Right Reverend Philip J. Garrigan, DD |
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Bishop of Sioux City | |
Church | Roman Catholic Church |
See | Sioux City |
In Office | March 21, 1902—October 14, 1919 |
Predecessor | None |
Successor | Edmond Heelan |
Orders | |
Ordination | June 11, 1870 |
Consecration | May 25, 1902 by Thomas Daniel Beaven |
Personal details | |
Born | September 8, 1840 Whitegate, County Clare, Ireland |
Died | October 14, 1919 Sioux City, Iowa |
(aged 79)
Philip Joseph Garrigan (8 September 1840—14 October 1919) was a Roman Catholic clergyman.
Garrigan was born in Whitegate, Ireland in 1840, he came to the United States with his parents, and received his elementary education in the public schools of Lowell, Massachusetts. He pursued his classical course at St. Charles's College, Ellicott City, Maryland, and courses of philosophy and theology at the Provincial Seminary of New York at Troy, where he was ordained on 11 June 1870. After a short term as curate of St. John's Church, Worcester, Massachusetts, he was appointed director of the Troy seminary for three years; and was for fourteen years afterwards pastor of St. Bernard's Church, Fitchburg, Massachusetts. In the fall of 1888 he was appointed first vice-rector of the Catholic University at Washington, D.C., which position he also held for fourteen years. He was named Bishop of Sioux City on 21 March 1902, and consecrated at the see of his home diocese, Springfield, Massachusetts, on 25 May of the same year, by the Right Rev. T.D. Beaven, and on 18 June following took possession of his see. He died at age 79.
This article incorporates text from the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia article "Sioux City" by Bishop Philip Garrigan himself, a publication now in the public domain.
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