, library, novitiates' annexes, the spacious
printing office and book bindery, shops, infirmary and bath-rooms--all
being completed and ready for occupancy as early as 1896.
The zeal of the reverend abbot for the Holy
Church was also manifested in other ways. He took active interest
in the Benedictine college at Rome (St. Anselms), and materially aided
that institution of learning. To him, also, is attributed the blessing
which St. Meinrad's enjoys in possessing the central direction of the flourishing
American Priests' Eucharistic League. But the greatest of all blessings
enjoyed by St. Meinrad during the lifetime of Abbot Fintan Mundwiler was
the example he set as a christian, religious priest, prelate and superior.
His devotion to the Blessed Eucharist was remarkable. It is known
that he knelt for hours before the blessed crucifix, and during the years
of his illness, even when he could scarcely walk or kneel, he paid lengthy
visits to the Holy Eucharist (or pyx). Such was his devotion to Christ,
that, when his fatal illness set in, he undertook a pilgrimage to the Holy
Land in 1893. The final dissolution took place at 6 P. M., February
16, 1898, in the presence of Right Rev. Bishop Chatard, and the priests
and brothers of the abbey. The Right Rev. Bishop Rademacher, of Fort
Wayne, celebrated the pontifical requiem over the mortal remains of the
departed priest --but the immortal part had gone to that heavenly abode
where requiems are never read nor sung.
"History of the Catholic Church in Indiana". Col. Charles Blanchard.
(Editor and Compiler). Logansport, Indiana : A. W. Bowen & Co.,
1898. (pp. 973 and 974).
"Mrs. Ellen Madden, one of the most highly-esteemed ladies of St. Mary's
parish, Daviess county, Ind., was born about 1829 in the city of Cork,
Ireland, the third in the family of three sons and seven daughters that
blessed the marriage of Dennis and Margaret (Healy) McCarthy. Of
these ten children three still survive, vis: Mrs. Madden; John, a
farmer of Barr township and a member of St. Mary's congregation, and Isadora,
wife of Michael Foley, also a farmer and a member of St. Simon's congregation.
Ellen McCarthy was a child but two years old
when brought to America by her mother, the father having preceded his family
in order to secure them a home prior to their arrival. After a voyage
of seven weeks and three days between Cork and New Orleans they landed
in safety, and a few weeks later went to Frankfort, Ky., where Ellen was
confirmed in the Catholic faith at the age of thirteen years. In
or about 1841, the family settled in St. Mary's parish, Barr township,
Daviess county, Ind., the township being then a wilderness. April
27, 1858, Miss Ellen was united in matrimony, by Rev. Father Mougin, with
John Madden.
The late John Madden was born in Baltimore,
Md., July 13, 1832, and was reared to hard toil. After coming to
Indiana he helped to excavate the canal at Terre Haute, and also to grade
the Baltimore & Ohio railroad. On reaching his majority he had
no capital, but by thrift and industry succeeded in acquiring a competency,
and in this he was largely aided by his willing wife. His first ownership
of land was in Martin county, in 1845, which land was purchased for him
by his father, and in 1855 he made his first purchase in Daviess county;
at his death, which occurred March 18, 1896, he possessed 618 acres in
Barr and Van Buren townships, all the result of his own good management
and the frugality of his helpmate. In politics he was a democrat,
and in religion one of the most devout of Catholics, and as a citizen was
honored by all who knew him. As a husband and father he was extremely
affectionate, and his loving wife and children have erected a beautiful
granite monument, in sacred remembrance of him, over his resting place
in St. Mary's cemetery.
The children that blessed the marriage of
Mr. and Mrs. Madden were eight in number--three sons and five daughters--and
of these the following-named five still survive: Jeremiah M., who
was confirmed by Bishop de St. Palais, is now a prominent member of St.
Mary's congregation, and in politics he is a democrat; Margaret A. was
confirmed by Bishop de St. Palais, and is now a Sister of Providence at
St. Mary's of the Woods; Hannah A. was also confirmed by Bishop de St.
Palais, and is the chief reliance of her mother in the care of the homestead;
William D. was confirmed by Bishop Chatard, at the age of fourteen years,
is a democrat in politics, and manages the home farm; Malachi J., also
confirmed by Bishop Chatard, at the age of fifteen, May 24, 1886, is a
democrat in politics, and, like his brother, William D., cast his first
presidential vote for Grover Cleveland; he, also, makes his home on his
mother's homestead.
Mrs. Madden is very liberal in her contributions
to the church, and no lady in the parish is held in higher esteem than
herself."
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