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Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Seattle

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Country
  
United States

Ecclesiastical province
  
Archdiocese of Seattle

Churches
  
160

Bishop
  
J. Peter Sartain

Phone
  
+1 206-382-4560

Territory
  
Western Washington

Parishes
  
134

Area
  
64,269 km²

Cathedral
  
St. James Cathedral

Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Seattle

Population - Total - Catholics
  
(as of 2013) 5,299,770 990,000 (18.7%)

Address
  
710 9th Ave, Seattle, WA 98104, USA

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Seattle is a Latin Metropolitan archdiocese of the Roman Catholic Church, in the U.S. state of Washington. Headquartered in Seattle, the archdiocese encompasses all counties in the state west of the Cascade Range.

Contents

Its present archbishop is J. Peter Sartain.

Its cathedral archiepiscopal see is St. James Cathedral in Seattle, and has a former Cathedral: the Proto-cathedral of St. James the Greater, in Vancouver, Washington.

The archdiocese was established in 1850 as the Diocese of Nesqually headquartered in Vancouver, Washington, as a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Oregon City. In 1903, the episcopal see was moved to Seattle, and the diocese's name was changed to Diocese of Seattle in 1907. The diocese was elevated to archdiocese status in 1951.

Ecclesiastical province

The Archbishop of Seattle concurrently is the Metropolitan bishop of two suffragan daughter dioceses within the Ecclesiastical province of Seattle, which together covers the entire state of Washington :

  • Roman Catholic Diocese of Spokane, carved out of the Archdiocese of Seattle territory in 1913
  • Roman Catholic Diocese of Yakima, carved out of the Archdiocese of Seattle territory in 1951.
  • Statistics and extent

    As per 2014 it pastorally served 997,000 Catholics (18.6% of 5,350,045 total) on 64,269 km² in 147 parishes with 298 priests (204 diocesan, 94 religious), 116 deacons, 476 lay religious (109 brothers, 367 sisters) and 30 seminarians.

    Today (date?) the archdiocese has 144 parishes, 16 high schools and 2 colleges, and has a Catholic population of 972,000.

    Antecedents

    The Catholic Church presence in the present-day state of Washington dates to the 1830s, when missionary priests François Norbert Blanchet and Modeste Demers traveled from Quebec and arrived in what was then known as the Oregon Country. On December 1, 1843, the Holy See established the Vicariate Apostolic of the Oregon Territory and named Blanchet its vicar apostolic. In 1846 Pope Gregory XVI established an ecclesiastical territory in the region, and the apostolic vicariate was split into three dioceses: Diocese of Oregon City with François Blanchet as bishop; Diocese of Vancouver Island, with Demers as bishop, and Diocese of Walla Walla at Walla Walla, Washington, with François Blanchet's brother, Augustin-Magloire Blanchet, as bishop.

    The Whitman massacre in 1847 and the ensuing Cayuse War increased tensions between Christians and the native population of the Oregon Territory, and as a result by 1850 the Diocese of Walla Walla was abandoned and its merged-in territory administered from Oregon City.

    On May 31, 1850, Pope Pius IX created the Diocese of Nesqually out of the defunct Walla Walla diocese, with Augustin Blanchet as bishop. In January 1851, Augustin Blanchet dedicated St. James Church near Fort Vancouver as the new diocese's cathedral. A new St. James Cathedral was built in Vancouver, Washington in 1885.

    (Arch)diocesan history

    In 1903 Bishop Edward O'Dea, realizing that Vancouver was no longer the economic and population center of the region, moved the episcopal see to Seattle and began construction on a new cathedral in 1905. The bishopric changed its name to Diocese of Seattle on September 11, 1907, and the present-day St. James Cathedral was dedicated on December 22, 1907.

    On 1913.12.17 it lost territory to establish the Diocese of Spokane, now its oldest suffragan.

    It was elevated on June 23, 1951 as Metropolitan Archdiocese of Seattle and Bishop Thomas Arthur Connolly became the first archbishop. Simultaneously it lost territory to establish the Diocese of Yakima, its second suffragan.

    In 1983, Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, the Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith (CDF), initiated an apostolic visitation to the Archdiocese of Seattle. The visitation was largely prompted by concerns over whether the archdiocese under Archbishop Raymond Hunthausen was adhering to church teachings on matters including contraception in Catholic hospitals, and its treatment of homosexuals and divorced people. Archbishop James Hickey of the Archdiocese of Washington, DC was sent to Seattle to gather information on behalf of the CDF. As a result of the CDF's findings, on December 3, 1985, the Vatican under Pope John Paul II named Donald Wuerl auxiliary bishop of Seattle, with the authority to overrule Hunthausen in several areas. This unconventional arrangement proved untenable and unpopular among the people of the archdiocese, and Wuerl was replaced with Thomas Murphy on May 26, 1987. Murphy was appointed as coadjutor bishop with immediate right of succession to Hunthausen; he became archbishop upon Hunthausen's retirement on August 21, 1991.

    Under Archbishop Murphy the archdiocese saw an increase in registered Catholics and an increase in lay ministries and outreach for women and various ethnic groups. He was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia in December 1996, and died on June 26, 1997. Father George Leo Thomas was appointed administrator of the archdiocese until the installation of Archbishop Alexander Joseph Brunett in December 1997. Brunett later appointed and consecrated George Thomas as auxiliary bishop, a post he held until his appointment as Bishop of Helena in 2004. Eusebio L. Elizondo Almaguer and Joseph J. Tyson were appointed as auxiliary bishops and consecrated in 2005; Elizondo still serves in that capacity, while Tyson departed in 2011 to become Bishop of suffragan see Yakima. Brunett served as archbishop until his retirement in 2011 and was succeeded by the incumbent bishop, J. Peter Sartain.

    Episcopal Ordinaries and Auxiliary bishops

    (all Roman Rite)

    [Precursor see Bishops of Nesqually :

  • Augustin-Magloire Blanchet (1850–1879)
  • Egidius Junger (1879–1895)
  • Edward John O'Dea (1896.06.13 – 1907.09.11 see below)
  • ]

    Suffragan Bishops of Seattle
  • Edward John O'Dea (see above 1907.09.11 – death 1932.12.25)
  • Gerald Shaughnessy, Society of Mary (Marists, S.M.) (1933.07.01 – death 1950.05.18)
  • Thomas Arthur Connolly (1950.05.18 – 1951.06.23 see below), previously Titular Bishop of Sila (1939.06.10 – 1950.05.18), first as Auxiliary Bishop of San Francisco (California, USA) (1939.06.10 – 1948.02.28), then as Coadjutor Bishop of Seattle (1948.02.28 – succession 1950.05.18)
  • Metropolitan Archbishops of Seattle
  • Thomas Arthur Connolly (see above' 1951.06.23 – retired 1975.02.13), died 1991
  • Auxiliary bishop Thomas Edward Gill (1956.04.11 – death 1973.11.11), Titular Bishop of Lambæsis (1956.04.11 – 1973.11.11)
  • Raymond Hunthausen (1975.02.25 – retired 1991.08.21), previously Bishop of Helena (USA) (1962.07.08 – 1975.02.25)
  • Auxiliary bishop Nicolas Eugene Walsh (1976.08.10 – retired 1983.09.06), Titular Bishop of Bolsena (1976.08.10 – 1983.09.06); previously Bishop of suffragan see Yakima (USA) (1974.09.05 – 1976.08.10); died 1997
  • Thomas Joseph Murphy (1991.08.21 – death 1997.06.26), previously last Bishop of Great Falls (USA) (1978.07.05 – 1980.02.14), restyled first Bishop of Great Falls–Billings (1980.02.14 – 1987.05.26)
  • Alexander Joseph Brunett (1997.10.28 – retired 2010.09.16), previously Bishop of Helena (USA) (1994.04.19 – 1997.10.28); later Apostolic Administrator of Oakland (USA) (2012.10.04 – 2013.05.03)
  • Auxiliary bishop Eusebio Elizondo Almaguer, Missionaries of the Holy Spirit M.Sp.S. (12 May 2005– ... ), Titular Bishop of Acholla
  • Auxiliary bishop Donald Wuerl (1985.11.30 – 1987.05.26), Titular Bishop of Rosemarkie (1985.11.30 – 1988.02.11); next Bishop of Pittsburgh (Pennsylvania, USA) (1988.02.11 – 2006.05.16), Metropolitan Archbishop of Washington (D.C., USA) (2006.05.16 – ...), created Cardinal-Priest of S. Pietro in Vincoli (2010.11.20 [2011.05.08] – ...)
  • Auxiliary bishop George Leo Thomas (1999.11.19 – 2004.03.23), Titular Bishop of Vagrauta (1999.11.19 – 2004.03.23); next Bishop of Helena (USA) (2004.03.23 – ...)
  • Auxiliary bishop Joseph J. Tyson (2005.05.12 – 2011.04.12), Titular Bishop of Migirpa (2005.05.12 – 2011.04.12); next Bishop of suffragan see Yakima (USA) (2011.04.12 – ...)
  • J. Peter Sartain (16 September 2010 – ...), previously Bishop of Little Rock (USA) (2000.01.04 – 2006.05.16), Bishop of Joliet (USA) (2006.05.16 – 2010.09.16).
  • Catholic High schools

  • Archbishop Murphy High School* - Everett
  • Bellarmine Preparatory School* - Tacoma
  • Bishop Blanchet High School - Seattle
  • Eastside Catholic School* - Sammamish
  • Forest Ridge School of the Sacred Heart* - Bellevue
  • Holy Names Academy* - Seattle
  • John F. Kennedy Catholic High School - Burien
  • O'Dea High School - Seattle
  • Pope John Paul II High School* - Lacey
  • Seattle Preparatory School* - Seattle
  • St. Elizabeth Ann Seton Catholic High School* - Vancouver
  • * Operationally independent of Archdiocese

    References

    Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Seattle Wikipedia


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