Diocese of Juneau Alaska


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History

Compiled by Fr. Patrick Travers

The Catholic Church was permanently established in Southeast Alaska on May 3, 1879, when Father John Althoff founded Saint Rose of Lima Church in Wrangell. Father Althoff was a young Dutch priest of the Canadian Diocese of Vancouver Island (now Victoria) which, in 1874, had been assigned responsibility for the missions in Alaska. He had been sent by Bishop Charles J. Seghers of Vancouver Island to serve Wrangell and the Cassiar mining district on the Stikine River, as well as the town of Sitka, to which he would travel from time to time and celebrate Mass in an old Russian carriage barn.

Gold Discovered at Juneau
Following the discovery of gold at what is now Juneau, Father Althoff moved to the new settlement and celebrated the first Mass and baptism there in the interdenominational ‘Log Cabin Church’ on July 17, 1882. The same year, Father William Heynen, another priest of the Diocese of Vancouver Island, arrived as Father Althoff's assistant. Father Heynen spent most of his time in Sitka, where he built the original Church of Saint Gregory Nazianzen in 1885. He returned to Vancouver Island in 1887. In the meantime, Father Althoff built the first Catholic church in Juneau in 1885, on the site now occupied by the driveway between the Cathedral rectory and Saint Ann's Hall.

Sisters of Saint Ann from Victoria
In 1886, he sponsored the establishment in Juneau of the Sisters of Saint Ann from Victoria. The first three sisters -- Sister Mary Zeno, Sister Mary Bon Secours, and Sister Mary Victor had established a hospital and a school within two months of their arrival in Juneau on September 11, 1886. The Sisters of Saint Ann operated this hospital and school, which were both named for Saint Ann and greatly expanded over the years, until the 1960s.

Pioneers of the Church in Southeastern Alaska
In September 1895, after Alaska had been separated from the Diocese of Vancouver Island, Father Althoff returned to Canada. He died in Nelson, British Columbia, in 1925, at the age of 70. Referring to Father Althoff and to Father Heynen, who died in October 1939, Bishop Crimont stated: ‘These two men were the pioneers of the Church in Southeastern Alaska.’

First Prefect - Father Pascal Tosi, S.J.
On July 17, 1894, Pope Leo XIII had established Alaska as an independent Prefecture Apostolic. The first Prefect was Father Pascal Tosi, S.J., and the Society of Jesus assumed primary responsibility for the new Alaskan Church. In 1895, Father John Rene, S.J., the new pastor in Juneau, established Our Lady of the Mines Church and School in Douglas. In 1900, Father Paul Bougis, S.J., would build a larger church, and the Sisters of Saint Ann would found a hospital that would operate until 1916, when the Treadwell mines were flooded and closed. The complex was destroyed by fire in 1926, and another building was bought to serve first as Saint Aloysius Mission and then as Saint Peter's Church, which was closed in 1986. The painting of Our Lady of the Mines from the old Douglas church is now displayed at the entrance of the Cathedral's Saint Ann's Hall. Father Tosi resigned as Prefect Apostolic of Alaska in 1897 due to illness, and died in Juneau early the next year.

Second Prefect - Father Rene
Father Pascal Tosi, S.J. was succeeded by Father Rene, who established his headquarters in Juneau, and served until 1904. In 1898, during the Klondike gold rush stampede, Father Rene and Father Philibert Tumell, S.J., established Saint Mark Church in Skagway.

G. Edgar Gallant - first priest ordained in Alaska
Father (later Monsignor) G. Edgar Gallant, who became the first priest ordained in Alaska on March 30, 1918, at the Cathedral, later built a new church and school in Skagway, which were named for Saint Theresa of the Child Jesus. In 1931, Monsignor Gallant would establish Saint Pius X Mission Home for Native children who were either orphans or from destitute families, staffed by the Sisters of Saint Ann. It would be rebuilt in 1946, and would operate until the 1960s.

Ketchikan
After years of celebrating Mass in various public buildings, the Catholics of Ketchikan bought an old schoolhouse in 1903 and converted it into Holy Name Church. This would be succeeded by other churches in 1939 and 1980. The parochial grade school, the only one in the Diocese which is still in operation, was established in 1946. In 1922, Ketchikan General Hospital was established under the auspices of the Sisters of Saint Joseph of Peace.

Third Prefect - Fr Joseph R. Crimont
In 1904, Father Joseph R. Crimont, S.J., succeeded Father Rene as Prefect Apostolic of Alaska. The church in Juneau, named for the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary because of its connection with the Sisters of Saint Ann, was rebuilt in 1910.

Father Joseph R. Crimont - First Bishop
In 1917, Pope Benedict XV made Alaska a Vicariate Apostolic, and named Father Crimont as its first Bishop. Under Bishop Crimont's administration, new churches were built and resident priests established in Wrangell and Sitka. Chapels, which eventually became the centers of new parishes, were built in Haines and Petersburg. Missionary work began in Hoonah, Yakutat, and other smaller communities. The Shrine of Saint Therese was established twenty-five miles from downtown Juneau to honor the newly named patroness of the Alaskan Church.

The Catholic Church blossomed, not only in Southeast Alaska, but also in the rest of the Territory, under Bishop Crimont's forty-one years of leadership.

Second Bishop Walter J. Fitzgerald, S.J.
When Bishop Crimont died at Juneau in 1945, he was succeeded for two years by Bishop Walter J. Fitzgerald, S.J., who had been his coadjutor Bishop since 1939.

Third Bishop Francis Gleeson, S.J.
Fitzgerald died in 1947 and was succeeded the next year as Vicar-Apostolic by Bishop Francis Gleeson, S.J.

Diocese of Juneau Established
On June 23, 1951, Pope Pius XII established the Diocese of Juneau. The new Diocese consisted of those parts of Alaska east of Shelikof Strait and Cook Inlet and southeast of Talkeetna, including Kodiak, the Kenai Peninsula, Anchorage, the Matanuska Valley, Cordova, and Valdez, in addition to Southeast Alaska.

Juneau Diocese First Bishop Dermot O'Flanagan
On October 3, 1951, Father Dermot O'Flanagan, the pastor of Holy Family Church in Anchorage, was ordained and installed as the first Bishop of Juneau. The rest of Alaska remained a Vicariate Apostolic under Bishop Gleeson, who moved to Fairbanks.

During the years leading to Statehood in 1959, the center of population of Alaska shifted decisively to the north and west, even though Juneau remained the capital of the new state. On February 9, 1966, the portion of the Diocese of Juneau lying west of Mount Saint Elias and Icy Bay was detached from that Diocese to form part of the new Archdiocese of Anchorage. When Bishop O'Flanagan resigned in June 1968, there were serious questions whether what remained of the Diocese would survive as an independent entity, and it was administered for more than three years by the new Archbishop of Anchorage, Archbishop Joseph T. Ryan.

Juneau Diocese Second Bishop Hurley
On September 8, 1971, however, Bishop Francis T. Hurley, who had been ordained in March 1970 as Auxiliary Bishop of Juneau under Archbishop Ryan, was installed as the new Bishop of Juneau. Bishop Hurley, an airplane pilot, greatly expanded Catholic ministry in the smaller and more remote communities of the Diocese, such as Hoonah, where Sacred Heart Church was built. As he implemented the reforms of Vatican II, he promoted more active roles for lay people in the life of the Church. In 1972, Saint Paul the Apostle Church in the Mendenhall Valley, which had been built as a mission of the Cathedral ten years earlier, became the second parish in Juneau.

Bishop Hurley administered the Diocese of Juneau for three years after being named Archbishop of Anchorage in May 1976.

Juneau Diocese Third Bishop Michael H. Kenny
On June 15, 1979, Bishop Michael H. Kenny was installed as the third Bishop of Juneau. Under his inspirational leadership, the Church of Southeast Alaska continued to grow and flourish. Teams of priests and sisters based in the larger towns traveled to the smaller communities to support small groups of Catholics, as well as those of other faiths. The people of Saint John by the Sea Parish on Prince of Wales Island built a church in the village of Klawock. The Native designs incorporated in this church reflected Bishop Kenny's desire to reach out to all the peoples of Southeast Alaska, whether Catholic or not. His bold stands in support of peace and justice were respected even by those who did not agree with him. When he died suddenly on a trip to Jordan on February 19, 1995, he was deeply mourned by people of all faiths and beliefs. Father Michael P. Nash served as Diocesan Administrator after Bishop Kenny's death.

Juneau Diocese Fourth Bishop Michael W. Warfel
The Church of Southeast Alaska is now grateful for Bishop Michael W. Warfel, the fourth Bishop of Juneau. Bishop Warfel was formerly a priest from the archdiocese of Anchorage.


Our Lady of the Rosary Novena

O, dear disciple, Mary. Each bead tells a story; each decade reveals a mystery to contemplate. Nourished by your close encounter with your Son, Jesus, growing alike mind and heart. Teach us from the fruits of your encounter as we ponder the mysteries, learning how to be disciples. O, Mary exemplar disciple. Help us encounter your Son! Amen
 
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