Leonard Neale, S.J. † | |
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Archbishop of Baltimore | |
See | Archdiocese of Baltimore |
In Office | December 3, 1815—June 18, 1817 |
Predecessor | John Carroll † |
Successor | Ambrose Maréchal † |
Orders | |
Ordination | June 5, 1773 |
Personal details | |
Born | October 15, 1746 Port Tobacco, Maryland |
Died | June 18, 1817 Baltimore, Maryland |
Styles of Leonard Neale |
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Reference style | The Most Reverend |
Spoken style | Your Excellency |
Religious style | Monsignor |
Posthumous style | none |
Leonard Neale, S.J. (October 15, 1746 – June 18, 1817) became, in 1800, the first Roman Catholic bishop ordained in the United States, and the second Archbishop of Baltimore. He devoted considerable time to the establishment of the Visitation Sisters, and also served as President of Georgetown College.
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Leonard Neale was born in Port Tobacco, Maryland on October 15, 1746 to William and Anne (Brooke) Neale. He was educated in the College of Saint-Omer, France, and later at Bruges and Liège, Belgium.[1]
He became a member of the Society of Jesus, and after his ordination on June 5, 1777 he taught in colleges and officiated as pastor in different places in Europe. Father Neale was teaching in the Jesuit college of Bruges when that institution was seized by the Austro-Belgian government, and along with the other Jesuits was expelled. He moved to England, where he had charge of a small congregation, but after several years he sailed in 1779 for Demerara, where he worked zealously among the natives and settlers. At length his health was almost ruined by the inclemency of the climate and the severity of his labors. He left Demerara in January, 1783, and after a dangerous voyage, in which he fell into the hands of British cruisers, he reached the United States in April 1783.
In June 1783 he attended a meeting of the clergy of Maryland at Whitemarsh and took an active part in its deliberations. He was stationed at St. Thomas Manor among his relatives until 1793. He then went to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and tended to victims of a yellow fever epidemic, even though his own health was in a delicate state. He was vigilant in his attentions to the sick and dying, and on the reappearance of yellow-fever in 1797 and 1798 he resumed his former exertions until he was stricken by the disease. While he was in Philadelphia he was appointed vicar-general for the northern states.
According to Jesuit[2] and slave[3] tradition Father Neale baptized George Washington on his deathbed, however, eyewitness accounts make no mention of such an event.[4]
In 1798, John Carroll asked Neale to succeed Louis William Valentine Dubourg as president of the school in Georgetown, Washington, D.C. He acted in the dual capacity of president and tutor for several years. During his tenure, the institution was developed from an academy into a college in 1801.
In 1799, Neale founded the Georgetown Visitation Preparatory School, under the direction of the Sisters of the Visitation. Both the school and the convent are still active more than 200 years later.
Carroll had some time previous to this applied to Rome to name Neale as his co-adjutor bishop. Neal was consecrated a bishop by Carroll in 1800, but remained as President of Georgetown College until 1806.
In 1809, his brother, Francis Neale, became president of Georgetown College.
Neale succeeded John Carroll as archbishop of Baltimore on December 3, 1815 and served until his death on June 18, 1817. As archbishop, he presided St. Mary's Catholic church's operations and decided upon his decision that appointed French priest Joseph Clorivière was to serve at St. Mary's Catholic. This wasn't welcomed by Irishman John O'Raw and this nominee refusal was met with the Charleston schism (1815–1819).[5]
His other brother, Charles Neale (died 1823), was the leader of the Jesuit Mission in America by the time he died.
Academic offices | ||
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Preceded by Most Rev. Louis Guillaume Valentin Dubourg, S.S. #3 |
President of Georgetown University 1798-1806 #4 |
Succeeded by Robert Molyneux, S.J. #5 |
Catholic Church titles | ||
Preceded by John Carroll |
Archbishop of Baltimore 1815 – 1817 |
Succeeded by Ambrose Maréchal |