Benedict Joseph Fenwick


Benedict Joseph Fenwick

Bishop of Boston
Portrait of Benedict Joseph Fenwick
SeeBoston
AppointedMay 10, 1825
InstalledDecember 21, 1825
Term endedAugust 11, 1846
PredecessorJean-Louis Lefebvre de Cheverus
SuccessorJohn Bernard Fitzpatrick
Orders
OrdinationMarch 12, 1808
by Leonard Neale
ConsecrationNovember 1, 1825
by Ambrose Maréchal
Personal details
Born(1782-09-03)September 3, 1782
DiedAugust 11, 1846(1846-08-11) (aged 63)
Boston, Massachusetts, U.S.
BuriedCollege of the Holy Cross Cemetery
DenominationCatholic Church
Alma mater
SignatureSignature of Bishop Benedict J. Fenwick

Benedict Joseph Fenwick SJ (September 3, 1782 – August 11, 1846) was an American Catholic prelate, Jesuit, and educator who served as the Bishop of Boston from 1825 until his death in 1846. In 1843, he founded the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester, Massachusetts. Prior to that, he was twice the president of Georgetown College and established several educational institutions in New York City and Boston.

Born in Maryland, Fenwick entered the Society of Jesus and began his ministry in New York City in 1809 as the co-pastor of St. Peter's Church. He then became pastor of the original St. Patrick's Cathedral and later the vicar general and diocesan administrator of the Diocese of New York. In 1817, Fenwick became the president of Georgetown College, remaining just several months before he was tasked with resolving a longstanding schism at St. Mary's Church in Charleston, South Carolina. He remained in the city as vicar general for the Archdiocese of Baltimore until 1822, when he returned to Georgetown as acting president.

Fenwick became the Bishop of Boston in 1825, during a period of rapid growth of the city's Catholic population due to massive Irish immigration. At the same time, Catholics faced intense nativism and anti-Catholicism, culminating in the burning of the Ursuline Convent in 1834, threats against Fenwick's life, and the formation of the Montgomery Guards. Fenwick also addressed parochial conflict, ultimately placing a Boston church under interdict. He established churches, schools, charitable institutions, and newspapers throughout the diocese, which encompassed all of New England. Among these were The Pilot newspaper and the College of the Holy Cross.


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