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BERNARD JOHN McQUAID
Bishop, educator; b. New York, N.Y., Dec. 15, 1823; d.
Rochester, N.Y., Jan. 18. 1909. His parents, Bernard and Mary (Maguire) McQuaid,
were Irish immigrants. Orphaned of both by 1832, Bernard was confided to St.
Patrick's Orphan Asylum in New York City, where Sister Elizabeth Boyle
encouraged his priestly vocation. He attended Chambly College, near Montreal,
Canada, and New York's diocesan seminary, then located at Fordham, New York
City. Bp. John Hughes ordained him on Jan. 16, 1848, in old St. Patrick's
Cathedral, New York. Designated pastor of St. Vincent's Church, Madison, N.J.,
McQuaid built two churches within 5 years and planned a third. In keeping with
Hughes policy, he also started two parochial schools, and taught for 6 months at
one, St. Vincent's, Madison, the first parochial school in New Jersey.
The Diocese of Newark was established in 1853, and
James R. Bayley, chancellor of the New York Diocese, was appointed its first
bishop. Bayley named McQuaid rector of St. Patrick's Cathedral in Newark where
he organized the St. Vincent de Paul Society and set up a Young Men's Catholic
Association with a large recreational center. During the Civil War he made a
brief visit to Fredericksburg, Va., to minister to the wounded and dying
soldiers. He founded Seton Hall College and Seminary (1856) and the Sisters of
Charity of St. Elizabeth, Madison, N.J. (1859). Bayley appointed him
vicar-general of the diocese and a theologian of the Second Plenary Council of
Baltimore in 1866.
Bishop of Rochester. McQuaid was named first bishop of
Rochester, N.Y., on March 3, 1868. He was consecrated in St. Patrick's
Cathedral, New York, on July 12, 1868 and installed at St. Patrick's, Rochester,
on July 17. He became deeply attached to his small diocese, declining subsequent
offers of the bishopric of Newark, N.J., and archbishopric of Cincinnati. Ohio.
He founded 69 parishes, enlarged orphanages, established the Home of Industry
for dependent girls, the Excelsior Farm for dependent boys, the Young Men’s
Catholic Institute (recreational), and St. Ann's Home for the Aged. He secured
admission of Catholic chaplains to the Western Home of Refuge, an institution
for juvenile delinquents in Rochester. Through his influence, a state law was
passed to provide paid chaplains at all state penal and welfare institutions. He
took an active part in the Fourth Provincial Council of New York (1883), the
Third Plenary Council of Baltimore (1884), and Vatican Council I (1869-70). At
the last he voted against the definition of papal infallibility as inopportune
and perhaps incapable of definition. After the definition he proclaimed his
complete adherence from his own cathedral pulpit on Aug. 28, 1870.
Because of his positive views and tenacity of purpose,
McQuaid became involved in several of the conflicts over policy that divided the
American hierarchy of his day. He and his metropolitan, Abp. Michael A.
Corrigan, of New York, held positions among the "conservatives"
comparable to those of Abp. John Ireland and Bp. John Keane among the
"liberals." Both parties dissented from the extreme nationalistic
ideas of some of the German-American clergy. But McQuaid, who had achieved
rapport with his German diocesans, preferred gradualism to the accelerated
Americanization of the "liberals." He favored strict episcopal
surveillance over secret societies, political or social, suspected of falling
under the ban of Church law. When the U.S. archbishops took a more lenient stand
regarding certain societies, McQuaid, blaming Abp. Ireland as their presumed
leader, began to speak of current trends toward "false liberalism."
This charge was to reverberate widely during the controversy over what was
so-called "Americanism."
Interest In Education. McQuaid's support of Catholic
education was his most significant contribution to the Church in the U.S. In his
diocese he founded about 40 parochial schools and 2 high schools. To staff most
of them he established the Rochester Sisters of St. Joseph. He instituted a
preparatory seminary, St. Andrew's (1870), and a theological seminary, St.
Bernard's (1893). He excluded from the Sacraments parents who sent their
daughters to non-Catholic colleges; but at the time of his death he was
projecting a Catholic college to be affiliated academically with Cornell
University, Ithaca, N.Y. From 1871 on he also wrote and lectured on
"Christian Free Schools."
McQuaid entered vigorously into controversies involving
education. The issue was prominent in his contests with two New York priests,
Louis A. Lambert and Edward McGlynn, and in his opposition to Abp. Ireland who
tended, so McQuaid thought, to concede to the state too much authority over
education. It formed the background of the New 'fork State Regency affair in
which Father Sylvester Malone became regent instead of McQuaid. At the time he
publicly denounced Abp. Ireland's ill-advised intervention in New York State
politics, and merited for himself a rebuke from Rome. Fortunately, McQuaid and
Abp. Ireland were reconciled in 1905, recalling that they had much in common. As
a progressive conservative, McQuaid was an important moderating influence in the
American Church of his generation.
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