Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York

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The Archdiocese of New York (Latin: Archidiœcesis Neo-Eboracensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory or archdiocese of the Catholic Church located in the State of New York. It encompasses the boroughs of Manhattan, the Bronx and Staten Island in New York City and the counties of Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Sullivan, Ulster, and Westchester to the north of the city. It does not include the New York City boroughs of Brooklyn or Queens, which are part of the Diocese of Brooklyn; however, the Diocese of Brooklyn is a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of New York.

Archdiocese of New York

Archidiœcesis Neo-Eboracensis
Coat of arms
Location
CountryUnited States
TerritoryNew York City (Bronx, Manhattan, Staten Island), Counties of Dutchess, Orange, Putnam, Rockland, Sullivan, Ulster, and Westchester, New York
Ecclesiastical provinceNew York
Coordinates40°45′27″N 73°57′50″W / 40.75750°N 73.96389°W / 40.75750; -73.96389
Statistics
Area12,212 km2 (4,715 sq mi)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2019)
6,238,441
2,807,298 (45%)
Parishes288[1]
Information
DenominationCatholic Church
Sui iuris churchLatin Church
RiteRoman Rite
Established
  • April 8, 1808; 216 years ago (1808-04-08), as Diocese of New York
  • July 19, 1850; 174 years ago (1850-07-19), as Archdiocese of New York
CathedralSt. Patrick's Cathedral
Patron saintSt. Patrick[2]
Secular priests320
Current leadership
PopeFrancis
ArchbishopTimothy Michael Cardinal Dolan
Metropolitan ArchbishopTimothy Michael Cardinal Dolan
Auxiliary Bishops
Vicar GeneralJoseph LaMorte
Bishops emeritus
Map
Website
archny.org
Current St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan

The Archdiocese of New York is the second-largest diocese in the United States by population, encompassing 296 parishes that serve around 2.8 million Catholics, in addition to hundreds of Catholic schools, hospitals and charities.[3][4] The archdiocese also operates St. Joseph's Seminary in Yonkers, New York. The archbishop is also the metropolitan of the larger Ecclesiastical Province of New York.

The Good Newsroom is the digital news outlet of the archdiocese and includes a website, social media channels, an app, and a weekly e-newsletter.[5]

The Reverend R. Luke Concanen was appointed the first bishop of what was then the Diocese of New York in 1808. As of 2024, the current archbishop of New York is Cardinal Timothy Dolan. Since 1911 every archbishop of the archdiocese has been elevated to the College of Cardinals, although such elevation is often deferred for a number of years.

Prelature

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The ordinary of the Archdiocese of New York is an archbishop whose cathedral is Cathedral of St. Patrick in Manhattan, New York. The archdiocese is the metropolitan see of the ecclesiastical province of New York, which includes the following suffragan dioceses:

The ecclesiastical province includes all of New York State, except for Fishers Island, which is part of the Province of Hartford. As such, the metropolitan archbishop possesses certain limited authority over the suffragan sees of the province (see Ecclesiastical Province § Catholic Church).

History

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1784 to 1808

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On November 26, 1784, Pope Pius VI erected the Apostolic Prefecture of United States of America, creating a separate jurisdiction for the new United States from the Catholic Church of the United Kingdom.[7] That same year, the new State of New York repealed the Colonial-era law prohibiting Catholic priests from residing in New York.[8]

With the anti-priest law repealed, the French consul, Hector St. John de Crevecoeur, organized a group of laymen in 1785 to open St. Peter's Parish in Manhattan, the first Catholic parish in New York City. The congregation purchased land for a new church from Trinity Church, supplement community donations with a gift of 1,000 silver pieces from King Charles III of Spain. The St. Peter's Church was dedicated in 1787; its worshippers included Sister Elizabeth Ann Seton and the philanthropist Pierre Toussaint.[9] In 1800, the congregation opened a school at St. Peter's, the first Catholic school in New York.[10]

On November 6, 1789, Pius VI raised the Apostolic Prefecture of United States to the Diocese of Baltimore, headed by the first American bishop, John Carroll. For the next nine years, Carroll was in charge of the Catholic Church in New York State along with the rest of the nation.[11][7] The second Catholic church in New York State, and the first outside of New York City, was St. Mary's Church in Albany, New York, founded in 1796.[12]

1808 to 1820

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Original St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan

On April 8, 1808, Pope Pius VII erected the Diocese of New York and three other dioceses, taking their territory from the Diocese of Baltimore. He simultaneously elevated the Diocese of Baltimore to a metropolitan archdiocese and assigned all four new sees as its suffragans.[13] At the time of its formation, the Diocese of New York included:

Pius VII appointed Monsignor R. Luke Concanen, then serving in Rome, as the first bishop of New York. However, he was prevented from sailing to New York by a French blockade. On Carroll's recommendation, Concanen appointed Reverend Anthony Kohlmann, rector of St. Peter's Parish, to administer the diocese as his vicar general. Kohlman traveled extensively throughout the new diocese, celebrating masses and providing sacraments to individuals. To relieve overcrowding at St. Peter's, Kohlman started construction in 1809 of the original Cathedral of St. Patrick in Lower Manhattan. He also established the New York Literary Institution, the first Catholic school in the new diocese.[15][16] Concanen died in Italy in 1810, having never made it to the United States.[17]

On October 4, 1814, Reverend John Connolly was appointed the second bishop of New York by Pius VII.[18] When Connolly arrived in New York, the diocese had four priests and three churches: St. Peter's and St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City, and St. Mary's in Albany.[19] The Catholic population of the diocese was approximately 15,000, primarily Irish with some English, French and Germans.[20]

In 1817, Connolly invited the Sisters of Charity in Emmitsburg, Maryland, to open the first Catholic orphanage in New York City.[21][22] During his tenure, Connolly traveled over 1,000 miles on horseback through the diocese. He spent a great deal of time ministering to Irish immigrants building the Erie Canal in Upstate New York.[23] The first parish in Utica, St. John's, was erected in 1819.[24] In 1823, St. Patrick's Parish was founded in Rochester, the first in that city.[25] Connolly died on February 6, 1825.

1825 to 1840

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To replace Connolly, Pope Leo XII in 1826 named Reverend John Dubois as the next bishop of New York.[26] At the time of his consecration, the diocese had 18 priests, 12 churches and a Catholic population of 150,000. Dubois faced a primarily Irish Catholic population that was not happy over the Vatican appointing a French bishop. Desperately needing a seminary to prepare more priests, Dubois spent two years in Europe trying to raise funds.[27] Back in New York, Dubois built his first seminary in Nyack in 1833, but it burned down the next year. He later opened another seminary in Lafargeville in northern New York. He also fought a long battle with the trustees of the first St. Patrick's Cathedral over administration of that facility.[28]

In 1837, at Dubois' request, Pope Gregory XVI appointed Reverend John J. Hughes as coadjutor bishop of New York to assist the ailing bishop.[29] Unlike previous Catholic leaders in New York, Hughes did not try to build bonds with Protestant leaders and was very willing to fight for what he deemed as the rights of Catholics.[30]

In 1840, Hughes started a campaign to persuade the Public School Society, which ran the public schools in New York City, to allocated seven schools for Catholic students and teachers. Hughes argued Catholics students in the existing schools were being forced to hear readings from the Protestant King James Bible. When the Society refused, he started lobbying the State of New York to subsidize Catholic schools.[31]

In 1841, Hughes founded St. John's College in the Bronx. Later to become Fordham University, St. John's was the first Catholic institution of higher learning in the Northeastern United States. Realizing that the Lafargeville seminary was too distant, Hughes that same year moved it to the new St. John's campus.[32] Despite Hughes' lobbying, the New York State Legislature passed the Maclay Act in 1842, which prohibited public funding of religious schools.[33][34]

1840 to 1850

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Statue of Bishop Hughes at Fordham University

When Dubois died in 1842, Hughes automatically succeeded him as bishop of New York. Having lost the legal battle over public funding of Catholic schools, Hughes worked to establish a Catholic political party. One of his other priorities was to address parish debts and loosen the control of boards of trustees over these parishes.[31] Hughes decided to found an independent Catholic school system in the city, staffed by members of religious orders. During his tenure as bishop, he opened over 24 schools.[10] By 1870, 19 percent of the city's children were attending Catholic schools.[35]

The difficulties faced by Catholics at the time included anti-Catholic bigotry in general and in the New York school system and a strong Nativist movement that failed to keep Catholics out of the country but warned that control by "the Papacy" was a threat to American republicanism.[11]

On April 23, 1847, Pope Pius IX erected the Diocese of Albany and the Diocese of Buffalo.[36][37][38][39] This left the Diocese of New York with the following areas:

  • New York City (then just Manhattan)
  • Queens County, Richmond County, Bronx County, the City of Brooklyn and the two counties on Long Island
  • Seven counties in New Jersey
  • Seven counties in New York north of New York City

1850 to 1885

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1863 Draft Riots

On July 19, 1850, Pius IX elevated the Diocese of New York to an archdiocese, making Hughes the first archbishop of New York. On July 29, 1853, to address the burgeoning Catholic population in New York and New Jersey, Pius IX created two new American dioceses:

At this point, the new archdiocese consisted of New York City, Richmond County and Bronx Counties, and the seven counties north of the city. In 1858, Hughes laid the cornerstone for the present St. Patrick's Cathedral in Manhattan.[31]

In July 1863, during the American Civil War, Hughes used his influence to help stop the Draft Riots in Lower Manhattan. They were started by Irish working men as a protest against conscription into the Union Army, but devolved into race riots that killed 119 African-Americans and resulted in the burning of many buildings. Very ill at the time, Hughes appeared on his balcony to address several thousand people, urging them to be peaceful and loyal to the United States. Other priests in Manhattan confronted mobs, stopping their rampages.[42][31] Hughes died on January 3, 1864.

To replace Hughes, Pope Pius IX named Bishop John McCloskey in January 1865 as the second archbishop of New York.[43] When the original St. Patrick's Cathedral was destroyed by fire in 1866, he rebuilt it in two years. McCloskey presided over the dedication of the present Patrick's Cathedral in 1879. In October 1880, Pope Leo XIII named Bishop Michael Corrigan as coadjutor archbishop to assist McCloskey.[44][45]

In response to the growing Catholic population in New York, McCloskey established 88 new parishes, including the first parish for African-Americans along with new parishes for the Polish and Italian communities.[46][47] The number of priests rose from 150 to 400 during his tenure. At the time of McCloskey's death in 1885, there were 37,000 children enrolled at archdiocesan schools. He also established several charitable societies for children and a hospital for the mentally ill.[48]

On July 25, 1885, Pope Leo XIII transferred the Bahamas to the Archdiocese of New York. The shipping connections between New York City and the islands made it easy for the archdiocese to administer them.[49]

1885 to 1900

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Mother Cabrini

McCloskey died on October 18, 1885; Corrigan automatically succeeded him as archbishop.[45]

During the 1886 mayoral campaign in New York City, Reverend Edward McGlynn, pastor of St. Stephen's Parish in Manhattan, announced that he would speak at a political rally for the journalist Henry George, the candidate of the United Labor Party. Corrigan, who was very close to the Democratic political machine at Tammany Hall, had had previous conflicts with McGlynn over his political affiliations. He ordered McGlynn to cancel his speech. McGlynn delivered the speech anyway and Corrigan immediately removed him as pastor of St. Stephen's. McGlynn was excommunicated by the Vatican in 1887.[50]

In the 1880s, the Vatican became concerned that the Catholic hierarchy in the United States, dominated by Irish prelates, was neglecting the needs of the increasing numbers of Catholic Italian immigrants. The Vatican rebuked Corrigan in 1887 for neglecting the Italians and treating them in a humiliating way. The Irish parishes would only allow Italians to attend Mass in church basements. Corrigan refused to open Italian parishes, claiming that the Italians were "not very clean" and were too poor to support them.[51]

Sister (and later Saint) Frances Xavier Cabrini arrived in New York in 1889 from Italy to establish an orphanage in Manhattan. When she met with Corrigan, he told her that he would not allow her orphanage and that she should return to Italy. Cabrini told him that, “I am here by order of the Holy See, and here I must stay.” At that point, Corrigan relented and invited Cabrini to work in the schools. He later allowed her to open an orphanage.[51] In 1891, Corrigan started work on St. Joseph's Seminary in Yonkers.[52]

1900 to 1967

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By 1900, the archdiocese had over 55,000 students enrolled in its schools.[10]

 
Cardinal Spellman in 1946

In 1902, after a fall at the St. Joseph's construction site, Corrigan developed pneumonia and died. Leo XIII appointed Auxiliary Bishop John Farley on September 15, 1902, as Corrigan's replacement as archbishop.[53] Farley established nearly fifty new parochial schools within his first eight years as archbishop.[54] After Farley died in 1918, Pope Benedict XV appointed Bishop Patrick Hayes on March 10, 1919, as archbishop.[55] That same year, near the end of World War I, the Vatican named Hayes as the apostolic vicar of the Military Vicariate of the United States. This gave him jurisdiction to minister to American servicemen and women throughout the world. Succeeding archbishops of New York retained this position for the next few decades.[56]

Pope Pius XI erected the Apostolic Prefecture of Bahama on March 21, 1929, starting its separation from the Archdiocese of New York.[49] When Hayes died in 1938, Pope Pius XI appointed Auxiliary Bishop Francis Spellman on April 15, 1939, as archbishop of New York.[57]

In 1949, the 240 gravediggers at the Catholic cemeteries in the archdiocese went on strike. After negotiations with the union broke down, Spellman led a group seminarians to dig the graves at one cemetery.[58][59] Spellman eventually reached a settlement with the union.[60]

During his long tenure as archbishop, Spellman raised over $500 million for the construction of schools, churches, and other institutions.[61] During a five-year period in the 1950s, he constructed 15 churches, 94 schools, 22 rectories, 60 convents and 34 other institutions in the archdiocese.[58] Spellman died of a stroke on December 3, 1967.[62]

1967 to 2000

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Cardinal Cooke

After Spellman's death, Pope Paul VI named Auxiliary Bishop Terence Cooke as the seventh archbishop of New York on March 2, 1968.[63] Cooke helped implement the reforms of the Second Vatican Council in the archdiocese, and adopted a more collegial management style than Spellman. During his tenure as archbishop, Cooke founded the following

  • Birthright, an organization providing counseling and other support for pregnant women
  • Inner-City Scholarship Fund, to provide financial aid for Catholic school students
  • an archdiocesan housing development program for the poor
  • Catholic New York, the archdiocesan newspaper
  • nine nursing homes.[64]

On October 6, 1983, Cooke died from leukemia. To replace him Pope John Paul II named Bishop John O'Connor on January 26, 1984.[65] In 1986, the Vatican erected the Archdiocese for the Military Services, USA, removing jurisdiction for Catholic ministry to servicemen and women from the archbishop of New York.[66] In 1990, O'Connor started the canonization process for Pierre Toussaint, the formerly enslaved man from Haiti who became a Catholic philanthropist in the 19th century.[67]

2000 to present

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Cardinal Egan

After O'Connor died on May 3, 2000, John Paul II appointed Bishop Edward Egan as archbishop on May 11, 2000.[68] After the September 11 terrorist attacks in Manhattan, Egan went to the disaster scene. He ministered to the injured and anointed the dead. He established a center for victims' families at the New School in Manhattan and an interfaith service at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx.[69] For retired priests, Egan established the John Cardinal O'Connor residence in 2003 at the previous site of the minor seminary in the Bronx.[70]

On January 19, 2007, Egan announced the closure of ten under-utilized parishes and the merging of 11 other parishes. He also established five new parishes; three in Orange County, and one each in Staten Island and Dutchess County. He also approved building projects for nine parishes.[71][72]

In 2008, the archdiocese celebrated the bicentennial of its establishment as a diocese. To mark the occasion, Pope Benedict XVI visited the archdiocese from April 18 to April 20, 2008. During his visit, Benedict visited St. Patrick's Cathedral, the United Nations, Ground Zero, St. Joseph's Parish in Yorkville, and St. Joseph's Seminary in Yonkers. The pope also celebrated a mass at Yankee Stadium. When Egan retired on February 23, 2009, Benedict XVI named Archbishop Timothy Dolan as the 10th archbishop of New York.[73]

Soon after his arrival in New York, Dolan oversaw a widely consultative pair of "strategic planning" processes, examining the archdiocese's hundreds of grade schools ("Pathways to Excellence", 2009–2013) and parishes ("Making All Things New", 2010–2015). Ultimately, Dolan announced that dozens of underutilized schools and parishes would close or merge with others in their neighborhoods, due to decades-long trends of shifting populations, increasing expenses, declining attendance, and decreasing clergy.[74][75] In November 2010, the archdiocese announced the closing of 32 schools.[76]

In January 2024, Dolan announced that the archdiocese would move its offices from the Terence Cardinal Cooke Catholic Building in Manhattan to another location close to St. Patrick's Cathedral.[77]

As of April 2024, Dolan is the current archbishop of New York.

Archdiocesan demographics

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As of 2023, the Catholic population of the archdiocese was 2,642,740. These Catholics were served by 320 archdiocesan priests, 195 priests of religious orders, and 140 international priests. The archdiocese had 228 permanent deacons and 443 men and women religious.[78] In comparison, in 1929 the Catholic population of the archdiocese was 1,273,291, with 1,314 clergy and 444 churches. Over 170,348 children were enrolled in Catholic educational and welfare institutions.[79]

As of 2023, the archdiocese had 60 men enrolled in its priestly formation program.

Anniversaries

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Leadership

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This is a list of present and past bishops, archbishops and auxiliary bishops of New York.[80][81]

Bishops of New York

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  1. R. Luke Concanen (1808–1810)
  2. John Connolly (1814–1825)
  3. John Dubois (1826–1842)
  4. John Hughes (1842–1850; coadjutor bishop 1837–1842), elevated to archbishop
    John McCloskey (coadjutor 1843–1847) – bishop of Albany; later returned as archbishop in 1864

Archbishops of New York

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  1. John Hughes (1850–1864)
  2. John McCloskey (1864–1885) (cardinal in 1875)
  3. Michael Corrigan (1885–1902; coadjutor archbishop 1880–1885)
  4. John Farley (1902–1918)
  5. Patrick Hayes (1919–1938)
  6. Francis Spellman (1939–1967)
    James Francis McIntyre (coadjutor 1946–1948) – archbishop of Los Angeles
    John Joseph Maguire (coadjutor 1965–1980), did not have right of succession
  7. Terence Cooke (1968–1983)
  8. John O'Connor (1984–2000)
  9. Edward Egan (2000–2009)
  10. Timothy Dolan (2009–present)

Current auxiliary bishops of New York

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Former auxiliary bishops of New York

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Other archdiocesan priests who became bishops

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Parishes

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Schools

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The Catholic Schools of the Archdiocese of New York is located in the Terence Cardinal Cooke Building in Manhattan

As of 2024, the Catholic Schools in the Archdiocese of New York, the archdiocesan school system, operates 148 schools with a total enrollment of 50,154. It is headquartered in the Cooke Building in Midtown Manhattan.[84]

Religious orders

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Cemeteries

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Non-parish cemeteries

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Calvary & Allied Cemeteries, an archdiocesan organization, operates the following cemeteries:

Parish cemeteries

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Parishes own and operate the following cemeteries:

  • All Souls (Pleasantville) – Holy Innocents Parish
  • Assumption (Cortlandt Manor) – Assumption Parish
  • Calvary (Newburgh) – St. Patrick Parish
  • Calvary (Poughkeepsie) – St. Martin de Porres Parish
  • Holy Mount (Eastchester) – Immaculate Conception–Assumption Parish in Tuckahoe
  • Holy Sepulchre (New Rochelle) – Blessed Sacrament Parish
  • Mount Calvary (White Plains) – St. John the Evangelist Parish
  • Sacred Heart (Barrytown) – St. Christopher Parish in Red Hook. The parish has a mission chapel in Barrytown.
  • St. Anastasia (Harriman) – St. Anastasia Parish
  • St. Denis (Hopewell Junction) – St. Denis Parish
  • St. Francis of Assisi (Mount Kisco) – St. Francis of Assisi
  • St. Joachim (Beacon) – St. Joachim-St. John the Evangelist Parish
  • St. John (Goshen) – St. John the Evangelist Parish
  • St. John (Pawling) – St. John the Evangelist Parish
  • St. Joseph (Florida) – St. Joseph Parish
  • St. Joseph (Middletown) – St. Joseph Parish
  • St. Joseph (Millbrook) – St. Joseph Parish
  • St. Joseph (Wurtsboro) – St. Joseph Parish
  • St. Joseph (Yonkers) – St. Joseph Parish
  • St. Lucy (Cochecton) – St. Francis Xavier Parish in Narrowsburg. There was formerly a mission parish in Cochecton.
  • St. Mary (Bangall) – Immaculate Conception Parish
  • St. Mary (Port Jervis) – St. Mary Parish
  • St. Mary (Wappingers Falls) – St. Mary Parish
  • St. Mary (Washingtonville) – St. Mary Parish
  • St. Mary (Yonkers) – St. Mary Parish
  • St. Patrick (Millerton) – Immaculate Conception Parish in Amenia. The parish has a mission chapel in Millerton.
  • St. Patrick (Newburgh) – St. Patrick Parish
  • St. Peter (Kingston) – St. Peter Parish
  • St. Peter (Poughkeepsie) – St. Peter Parish in Hyde Park. The church moved from Poughkeepsie.
  • St. Raymond (Bronx) – St. Raymond Parish
  • St. Stephen (Warwick) – St. Stephen–St. Edward Parish
  • St. Sylvia (Tivoli) – St. Sylvia Parish
  • St. Thomas (Cornwall-on-Hudson) – St. Thomas of Canterbury Parish.

Catholic charitable organizations

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Religious figures associated with archdiocese

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Saints

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Venerables

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Servants of God

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Major shrines

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Reports of sex abuse

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The archdiocese in 2017 announced that it was applying for a $100 million mortgage on the Lotte New York Palace Hotel, one of its properties in Manhattan, to pay victims of sexual abuse by its clergy who had not sued the archdiocese.[88]

In August 2018, the archdiocese reported that between 2016 and 2018, its Independent Reconciliation and Compensation Program paid nearly $60 million to 278 victims of sex abuse by clergy.[89] On September 26, 2018, it was reported that the Archdiocese of New York, and the three other dioceses where Theodore McCarrick served as a bishop, were facing an investigation by the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops for McCarrick's alleged sex abuse.[90] On January 28, 2019, the New York State Assembly and Senate passed a law allowing prosecutors to bring criminal charges until a victim turned 28, and permitting victims to sue until age 55.[91] Governor Andrew Cuomo signed the bill into law on February 14, 2019.[92]

On April 26, 2019, the archdiocese released a list of 120 Catholic clergy accused of committing acts of sexual abuse.[93] Some of those on the list, which included both male and female church workers, had been convicted of crimes and many others were deceased.[94] Cardinal Dolan released a letter of apology, asking for forgiveness.[95]

On August 14, 2019, James Grien, who accused McCarrick of sexually abusing him when McCarrick was an auxiliary bishop of New York, sued the archdiocese.[96][97] In his lawsuit, Grien also stated that McCarrick's status as a friend of his family allowed him to continue to visit and sexually abuse him after leaving the archdiocese in 1981.[98]

On September 30, 2019, Dolan released a report written by Barbara S. Jones, a former judge and prosecutor.[99][100] Her report stated that the archdiocese had completed the process of removing all of its remaining accused clergy from active ministry.[101][102][100] In the same report, Jones recommended that the archdiocese also hire a sex abuse "czar" to vet all complaints.[103][102][100] Jones, who was commissioned by Dolan in 2018 to conduct the review of the church's handling of abuse allegations,[104] also recommended hiring "a compliance officer for the Office of Priest Personnel to monitor its functions and oversee the new document management system".[103] Dolan also backed the Jones Report and stated at a press conference that the archdiocese was expanding its sex abuse policy as well.[100]

On October 10, 2019, Pope Francis had accepted the resignation of Auxiliary Bishop John Jenik following an accusation of sex abuse.[105] Appointed auxiliary bishop by Francis in 2014, Jenik also served as vicar for the Northwest Bronx, appointed by Dolan's predecessor Edward Egan in 2006.[106] Jenik, who had submitted his resignation letter upon turning 75 in March 2019,[105] had been out of public ministry since October 2018 after the allegation surfaced.[107]

On May 8, 2020, Cuomo extended the 2019 New York Child Victim Act's statute of limitations deadline to file sex abuse lawsuits. Originally set for August 14, 2020, it was changed to January 14, 2021.[108]

On July 27, 2020, it was revealed that a Catholic priest who served in Orange County was named in a new sex abuse lawsuit.[109] Eight men alleged that Reverend George Boxelaar, who died in 1990, sexually abused them when they were children during the 1970s and 1980s. They added their claims to three other alleged victims of Boxelaar.[109][110] In addition to these new lawsuits, a Scarsdale Catholic school teacher identified as Edwin Gaylor also confessed to committing acts of sex abuse.[111]

On December 3, 2020, Reverend George Rutler, pastor of the Church of St. Michael in Manhattan, was accused by a female security guard of watching pornography and "aggressively" groping her.[112] Rutler denied the charges and offered to temporarily step down as pastor. In May 2021, the District Attorney of Manhattan declined to bring charges against Rutler, dismissing the accusations as "baseless."[113]

Province of New York

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See also

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References

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  1. ^ Newman, Andy. "New York Archdiocese Will Close 7 More Churches" Archived 2017-02-01 at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, May 8, 2015.
  2. ^ "Cardinal Dolan Will Celebrate Mass in Honor of Saint Patrick, Patron Saint of the Archdiocese of New York Tomorrow". 16 March 2021. Archived from the original on 4 February 2022. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  3. ^ Grayce West, Melanie (May 8, 2015). "Archdiocese of New York Announces Parish Merger Decisions". Wall Street Journal. Archived from the original on February 16, 2018. Retrieved March 11, 2017.
  4. ^ "New York's Catholic Church — How We Serve - New York State Catholic Conference". 2011-11-21. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
  5. ^ "About The Good Newsroom". The Good Newsroom. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
  6. ^ "The Dioceses of New York State - New York State Catholic Conference". 2011-11-22. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
  7. ^ a b "Baltimore (Archdiocese) [Catholic-Hierarchy]". www.catholic-hierarchy.org. Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  8. ^ "Catholics – Encyclopedia of New York City". virtualny.ashp.cuny.edu. Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  9. ^ "St Peter's Church HISTORY". St Peter – Our Lady of the Rosary Parish. Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  10. ^ a b c "History of Schools". Catholic Schools in the Archdiocese of New York. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
  11. ^ a b "Catholic Encyclopedia: Archdiocese of New York". New Advent. Archived from the original on 2020-01-21. Retrieved 2006-01-21.
  12. ^ "History". Historic St. Mary's Church on Capital Hill. Retrieved 2024-04-20.
  13. ^ "Baltimore (Archdiocese) [Catholic-Hierarchy]". www.catholic-hierarchy.org. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
  14. ^ "History of the Archdiocese of New York". Archives of the Archdiocese of New York. Archived from the original on 2015-07-10. Retrieved 2015-06-30.
  15. ^ Kate Feighery, " 'Everything Depends on the First Year': Archbishop John Hughes and his Fundraising Plan for St. Patrick's Cathedral." American Journal of Irish Studies 12 (2015): 57–76. online
  16. ^ Egan, Edward (2006-06-10). "Our History: Seven Years and No Bishop". Archdiocese of New York. Retrieved 2024-04-24.
  17. ^ "Bishop Richard Luke Concanen [Catholic-Hierarchy]". www.catholic-hierarchy.org. Retrieved 2024-04-19.
  18. ^ "Bishop John Connolly, O.P." Catholic-Hierarchy.org.
  19. ^ "O'Daniel, Victor F., "Profile: John Connolly, Bishop of New York (1814–1825)", Dominican Province of St. Joseph" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on October 10, 2014. Retrieved October 6, 2014.
  20. ^ Clarke, Richard Henry (1888). Lives of the Deceased Bishops of the Catholic Church in the United States. Vol. I. New York: R. H. Clarke.
  21. ^ "Sisters of Charity of New York". Social Welfare History Project. 2013-02-26. Retrieved 2024-04-20.
  22. ^ Fitzgerald, Thomas W. H., ed. (1910). Ireland and Her People: A Library of Irish Biography. Vol. III. Chicago: Fitzgerald Book Company.
  23. ^ Egan, Edward (2007-01-18). "A Bishop for New York Arrives". Archdiocese of New York. Retrieved 2024-04-20.
  24. ^ "History of St. John's Parish". Historic Old St. John's Catholic Church. Retrieved 2024-04-20.
  25. ^ Morrell, Alan. "Whatever Happened To ... St. Patrick's?". Democrat and Chronicle. Retrieved 2024-04-20.
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