Denis O'Connor (bishop)

Summary

Denis Thomas O'Connor CSB (26 February 1841 – 30 June 1911) was a Canadian prelate of the Catholic Church. The first member of the Congregation of St. Basil to become a bishop, he served as Bishop of London (1890-1899) and later as the first Canadian-born Archbishop of Toronto (1899-1908).


Denis Thomas O'Connor

Archbishop of Toronto
ChurchCatholic
ArchdioceseToronto
Appointed7 January 1899
Retired4 May 1908
PredecessorJohn Walsh
SuccessorFergus McEvay
Other post(s)
Personal details
Born(1841-02-26)26 February 1841
Died30 June 1911(1911-06-30) (aged 70)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
BuriedBasilian plot, Mount Hope Cemetery, Toronto
Previous post(s)Bishop of London (1890-1899)
Ordination history
History
Priestly ordination
Ordained byJohn Joseph Lynch
Date8 December 1863
Episcopal consecration
Principal consecratorJohn Walsh
Co-consecrators
Date19 October 1890
PlaceLondon, Ontario
Episcopal succession
Bishops consecrated by Denis O'Connor as principal consecrator
Fergus Patrick McEvay1899

Early life and education edit

O'Connor was born on 26 February 1841[1] in Pickering, Ontario. He was the eldest of three children of Denis O'Connor and Mary O'Leary, who were Irish immigrants from County Cork.[2] His mother died in 1846 and his father remarried, having ten more children.[3] Five of his sisters would join religious orders.[3]

When the Congregation of St. Basil (also known as the Basilian Fathers) opened St. Michael's College at Toronto in 1852, O'Connor was enrolled as a member of the founding class.[4] After completing his classical and philosophical studies at St. Michael's, he entered the novitiate of the Basilian Fathers in 1859 and made his profession on 24 June 1860.[5] He then went to France to study theology at the Basilian colleges in Feyzin and Annonay.[2]

Failing health due to tuberculosis forced O'Connor to return to Toronto in 1863 and allowed him to be ordained to the priesthood before the canonical age of 25.[4]

Priesthood edit

At age 22, O'Connor was ordained a priest on 8 December 1863 by Bishop John Joseph Lynch at St. Mary's Church in Toronto.[5] He immediately went on sick leave and was nursed back to health by his stepmother.[4] In 1864 he returned to St. Michael's College, where he served as a professor and became acting administrator in 1868 during the absence of Charles Vincent.[2]

O'Connor helped the Basilian Fathers acquire Assumption College in Windsor, and he was subsequently appointed the college's superior in 1870.[2] During his 20 years at the helm of Assumption, he turned the college around from a state of disrepair by tripling the number of students, expanding the curriculum, and adding two wings to the building.[2] Pope Leo XIII conferred the title of Doctor of Divinity upon O'Connor in 1888.[4]

Episcopal career edit

Bishop of London edit

After Bishop John Walsh was promoted to the Archdiocese of Toronto, Pope Leo appointed O'Connor to succeed him as the third Bishop of London on 18 July 1890.[5] He received his episcopal consecration on the following 19 October from Archbishop Walsh, with Bishops John Samuel Foley and Thomas Joseph Dowling serving as co-consecrators, at St. Peter's Cathedral in London.[5]

O'Connor was the first Basilian priest to become a bishop,[6] although he unsuccessfully sought to decline the appointment.[7] He avoided significant expansion of the Diocese of London during his tenure, having inherited debt from the construction of St. Peter's Cathedral and overseeing a decline in the local Catholic population from 70,000 in 1890[8] to 60,000 in 1899.[9] One notable exception was the establishment of St. Joseph's Hospital in London.[2]

Archbishop of Toronto edit

Following the death of Archbishop Walsh, O'Connor was once again called to succeed him and was appointed the third Archbishop of Toronto on 7 January 1899.[5] He was the first Canadian-born Archbishop of Toronto and the first Canadian-born head of the diocese since Michael Power, who served as bishop from 1841 to 1847. He took formal charge of the archdiocese on 3 May 1899, when he was installed at St. Michael's Cathedral in Toronto.[6]

With his academic background, O'Connor made a strong push for the certification of separate school teachers and tried to guarantee an equal education for Catholic children.[6] However, gaining a reputation as a "rigid disciplinarian,"[10] O'Connor had a poor relationship with the clergy and laity of the archdiocese. He was strongly opposed to interfaith marriage and required his personal approval for any such marriage, even doubling the fees for the weddings.[2] He also prohibited women from serving in church choirs, applied a strict implementation of Pope Pius X's Tra le sollecitudini that discouraged more modern liturgical music, banned parishes from holding picnics, and refused to allow the Knights of Columbus to expand into the archdiocese on the grounds that there were already too many Catholic societies.[2]

Later life and death edit

O'Connor submitted his resignation as Archbishop of Toronto in April 1908, and it was accepted by the pope on 4 May 1908.[7] At the same time, he was given the honorary tile of Titular Archbishop of Laodicea in Syria.[5] He was succeeded by Fergus McEvay, who had also succeeded him as Bishop of London.

O’Connor spent his retirement at the Basilian novitiate in Toronto.[2] He died there from complications with Bright's disease and diabetes on 30 June 1911, at age 70.[10] He is buried in Mount Hope Catholic Cemetery.[6] Archbishop Denis O'Connor Catholic High School in Ajax is named for him.

References edit

  1. ^ "Canada, Ontario Roman Catholic Church Records, 1760-1923," database with images, FamilySearch (https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:33SQ-GYWS-3PK?cc=1927566&wc=M6VR-PTP : 22 April 2021), Northumberland > Cobourg > St Michael > Baptisms, marriages, burials 1837-1842 > image 30 of 46; Catholic Church parishes, Ontario.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i Power, Michael; McGowan, Mark (September 2022) [1998]. "O'Connor, Denis". Dictionary of Canadian Biography. University of Toronto/Université Laval.
  3. ^ a b McCauley, Pat (1998). "The O'Connors since 1832" (PDF). Pathmaster. 2 (1).
  4. ^ a b c d Platt, Philip Wallace (2005). Dictionary of Basilian Biography: Lives of Members of the Congregation of Priests of Saint Basil from Its Origins in 1822 to 2002. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802039491.
  5. ^ a b c d e f "Archbishop Denis T. O'Connor, C.S.B.". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. 9 October 2022.
  6. ^ a b c d "Most Reverend Denis O'Connor, C.S.B." Archdiocese of Toronto.
  7. ^ a b "Archbishop will retire from post". Windsor Star. 28 April 1908.
  8. ^ Sadliers' Catholic Directory, Almanac and Ordo. New York: D. J. Sadlier & Co. 1890.
  9. ^ Hoffmann's Catholic Directory, Almanac and Clergy List. Milwaukee: M. H. Wiltzlus & Co. 1899.
  10. ^ a b "Noted Prelate of Catholic Church Dead in Toronto". Windsor Star. 30 June 1911.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Denis O'Connor (bishop) at Wikimedia Commons
Religious titles
Preceded by Archbishop of Toronto
1899–1908
Succeeded by
Preceded by Bishop of London
1890–1899
Succeeded by