Daniel Mannix

The Most Reverend
Daniel Mannix
3rd Archbishop of Melbourne

Statue of Mannix outside St Patrick's Cathedral, Melbourne
Diocese Melbourne
Installed 6 May 1917[1]
Term ended 6 November 1963[1]
Predecessor Thomas Carr
Successor Justin Simonds
Other posts Bishop of the Armed Services (1917–1963)
Orders
Ordination 9 June 1890[1]
Consecration 6 October 1912[1]
Personal details
Born (1864-03-04)4 March 1864
Charleville, Cork, Ireland
Died 6 November 1963(1963-11-06) (aged 99)
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Buried St Patrick's Cathedral, Melbourne
Nationality Irish
Denomination Roman Catholic
Occupation Cleric
Alma mater St Patrick's College, Maynooth
Styles of
Daniel Mannix
Reference style The Most Reverend
Spoken style Your Grace
Religious style Archbishop

Daniel Patrick Mannix (4 March 1864 – 6 November 1963) was an Irish-born Australian Catholic bishop. Mannix was the Archbishop of Melbourne for 46 years and one of the most influential public figures in 20th-century Australia.

Early years and Maynooth

Born near Charleville in County Cork, Ireland, Mannix was the son of a tenant farmer, Timothy Mannix, and his wife Ellen, née Cagney. He was educated at Congregation of Christian Brothers schools and at St Patrick's College, Maynooth seminary, where he was ordained as a priest in 1890.

Mannix was president of St Patrick's College, Maynooth, the Irish national seminary, from 13 October 1903 to 10 August 1912 when he was succeeded by the Rt Reverend John F. Hogan. During his presidency he was widely criticised for welcoming King Edward VII on a visit to Maynooth (it was alleged that the reception room was hung with the king's racing colours). Contrasts were drawn between this welcome for the notoriously adulterous king and the Catholic bishops' role in supporting the deposition of Charles Stewart Parnell as Irish nationalist leader because of his affair with Katharine O'Shea.[2]

Mannix was also heavily involved in the controversy surrounding the dismissal of Father Michael O'Hickey as Professor of Irish after O'Hickey publicly attacked those members of the Senate of the National University of Ireland who opposed making Irish a compulsory subject for matriculation and insinuated that the senators (who included several bishops) had sinned grievously by so doing and resembled those MPs who were bribed to pass the Act of Union.

Coadjutor Archbishop of Melbourne

On 1 July 1912, Mannix was consecrated titular Bishop of Pharsalia and coadjutor bishop to Archbishop Carr of Melbourne at Maynooth College Chapel. Mannix was not consulted about his appointment.[2] Melbourne was one of the large centres of Irish emigration, where the Roman Catholic Church was almost entirely Irish. In Australia at this time, the Irish Catholics were commonly treated with disdain by the English and Scottish majority (who were mostly Anglicans and Presbyterians respectively) and also as potentially disloyal. Mannix was regarded with suspicion from the start and his militant advocacy on behalf of a separate Roman Catholic school system, in defiance of the general acceptance of a secular school system, made him immediately a figure of controversy.[3]

In 1914 Australia entered World War I on the side of the United Kingdom and when Mannix denounced the war as "just a sordid trade war", he was widely denounced as a traitor.[4] When the Australian Labor Party government of Billy Hughes tried to introduce conscription for the war, Mannix campaigned against it and it was defeated. He spoke out more frequently about the 1917 referendum, which was also defeated. This campaign included a speech before a huge crowd of perhaps 100,000 at the Richmond Racecourse, which was provided by John Wren.[2] The extent to which Mannix influenced the outcome of the vote has been debated widely. When the Labor Party split over conscription, Mannix supported the Catholic-dominated anti-conscription faction,[2] led by Frank Tudor (although Tudor was not a Catholic). Among the Catholic politicians whose careers he encouraged were James Scullin, Frank Brennan, Joseph Lyons and, later, Arthur Calwell. In 1917, when Carr died, Mannix became Archbishop of Melbourne.[2]

Archbishop of Melbourne

Mannix opposed the Easter Rising in 1916 and always condemned the use of force by Irish nationalists. He also counselled Australians of Irish Catholic extraction to stay out of Irish politics. He became, however, increasingly radicalised and in October 1920 led an Irish republican funeral cortège through the streets of London following the death of the hunger striker Terence MacSwiney, the Lord Mayor of Cork City in Mannix's native county. He was involved in the production of the film Ireland Will Be Free.

In 1920, Mannix travelled from Melbourne to San Francisco and then by train he journeyed to New York in order to take passage on the White Star Line ship the RMS Baltic to Ireland. A rally reported to be made up of 15,000 New York Irish was organised on 31 July at the White Star Line docks at Pier 60, Chelsea Piers on the West side of New York. This show of support was to send off Mannix, who had been so outspoken on the English rule in Ireland, and successfully led anti conscription campaigns during WW1. The rally ensured that David Lloyd George would allow Mannix passage to Ireland.[5] However shortly before the RMS Baltic was due to arrive in Cork Harbour, it was stopped and boarded by British military, who arrested Mannix and transferred him directly to England.[6][7]

RMS Baltic, until 1905 the largest ship in the world, from which Archbishop Mannix was arrested and removed to prevent him landing in Ireland

By the end of the war Mannix was the recognised leader of the Irish community in Australia, idolised by Catholics but detested by others, including those in power federally and in Victoria. He had spoken against the Treaty of Versailles, saying it would lead to a greater war than the one just ended. For many years he was ostracised and not invited to the official functions his position would have entitled him to attend. Mannix formed the Irish Relief Fund, which provided financial support for the families of those shot or imprisoned by the British. When he left Australia in 1920, to visit Rome and the United States, the British government refused him permission to visit Ireland or British cities with large Irish populations, which resulted in an extended stay in Penzance. There was also a serious, though unsuccessful, move to prevent him returning to Australia.[2]

Mannix supported trade unionism but opposed militancy and strikes. In the 1920s he became outspoken in opposition to the Industrial Workers of the World and the Communist Party of Australia. On all matters of personal and sexual morality, he was a traditionalist and an upholder of the authority of the Church.

In Melbourne, Mannix was the leader of the city's largest ethnic minority as well as a religious leader. From his palatial house, Raheen, in Kew, Melbourne, he would daily walk to and from St. Patrick's Cathedral, personally greeting any of his flock that he encountered. On official engagements he was chauffeured about in a large limousine. In 1920 he led an enormous St Patrick's Day parade with a guard of honour made up of Irish Australian winners of the Victoria Cross.

After the Irish Free State was created in 1922, Mannix became less politically controversial and animosity to him gradually faded for the most part. From the 1930s he came to see Communism as the main threat to the Church and he became increasingly identified with political conservatism. He was a strong supporter of Joseph Lyons, who left the Labor Party in 1931 and led the conservative United Australia Party in government from 1932 until 1939, although he continued to support Catholics in the Labor Party such as Arthur Calwell.

Mannix's best-known protégé in his later years was B. A. Santamaria, a young Italian-Australian lawyer, whom Mannix appointed head of the National Secretariat of Catholic Action in 1937. After 1941, Mannix authorised Santamaria to form the Catholic Social Studies Movement, known simply as The Movement, to organise in the unions and defeat the Communists. The Movement was so successful in its efforts that by 1949 it had taken control of the Victorian branch of the Labor Party.[2] Another associate was William Hackett, a Jesuit priest from Ireland, who had been involved in the Irish Republic's struggle for independence from Britain before being posted to Australia.

In 1951 the Liberal Party of Australia government of Robert Menzies held a referendum to give the government the constitutional power to ban the Communist Party.[8] Mannix surprised many of his supporters by opposing this, on the grounds that the bill was totalitarianism, which in his view was worse than communism: his may have been a decisive influence in the referendum's narrow defeat. This alliance with the Labor leader, H. V. Evatt, was short-lived.

The Labor Party split again in 1954 over attitudes to Communism and the Cold War. Santamaria's supporters were expelled and formed the Democratic Labor Party (DLP). Mannix covertly supported the DLP and allowed many priests and religious to work openly for it. This involvement in politics was opposed by the head of the Australian church, Norman Thomas Gilroy, Cardinal Archbishop of Sydney, who worked with the Premier of New South Wales, Joseph Cahill, to hold together the Labor Party in New South Wales,[9] and also by the Vatican which, in 1957, ruled that the Movement should not interfere in politics.[9] Rome appointed Archbishop Justin Simonds as coadjutor to Mannix – Simonds was widely seen as Rome's man in Melbourne.

In the late 1940s and 1950s, Mannix spoke against the White Australia policy, which was in effect at the time. He described the policy as "crude" and said that Australia had much to learn from other races. In his opposition to the policy, Mannix stated in 1949 that "there is no colour bar in Australia".[10]

In 1960 Calwell became Labor leader and sought Mannix's support to bring about a reconciliation between Labor and the DLP, essential if the Menzies government was to be defeated. Some figures in the DLP supported this idea, but Mannix supported Santamaria in his resistance to such suggestions. The negotiations fell through and Menzies was re-elected in 1961. Mannix and Calwell became permanently estranged.

By the 1960s the distinct identity of the Irish community in Melbourne was fading, and Irish Catholics were increasingly outnumbered by Italians, Maltese and other postwar immigrant Catholic communities. Mannix, who turned 90 in 1954, remained active and in full authority, but he was no longer a central figure in the city's politics. He died suddenly on 6 November 1963, aged 99, while the archdiocese was preparing to celebrate his 100th birthday. He was buried in the crypt of St Patrick's Cathedral, Melbourne.

Legacy

Mannix's legacy to the Roman Catholic Church in Australia is substantial. Over fifty years during his episcopacy, the number of archdiocesan parishioners increased from 150,000 to 600,000; churches from 160 to 300; students in Catholic primary schools from 21,792 to 73,695; secondary pupils from 3,126 to 28,395; priests increased by 237, brothers by 181, nuns by 736; 10 new male and 14 female orders were introduced; 10 seminaries and 7 new hospitals, 3 orphanages, homes for delinquents, the blind and deaf, hostels for girls, and a range of other church facilities.[2]

In recognition of his influence across both church and state, the Catholic Church commissioned a statue of Mannix (pictured above) which is located in the forecourt of St Patrick's Cathedral, Melbourne, facing Parliament House. The bronze and marble sculpture was unveiled by the Governor of Victoria, Sir James Gobbo, in March 1999.[3] The statue replaced an existing one of Daniel O'Connell.

A number of facilities are named in his honour, others were established by Mannix, as listed below:

Established by Mannix

Named in honour of Mannix

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Archbishop Daniel Mannix". The Hierarchy of the Catholic Church. 8 April 2012. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Griffin, James (1986). "Mannix, Daniel (1864–1963)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
  3. 1 2 Gobbo, Sir James (March 1999). Victoria's Governor pays tribute to Dr Mannix (Speech). Melbourne: AD2000. Archived from the original on 22 March 2012. Retrieved 24 April 2012.
  4. nla.gov.au
  5. Bayor, Ronald H; Meagher, Timothy J, eds. (1996). The New York Irish. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 264. ISBN 0801851998.
  6. http://waterfordireland.tripod.com/archbishop_daniel_mannix,_freeman.htm
  7. http://www.bureauofmilitaryhistory.ie/reels/bmh/BMH.WS1737.pdf#page=25%7CIrish Bureau of Military History, statement by Seamus Fitzgerald
  8. Brent, Peter (23 September 2011). "The day they tried to ban Communism". The Australian. Retrieved 3 October 2013.
  9. 1 2 Martin, Keith (26 April 1985). "How the priest and the politician eased Labor's pain". Sydney Morning Herald. p. 9. Retrieved 3 October 2013.
  10. Kulich, William (28 June 2010). "Daniel Mannix and the British Influence on Australia". One Cuckoo Short of a Nest. Retrieved 28 June 2010.
  11. "MANNIX". cccv.ent.sirsi.net. Retrieved 2016-02-09.

Further reading

•Mannix, Patrick. (2013) The Belligerent Prelate: An alliance between Archbishop Mannix and Éamon de Valera Newcastle-upon-Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing ISBN 9781443846189

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Daniel Mannix.
Preceded by
Thomas Carr
Third Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne
(1917–63)
Succeeded by
Justin Simonds
Preceded by
Thomas Carr
Second Bishop of the Armed Services
1917–1963
Succeeded by
Thomas McCabe
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