Alfred Allen Paul Curtis

Alfred Allen Paul Curtis (July 4, 1831 – July 11, 1908) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Bishop of Wilmington (1886–1896) and Auxiliary Bishop of Baltimore (1897–1908). He had previously served as a member of the Episcopal clergy before converting to Catholicism.

The Most Reverend


Alfred Allen Paul Curtis
Bishop of Wilmington
SeeBishop of Wilmington
InstalledNovember 25, 1886
Term endedMay 23, 1896
PredecessorThomas Becker
SuccessorJohn Monaghan
Other postsTitular Bishop of Echinus (1896–1908)
Auxiliary Bishop of Baltimore (1897–1908)
Orders
OrdinationDecember 19, 1874
ConsecrationNovember 14, 1886
Personal details
Born(1831-07-04)July 4, 1831
Rehobeth, Maryland
DiedJuly 11, 1908(1908-07-11) (aged 77)
Baltimore, Maryland
DenominationRoman Catholic Church

Biography

Alfred Curtis was born near Rehobeth in Somerset County, Maryland, to Episcopalian parents.[1] He attended the country school his father had founded, but taught himself Latin, Greek, and Shakespeare.[2] Following his father's death in 1849, he became an assistant teacher at an academy in Princess Anne to support his mother and siblings.[2] He began studying for the ministry in 1855, and was ordained a deacon in 1856 and afterwards a priest in 1859.[2] He then worked as an assistant at St. Luke's Church in Baltimore, from where he was transferred to Frederick County and then to Chestertown, Kent County.[2]

In 1862 he was elected rector of Mount Calvary Church in Baltimore.[2] During the American Civil War, Curtis seemed to favor the Confederacy. He wrote that the Union victories were “steps and stages towards eventual ruin” and that they were “matters of humiliation and not of thanksgiving.” Episcopalian Bishop William Rollinson Whittingham reacted by ceasing to be a pew holder at Mount Calvary, saying that he did not wish to be “associated with a body so treasonably ungrateful for Divine Mercy shown in the deliverance of the State from armed rebels and thieves.”[3] Curtis gradually became more Catholic in his beliefs and practices, to the dismay of Bishop Whittingham.[2] He eventually resigned as rector in 1871 and then went to England, where he was received into the Catholic Church by Fr. John Henry Newman on May 18, 1872.[1][4] Curtis returned to Baltimore later that year, entering St. Mary's Seminary.[1] He was ordained a Catholic priest by Archbishop James Roosevelt Bayley on December 19, 1874.[4] He then served as Archbishop Bayley's private secretary and an assistant at the Cathedral of Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary.[2]

On August 3, 1886, Curtis was appointed the second Bishop of Wilmington, Delaware, by Pope Leo XIII.[4] He received his episcopal consecration at the Baltimore Cathedral on the following November 14 from Cardinal James Gibbons, with Bishops John Moore and John Joseph Kain serving as co-consecrators, in Baltimore.[4] He was installed at St. Peter's Cathedral in Wilmington on November 21, 1886.[4] During his tenure, he introduced the Josephite Fathers into the diocese to minister to African American Catholics, for whom he also built St. Joseph Church, an orphanage, and a parochial school.[5] He also erected a cloistered convent for the Visitation Nuns.[1]

After ten years as bishop, Curtis resigned due to poor health on May 23, 1896; he was appointed Titular Bishop of Echinus on the same date.[4] He left the diocese with 25,000 Catholics, thirty priests, twenty-two churches and eighteen missions, twelve seminarians, eight religious communities, three academies, nine parochial schools, and three orphanages.[5] He became an auxiliary bishop of Baltimore in 1897, and assisted Cardinal Gibbons with performing ordinations and confirmations.[2] He later died from cancer at St. Agnes Hospital, aged 77.[2] At his own request, his remains were buried at Visitation Monastery in Wilmington.[1] (In 1993, because of the Visitation community's relocation to Massachusetts, the Wilmington facility was closed and Bishop Curtis' grave was moved to Cathedral Cemetery.)

See also

References

  1. "Diocese of Wilmington". Catholic Encyclopedia.
  2. The Sisters of the Visitation of Wilmington (1913). The Life and Characteristics of Right Reverend Alfred A. Curtis, D.D. New York: P.J. Kenedy & Sons.
  3. Letter of Bishop Whittingham to Rev. Curtis, July 18, 1863, Whittingham Papers, Peabody Institute, Baltimore.
  4. "Bishop Alfred Allen Paul Curtis". Catholic-Hierarchy.org.
  5. "A Brief History of the Diocese of Wilmington". Roman Catholic Diocese of Wilmington.

Episcopal succession

Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Thomas Albert Andrew Becker
Bishop of Wilmington
18861896
Succeeded by
John James Joseph Monaghan
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.