Joseph Oliver Bowers

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Joseph Oliver Bowers
Bishop St. Johns -Basseterre (Emeritus)
Church Roman Catholic Church
See St. Johns-Basseterre
In office 1971 - 1981
Predecessor New Creation
Successor Donald Reece
Orders
Ordination January 22, 1939
Consecration January 8, 1953
by Francis Joseph Spellman
Personal details
Born (1910-03-28)March 28, 1910
Massacre, British Leeward Islands (present day - Dominica)
Died November 5, 2012(2012-11-05) (aged 102)
Agomanya, Eastern Region, Ghana
Previous post Bishop of Accra, Ghana
Bishop
Bishop Bowers in his early days.

Joseph Oliver Bowers, SVD (March 28, 1910 – November 5, 2012) was a prelate of the Roman Catholic Church from Dominica, who went to West Africa to serve in the then Gold Coast in 1939. At the time of his death, aged 102, he was the second-oldest Roman Catholic bishop and the oldest in the Caribbean.

Biography

Bowers was born in Massacre, Dominica, to sheriff Montague Bowers (originally from Antigua) and his wife Mary.[1] He traveled to the United States to attend St. Augustine Seminary, in Bay St. Louis, Mississippi. He was ordained on January 22, 1939 and continued as a priest in the Society of the Divine Word from 1939 to 1952. He was then appointed auxiliary bishop of Accra, Ghana, and Titular Bishop of Cyparissia. Bowers was appointed Bishop of Accra on 8 January 1953 and received his episcopal consecration on April 22, 1953 from Cardinal Spellman at the Church of Our Lady of the Gulf in Bay St. Louis, United States, becoming the first black bishop to be so ordained in the United States.[2]

In 1957 Bowers founded the congregation of the Sisters of the Handmaids of the Divine Redeemer (HDR) in Accra, which was dedicated to caring and comforting the poor. He was also the founder of St John’s Seminary and College known, as of 2012, as Pope John Senior High School and Minor Seminary.

In recognition and acknowledgement of his work in Ghana, when the diocese of St. John's-Basseterre in the West Indies was created in 1971 - comprising the islands of Antigua-Barbuda, St. Kitts and Nevis, Montserrat, Anguilla and the British Virgin Islands - Bowers was appointed its first bishop on January 16, 1971, becoming the chief pastor in Antigua.[3] On July 17, 1981, he retired from church office and, after some years spent in Charlestown, Nevis, returned to Dominica, where he lived in Mahaut in the care of his sister, Blossom Ann Reid.

In the 1990s the HDR Sisters, some of whom had periodically visited him in Dominica, invited him back to Ghana,where they cared for him in the town of Agomanya. At the celebrations there for his 100th birthday a guest was Nicholas Liverpool, president of Dominica.[4]

Bowers died at the age of 102 on November 5, 2012, in Agomanya in the Eastern Region of Ghana.[5] He was buried at the Holy Spirit Cathedral, Accra.[6]

References

External links

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