Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence

Diocese of Providence
Dioecesis Providentiensis

Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul, the mother church of the diocese of Providence
Location
Country United States
Territory State of Rhode Island
Ecclesiastical province Archdiocese of Hartford
Metropolitan Providence, Rhode Island
Population
- Catholics

679,000
Information
Denomination Roman Catholic
Rite Roman Rite
Established February 17, 1872
Cathedral Cathedral of Saints Peter and Paul
Patron saint SS. Peter and Paul
Current leadership
Pope Benedict XVI
Bishop

Thomas J. Tobin

Bishop of Providence
Metropolitan Archbishop

Henry J. Mansell

Archbishop of Hartford
Website
dioceseofprovidence.org

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence (Latin: Dioecesis Providentiensis) is a diocese of the Roman Catholic Church in the United States. The diocese was erected by Pope Pius IX on February 17, 1872 and originally comprised the entire state of Rhode Island and the counties of Bristol, Barnstable, Dukes and Nantucket in the state of Massachusetts. On March 12, 1904, those four counties were separated from the Diocese of Providence to form the Diocese of Fall River, Massachusetts, leaving the Diocese of Providence with just the state of Rhode Island. The diocese is suffragan to the Archdiocese of Hartford and a part of the ecclesiastical province that includes that archdiocese and the suffragan dioceses of Bridgeport and Norwich. The Cathedral of SS. Peter and Paul in Providence is the mother church of the diocese of Providence. The Most Reverend Thomas Joseph Tobin, former Bishop of Youngstown, Ohio, is the eighth, and current, Bishop of Providence.

Contents

Bishops

  1. Thomas F. Hendricken (1872 - 1886)
  2. Matthew Harkins (1887 - 1921)
  3. William A. Hickey (1921 - 1933)
  4. Francis Patrick Keough (1934 - 1947)
  5. Russell Joseph McVinney (1948 - 1971)
  6. Louis Edward Gelineau (1972 - 1997)
  7. Robert Edward Mulvee (1997 - 2005)
  8. Thomas Joseph Tobin (2005 - present)

Auxiliary Bishops

  1. Thomas F. Doran (1915-1916)
  2. Dennis M. Lowney (1917-1918)
  3. Thomas F. Maloney (1960-1962)
  4. Bernard M. Kelly (1964-1971)
  5. Kenneth A. Angell (1974-1992)
  6. Robert Joseph McManus (1999-2004)
  7. Robert C. Evans (2009- present)

Education

High schools

List of churches

See also

External links