Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York
The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York is a Latin Catholic archdiocese in New York State. 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. 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. The Archdiocese also operates the well-known St. Joseph's Seminary, commonly referred to as Dunwoodie. The Archdiocese of New York is the metropolitan see of the ecclesiastical province of New York which includes the suffragan dioceses of Albany, Brooklyn, Buffalo, Ogdensburg, Rochester, Rockville Centre and Syracuse.
The Latin name of the archdiocese is Archidioecesis Neo-Eboracensis, and the corporate name is Archdiocese of New York.
It publishes a bi-weekly newspaper, Catholic New York, the largest of its kind in the United States.
Prelature
The ordinary of the Archdiocese of New York is an archbishop whose cathedra is The Cathedral of St. Patrick in Manhattan, New York. The Archbishop of New York is also the metropolitan of the larger :Category:Roman Catholic Ecclesiastical Province of New York|Ecclesiastical Province of New York, which consists of the eight dioceses that comprise the State of New York with the exception of a small portion that belongs to the :Category:Roman Catholic Ecclesiastical Province of Hartford|Province of Hartford. As such, the metropolitan archbishop possesses certain limited authority over the suffragan sees of the province.R. Luke Concanen became the first Bishop of the Diocese of New York in 1808. The current Archbishop of New York is Timothy Michael Cardinal Dolan.
History
Initially, the territory that now makes up the Archdiocese of New York was part of the Prefecture Apostolic of United States of America which was established on November 26, 1784. On November 6, 1789, the Prefecture was elevated to a diocese and the present territory of the Archdiocese of New York fell under the jurisdiction of the Diocese of Baltimore, headed by the first American bishop, John Carroll.At the time, there was a dearth of priests to minister to the large territory. The first Roman Catholic Church in New York City was St. Peter's on Barclay Street. The land was purchased from Trinity Church with community donations and a gift of 1,000 pieces of silver from King Charles III of Spain. The church was built in the federal style. Among its regular worshippers were Saint Elizabeth Seton and Venerable Pierre Toussaint.
On April 8, 1808, the Holy See raised Baltimore to the status of an Archdiocese. At the same time, the dioceses of Philadelphia, Boston, Bardstown and New York were created as suffragan dioceses of Baltimore. At the time of its establishment, the Diocese of New York covered all of the State of New York, as well as the northeastern New Jersey counties of Sussex, Bergen, Morris, Essex, Somerset, Middlesex, and Monmouth.
Since the first appointed bishop could not set sail from Italy due to the Napoleonic blockade, a Jesuit priest, Anthony Kohlmann, was appointed administrator. He was instrumental in organizing the diocese and preparing for its original Cathedral of St. Patrick to be built on Mulberry Street. Among the difficulties faced by Catholics at the time was anti-Catholic bigotry in general and in the New York school system. A strong Nativist movement sought to keep Catholics out of the country and to prevent those already present from advancing.
On April 23, 1847, territory was taken from the diocese to form the dioceses of Albany and Buffalo. The New York diocese was elevated to an archdiocese on July 19, 1850. On July 29, 1853, territory was again taken from the diocese, this time to form the Diocese of Newark and the Diocese of Brooklyn.
The Bahamas were made a part of the Archdiocese of New York on July 25, 1885, establishing their first permanent Catholic presence, due to their proximity to New York's busy port. Churches and schools were constructed and administered until The Bahamas' eventual dissociation to form the Prefecture Apostolic of Bahama on March 21, 1929. By 1932, The Bahamas were no longer under the spiritual jurisdiction of New York.
Archdiocesan demographics
As of 2016, the Catholic population of the Archdiocese was 2,642,740. These Catholics were served by 696 archdiocesan priests and 590 priests of religious orders. Also laboring in the diocese were 319 permanent deacons, 962 religious brothers, and 2,260 nuns.For comparison, in 1929, the Catholic population of the Archdiocese was 1,273,291 persons. There were 1,314 clergy ministering in the archdiocese and 444 churches. There were also 170,348 children in Catholic educational and welfare institutions.
In 1959, there were 7,913 nuns and sisters ministering in the Archdiocese, representing 103 different religious orders.
Anniversaries of significance to the archdiocese
- January 4 – Memorial of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton, native of New York
- January 5 – Memorial of Saint John Neumann, ordained a priest of New York
- March 17 – Solemnity of Saint Patrick, Patronal Feast of both the Archdiocese and the Cathedral
- April 8 – Anniversary of the establishment of the Diocese of New York
- July 14 – Memorial of Saint Kateri Tekakwitha, born near Albany in territory which was once part of the Diocese of New York
- September 5 – Memorial of Saint Teresa of Calcutta, who did missionary work in the Bronx
- October 5 – Anniversary of Dedication of the current Cathedral of Saint Patrick
- November 13 – Memorial of Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini, missionary in New York
Leadership
Ordinaries
Bishops of New York
- R. Luke Concanen
- John Connolly
- John Dubois
- John Hughes, became Archbishop of New York
Archbishops of New York
- John Hughes, was Bishop of New York
- John McCloskey
- Michael Corrigan
- John Farley
- Patrick Hayes
- Francis Spellman
- Terence Cooke
- John O'Connor
- Edward Egan
- Timothy Dolan
Coadjutor archbishops of New York
- John Hughes, as coadjutor bishop
- John McCloskey, as coadjutor bishop; subsequently appointed Bishop of Albany; returned in 1864 as Archbishop
- Michael Corrigan
- James Francis McIntyre, subsequently appointed Archbishop of Los Angeles
- John Joseph Maguire, did not have right of succession
Auxiliary Bishops of New York
- John Farley, appointed Archbishop of this archdiocese
- Thomas Cusack, appointed Bishop of Albany
- Patrick Hayes, appointed Archbishop of this archdiocese
- John Joseph Dunn
- Stephen Joseph Donahue
- James Francis McIntyre, appointed coadjutor archbishop of this archdiocese, then Archbishop of Los Angeles
- Joseph Patrick Donahue
- Thomas John McDonnell, appointed Coadjutor Bishop of Wheeling
- Joseph Francis Flannelly
- James Henry Ambrose Griffiths
- Fulton J. Sheen, appointed Bishop of Rochester, then appointed Titular Archbishop
- Walter P. Kellenberg, appointed Bishop of Ogdensburg, then Bishop of Rockville Centre
- Edward Vincent Dargin
- Joseph Maria Pernicone
- John Michael Fearns
- John Joseph Maguire, appointed coadjutor archbishop of this archdiocese
- Edward Ernest Swanstrom
- James Edward McManus, previously Bishop of Ponce, Puerto Rico
- George Henry Guilfoyle, appointed Bishop of Camden
- Terence Cooke, appointed Archbishop of this archdiocese
- John William Comber
- Edwin Broderick, appointed Bishop of Albany
- Edward Dennis Head, appointed Bishop of Buffalo
- Patrick Vincent Ahern
- James Patrick Mahoney
- Anthony Francis Mestice
- Theodore Edgar McCarrick, appointed the first Bishop of Metuchen, then Archbishop of Newark, then Archbishop of Washington
- Austin Bernard Vaughan
- Francisco Garmendia
- Joseph Thomas O'Keefe, appointed Bishop of Syracuse
- Emerson John Moore
- Edward Egan, appointed Bishop of Bridgeport, then returned as Archbishop of this archdiocese
- William Jerome McCormack
- Patrick Sheridan
- Henry J. Mansell, appointed Bishop of Buffalo, then Archbishop of Hartford
- Edwin Frederick O'Brien, appointed Archbishop for the Military Services, USA, then Archbishop of Baltimore, then Grand Master of the Order of the Holy Sepulchre
- Robert Anthony Brucato
- James Francis McCarthy
- Timothy A. McDonnell, appointed Bishop of Springfield in Massachusetts
- Josu Iriondo
- Dominick John Lagonegro
- Dennis Joseph Sullivan, appointed Bishop of Camden
- Gerald Thomas Walsh
- Peter John Byrne
- John Joseph Jenik
- John Joseph O'Hara
- Edmund James Whalen
- Gerardo Joseph Colacicco
Other bishops who once were priests in the Diocese or Archdiocese of New York
- Benedict Joseph Fenwick, appointed Bishop of Boston
- William Quarter, appointed the first Bishop of Chicago
- Andrew Byrne, appointed the first Bishop of Little Rock
- Bernard O'Reilly, appointed Bishop of Hartford
- Saint John Neumann, appointed Bishop of Philadelphia
- James Roosevelt Bayley, appointed the first Bishop of Newark, then Archbishop of Baltimore
- John Loughlin, appointed the first Bishop of Brooklyn
- David William Bacon, appointed the first Bishop of Portland, Maine
- Francis Patrick McFarland, appointed Vicar Apostolic of Florida and Bishop of Hartford
- John J. Conroy, appointed Bishop of Albany
- William George McCloskey, appointed Bishop of Louisville
- Bernard John McQuaid, appointed the first Bishop of Rochester
- Francis McNeirny, appointed Coadjutor Bishop of Albany, then Bishop of Albany
- William Hickley Gross, appointed Bishop of Savannah, then Archbishop of Oregon City
- John Lancaster Spalding, appointed the first Bishop of Peoria
- Michael J. O'Farrell, appointed the first Bishop of Trenton
- Henry P. Northrop, appointed Vicar Apostolic of North Carolina and Bishop of Charleston
- Charles Edward McDonnell, appointed Bishop of Brooklyn
- Thomas O'Gorman, appointed Bishop of Sioux Falls
- Charles H. Colton, appointed Bishop of Buffalo
- Bonaventure Broderick, appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Havana
- John T. McNicholas, appointed Bishop of Duluth, then Archbishop of Cincinnati
- Francis Joseph Tief, appointed Bishop of Concordia, Kansas
- Daniel Joseph Curley, appointed Bishop of Syracuse
- John Joseph Mitty, appointed Bishop of Salt Lake City, then Coadjutor Archbishop of San Francisco, then Archbishop of San Francisco
- Joseph Francis Rummel, appointed Bishop of Omaha, then Archbishop of New Orleans
- James E. Kearney, appointed Bishop of Salt Lake City, then Bishop of Rochester
- Bryan Joseph McEntegart, appointed Bishop of Ogdensburg, later Bishop of Brooklyn
- William Scully, appointed Coadjutor Bishop of Albany, then Bishop of Albany
- Patrick Aloysius O'Boyle, appointed Archbishop of Washington
- Christopher Joseph Weldon, appointed Bishop of Springfield in Massachusetts
- Philip Joseph Furlong, appointed Auxiliary Bishop for the Military Services, USA
- Francis Frederick Reh, appointed Bishop of Charleston, then Rector of the Pontifical North American College, then Bishop of Saginaw
- Thomas Andrew Donnellan, appointed Bishop of Ogdensburg, then Archbishop of Atlanta
- Charles Borromeo McLaughlin, appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Raleigh, then the first Bishop of St. Petersburg
- Thomas C. Kelly, appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Washington, then Archbishop of Louisville
- Joseph Thomas Dimino, appointed Auxiliary Bishop for the Military Services, USA, then Archbishop for the Military Services, USA
- Roberto González Nieves, appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Boston, Bishop of Corpus Christi, then Archbishop of San Juan
- Rrok Kola Mirdita, appointed Archbishop of Tiranë-Durrës, Albania
- Emilio S. Allué, appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Boston
- Charles Daniel Balvo, appointed an Apostolic Nuncio and Titular Archbishop
- Charles John Brown, appointed an Apostolic Nuncio and Titular Archbishop
- William James Muhm, appointed Auxiliary Bishop for the Military Services, USA
Churches
Schools
Religious orders
Cemeteries
The following cemeteries are under the auspices of Calvary & Allied Cemeteries, Inc.:- Calvary Cemetery - Established in 1847; located in Queens. The cemetery, while located in the Diocese of Brooklyn, is property of the Archdiocese of New York as it was established before the Diocese of Brooklyn was canonically erected.
- Cemetery of the Ascension - Located in Airmont in Rockland County.
- Cemetery of the Resurrection - Located in Staten Island.
- Gate of Heaven Cemetery - Located in Valhalla in Westchester County.
- All Souls Cemetery - Belongs to Holy Innocents Church in Pleasantville.
- Assumption Cemetery - Belongs to Assumption Church in Peekskill.
- Calvary Cemetery - Belongs to St. Patrick Church in Newburgh.
- Calvary Cemetery - Belongs to St. Martin de Porres Church in Poughkeepsie.
- Holy Mount Cemetery - Belongs to Immaculate Conception Church in Tuckahoe.
- Holy Sepulchre Cemetery - Belongs to Blessed Sacrament Church in New Rochelle.
- Mount Calvary Cemetery - Belongs to St. John the Evangelist Church in White Plains.
- Sacred Heart Cemetery - Belongs to St. Christopher Church in Red Hook. The parish has a mission chapel in Barrytown.
- St. Anastasia Cemetery - Belongs to St. Anastasia Church in Harriman.
- St. Denis Cemetery - Belongs to St. Denis Church in Hopewell Junction.
- St. Francis of Assisi Cemetery - Belongs to St. Francis of Assisi Church in Mount Kisco.
- St. Joachim Cemetery - Belongs to St. Joachim-St. John the Evangelist Church in Beacon. The cemetery consists of an old section and a new section.
- St. John Cemetery - Belongs to St. John the Evangelist Church in Goshen.
- St. John Cemetery - Belongs to St. John the Evangelist Church in Pawling.
- St. Joseph Cemetery - Belongs to St. Joseph Church in Florida.
- St. Joseph Cemetery - Belongs to St. Joseph Church in Middletown.
- St. Joseph Cemetery - Belongs to St. Joseph Church in Millbrook.
- St. Joseph Cemetery - Belongs to St. Joseph Church in Wurtsboro.
- St. Joseph Cemetery - Belongs to St. Joseph Church in Yonkers.
- St. Lucy Cemetery - Belongs to St. Francis Xavier Church in Narrowsburg. There was formerly a mission church in Cochecton.
- St. Mary Cemetery - Belongs to Immaculate Conception Church in Bangall.
- St. Mary Cemetery - Belongs to St. Mary Church in Port Jervis.
- St. Mary Cemetery - Belongs to St. Mary Church in Wappingers Falls.
- St. Mary Cemetery - Belongs to St. Mary Church in Washingtonville.
- St. Mary Cemetery - Belongs to St. Mary Church in Yonkers.
- St. Patrick Cemetery - Belongs to Immaculate Conception Church in Amenia. The parish has a mission chapel in Millerton.
- St. Patrick Cemetery - Belongs to St. Patrick Church in Newburgh.
- St. Peter Cemetery - Belongs to St. Peter Church in Kingston.
- St. Peter Cemetery - Belongs to St. Peter Church in Hyde Park. The church was formerly located in Poughkeepsie.
- St. Raymond Cemetery - Belongs to St. Raymond Church in the Bronx. The cemetery consists of an old section and a new section.
- St. Stephen Cemetery - Belongs to St. Stephen-St. Edward Church in Warwick.
- St. Sylvia Cemetery - Belongs to St. Sylvia Church in Tivoli.
- St. Thomas Cemetery - Belongs to St. Thomas of Canterbury Church in Cornwall-on-Hudson.
Catholic charitable organizations
Saints, blesseds, venerables, servants of God
- Elizabeth Ann Seton – founder of American branch of Sisters of Charity; first canonized saint from New York; first native-born U.S. citizen canonized a saint
- Frances Xavier Cabrini – founder of Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus; first U.S. citizen canonized a saint
- Isaac Jogues – Jesuit missionary, active in northern New York State before establishment of Diocese of New York
- John Nepomucene Neumann – New York diocesan priest, later a Redemptorist; fourth Bishop of Philadelphia; first U.S. bishop canonized; founder of first Catholic diocesan school system in the U.S.
- Kateri Tekakwitha – first Native American canonized a saint
- Fulton Sheen – archbishop; prominent radio and television preacher
- Pierre Toussaint – Haitian slave; New York businessman and philanthropist
- Isaac Hecker, Servant of God – Redemptorist priest; founder of Paulist Fathers
- Vincent Capodanno – Maryknoll missionary; U.S. Navy chaplain; Vietnam War hero; Medal of Honor recipient
- Dorothy Day – social activist and radical; co-founder of Catholic Worker movement and newspaper
- Terence Cooke – archbishop and cardinal; founder of many charitable programs
- Rose Hawthorne Lathrop – founder of Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne, as Mother Mary Alphonsa
Major shrines
- St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Shrine, at 701 Fort Washington Avenue in Hudson Heights, Manhattan, with a facade on Cabrini Boulevard, next to the former Mother Cabrini High School.
- Shrine of St. Elizabeth Ann Bayley Seton, in the Church of Our Lady of the Rosary, at 7 State Street in the Financial District, Manhattan.
- National Shrine of Our Lady of Mount Carmel, at 70 Carmelite Drive in Middletown, Orange County, New York.
- Salesian National Shrine of Mary Help of Christians, 174 Filors Lane, Stony Point, New York.
Reports of sex abuse
On April 26, 2019, the Archdiocese released a list of 120 Catholic clergy accused of committing acts of sexual abuse. Some of those on the list, which includes both male and female church workers, have been convicted and many are deceased. The list was accompanied by a letter of apology from Cardinal Timothy Dolan, who asked for forgiveness.
On August 14, 2019, James Grien, who has accused McCarrick of sexually abusing him when McCarrick was an Auxiliary Bishop of New York, filed a lawsuit against the Archdiocese of New York for shielding McCarrick from a potential criminal investigation. In his lawsuit, Grien also stated that McCarrick's status as a friend of his family allowed the former New York Auxiliary Bishop to continue to visit and sexually abuse him after being transferred to New Jersey's Diocese of Metuchen and Archdiocese of Newark.
On September 30, 2019, Dolan released a report written by Barbara S. Jones, a former judge and prosecutor. Her report stated, among other things, that the Archdiocese had completed the process of removing all of its remaining accused clergy from active ministry. In the same report, Jones recommended that the Archdiocese should also hire a sex abuse "czar" to vet all complaints. Jones, who was commissioned by Dolan in 2018 to conduct the review of the church's handling of abuse allegations, also recommended hiring "a compliance officer for the Office of Priest Personnel to monitor its functions and oversee the new document management system". Dolan also backed the Jones Report and stated at a press conference that the Archdiocese was expanding its sex abuse policy as well.
On October 10, 2019, it was announced that Pope Francis had accepted the resignation of Bronx-based Auxiliary Bishop John Jenik following an accusation of sex abuse. Appointed Auxiliary Bishop by Pope Francis in 2014, Jenik also served as vicar for the Northwest Bronx, appointed by Dolan's predecessor Edward Egan in 2006. Jenik, who submitted his resignation letter upon turning 75 in March 2019, had stepped out of public ministry in October 2018 after the allegation surfaced.
On May 8, 2020, Cuomo extended the 2019 New York Child Victim Act's statewide statute of limitations deadline to file sex abuse lawsuits, which was originally set for August 14, 2020, to January 14, 2021.
On July 27, 2020, it was revealed that a Catholic priest who served the Archdiocese of New York in upstate New York's Orange Coutny was named in a new sex abuse lawsuit. In the lawsuit, eight men alleged that longtime Orange County priest Rev. George Boxelaar, who is now deceased, sexually abused them when they were children, adding their claims to those of at least three other accusers of the late Boxelaar who have sued. These three other accusers had filed lawsuits through the state Supreme Court in Orange County in late 2019, with one also naming the Archdiocese of New York and both Holy Cross and Our Lady of Mount Carmel churches as defendants. In addition to these new lawsuits, a Scarsdale Catholic school teacher identified as Edwin Gaylor also confessed to committing acts of sex abuse.