Colin Francis MacKinnon
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Colin Francis MacKinnon (20 July 1810 – 26 September 1879) was a Canadian Roman Catholic Archbishop and founder of St. Francis Xavier University.
Born in William's Point, in the County of Antigonish, Nova Scotia, the son of John MacKinnon and Eunice MacLeod, MacKinnon's father came to the United States from Eigg, Scotland in 1791 and soon settled in Nova Scotia.
MacKinnon made his theological studies in Rome, where he was ordained priest by Archbishop Giacomo Filippo Fransoni on June 4, 1837. Returning to Nova Scotia, he was appointed the first resident pastor at St Andrews, Sydney County, Nova Scotia.
On November 9, 1851, he was appointed Bishop of Arichat by Pope Pius IX. On February 27, 1852 he was consecrated bishop by Bishop William Walsh, at St. Mary's Cathedral, Halifax and this was the first consecration of a Catholic bishop in Halifax. In 1853, he founded a seminary, St. Francis Xavier College, which grew into St. Francis Xavier University.
He resigned in 1877 and was then made an Archbishop. He died in 1879, aged 69.
[edit] References
- A.A. Johnston, A History of the Catholic Church in Eastern Nova Scotia, Vol. II, St. Francis Xavier University Press, Antigonish, N.S., 1971.
- Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
Religious titles | ||
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Preceded by William Fraser |
Bishop of Arichat 1851–1877 |
Succeeded by John Cameron |