Roman Catholic Diocese of Erie

Diocese of Erie
Diocesis Eriensis

Coat of arms of the Diocese of Erie
Location
Country United States
Ecclesiastical province Archdiocese of Philadelphia
Statistics
Area 9,936 sq mi (25,730 km2)
Population
- Total
- Catholics
(as of 2000)
874,055
~225,000
Parishes 120
Information
Rite Roman Rite
Cathedral St. Peter Cathedral
Current leadership
Bishop Donald Walter Trautman
Map
Website
www.eriercd.org

The Roman Catholic Diocese of Erie (Latin: Dioecesis Eriensis) is a Roman Catholic diocese in western Pennsylvania. It was founded on July 29, 1853. It is one of seven suffragan sees in Pennsylvania that make up the Ecclesiastical Province of Philadelphia, which is headed by the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia.

Contents

Size of diocese

Erie is geographically the largest diocese in Pennsylvania, covering 9,936 square miles (25,734.12 km2). Erie diocese covers 13 counties in Northwestern Pennsylvania. About 220,000 Catholics (74,000 families) reside in the diocese. They educate 14,000 children and youth in their religious education programs.[1]

Vicariates and parishes

The diocese is divided into three vicariates:

The Eastern Vicariate consists of parishes in Cameron, Clearfield, Elk, Jefferson, McKean, and Potter counties. It has deaneries at Bradford, Clearfield, Dubois, and St. Mary's.
The Northern Vicariate consists of parishes in Erie, part of Forest, and Warren counties. It has Erie East and Erie West deaneries in Erie, Pennsylvania, plus a deanery in Warren
The Western Vicariate consists of parishes in Clarion, Crawford, part of Forest, Mercer, and Venango. It has deaneries in Meadville, Oil City, and Sharon.[2]

Historically significant parishes include:[3]

Oldest Existing Parishes by Church Dedication Dates:[4]

Other Historically-significant Parishes:

There are 120 parishes in the Erie diocese today, encompassing 151 churches.[1]

Administrative offices

The diocesan offices are located at St. Mark Catholic Center in Erie, Pennsylvania.[5]

Bishops

Below are the bishops of the diocese and their tours of service:

Religious orders

Charities

Erie Diocese has many charities throughout all of the parishes. There are 9 main charities within the diocese. Better Homes for Erie, Christ the King Manor, Foreign Missions, Harborcreek Youth Services, Donate to Mission of Friendship, Parish Care and Concern, Prince of Peace Center, Refugee Ministry, St. Martin Center [7]

Schooling

Elementary and Middle Schools

Having Catholic schools allows the best way to pass on the Catholic religion through generations. They teach their students the most important values of ever lasting peace and happiness. The focus on teaching the spiritual and secular dimensions of their lives. The schools allow their student to have a place of belonging in a global community. They focus on service within and outside of the school commutnity. The diocese has 33 elementary schools and 2 middle schools.[8]

High schools

Cemeteries

See also Erie Diocesan Cemeteries

References

  1. ^ a b "Facts about the Erie Diocese." Faith Magazine CSA 2010: 3.
  2. ^ "Map of the Diocese". Erie Roman Catholic Diocese. http://www.eriercd.org/map.asp. Retrieved 2007-05-09. 
  3. ^ Establishment dates for parishes will vary among sources: some use the arrival date of the first Catholic settlers; others use the date of the congregation's formation, the date of church building dedications, or the arrival date of the first resident priest.
  4. ^ St. Nicholas of Tolentino Church Sesquicentennial Jubilee Commemorative Book, 1978
  5. ^ "About the Diocese". Erie Roman Catholic Diocese. http://www.eriercd.org/gettoknowus.asp. Retrieved 2007-05-09. 
  6. ^ Named archbishop in 1953 [1]; Gannon University named for Bishop Gannon in 1944 [2]
  7. ^ "Giving". Erie Roman Catholic Diocese. http://www.eriercd.org/giving.asp. 
  8. ^ "Catholic Schools office". Erie Roman Catholic Diocese. http://www.eriercd.org/schools.asp. 

External links