Diocese of Wilmington Dioecesis Wilmingtoniensis | |
|---|---|
| Cathedral of St. Peter | |
| Coat of arms | |
| Location | |
| Country | |
| Territory | |
| Ecclesiastical province | Baltimore |
| Statistics | |
| Area | 5,375 km2 (2,075 sq mi) |
Population
|
|
| Parishes | 56 [2] |
| Information | |
| Denomination | Catholic |
| Sui iuris church | Latin Church |
| Rite | Roman Rite |
| Established | March 3, 1868 (157 years ago) |
| Cathedral | Cathedral of Saint Peter |
| Patron saint | St. Francis de Sales |
| Current leadership | |
| Pope | Leo XIV |
| Bishop | William Edward Koenig |
| Metropolitan Archbishop | William E. Lori |
| Bishops emeritus | William Francis Malooly |
| Map | |
| | |
| Website | |
| cdow.org | |
The Diocese of Wilmington (Latin : Dioecesis Wilmingtoniensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical diocese of the Catholic Church in the eastern United States, comprising the entire state of Delaware and the Eastern Shore Region of Maryland. William Koenig is the bishop.
Before and during the American Revolutionary War, the Catholics in all of the British colonies in America were under the jurisdiction of the Apostolic Vicariate of the London District in England. The first Catholic mission in Delaware was established by Jesuit missionaries near present-day Blackbird in 1747. [3] Unlike the other North American colonies, Delaware never imposed any restrictions or bans on Catholics. [4]
After the end of the American Revolution in 1783, Pope Pius VI erected the Prefecture Apostolic of the United States in 1784, encompassing the entire United States. Five years later, he converted the prefecture into the Diocese of Baltimore. [5] St. Mary of the Assumption was the first Catholic church in Delaware, built by White Clay Creek in 1788. [6]
Patrick Kenney established a mission in 1804 on the site of the Coffee Run Cemetery in Mill Creek. The Coffee Run Mission Site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. [7] [a] [8]
in 1808, Pope Pius VII erected the Diocese of Philadelphia out of the Archdiocese of Baltimore, placed all of Delaware into the new diocese. Delaware would remain part of the diocese of Philadelphia for the next 60 years. The first Catholic church in Wilmington was started in 1816. [6]
On March 3, 1868, Pope Pius IX erected the Diocese of Wilmington. The new diocese contained the following counties:
Pius IX designated the new diocese as a suffragan diocese of the Archdiocese of Baltimore. He appointed Thomas Becker of Baltimore as the first bishop of Wilmington. Becker oversaw a three-fold increase in the number of priests a doubling of churches. [9] He established an orphanage and academy for boys, an academy for girls, and two additional parochial schools. [9] [10] After 18 years in Wilmington, Becker was appointed in 1886 by Pope Leo XIII as bishop of the Diocese of Savannah.
To replace Becker, Leo XIII in 1886 appointed Alfred Curtis as the second bishop of Wilmington. During his tenure as bishop, Curtis introduced the Josephite Fathers into the diocese to minister to African-American Catholics, supervised construction of St. Joseph Church in Wilmington, an orphanage, a parochial school, and segregated facilities for the African-American congregation. [9] He also erected a cloistered convent for the Visitation Nuns. [11]
Twice a year, Curtis would visit the county almshouse to minister to the poor and bring them food. When he took office, Curtis discovered that all the church property in the diocese was under the personal name of the bishop. He spent the next few years legally transferring all the property to the diocese itself. [12] He also led efforts to clear the sizable debt held by the diocese and its parishes.
Curtis retired in 1896 due to poor health and Leo XIII appointed John Monaghan of the Diocese of Charleston as his replacement. When Monaghan became bishop, the diocese had 25,000 Catholics, 30 priests, 22 churches and 18 missions, 12 seminarians, eight religious communities, three academies, nine parochial schools, and three orphanages. [9] During his tenure, Monaghan established seven parishes, seven missions, and eight schools. [9] He also was instrumental in the establishment of the Oblate Fathers' Salesianum School for boys in Wilmington, St. Francis Hospital in Wilmington, and a home for the elderly. [9] Monaghan retired in 1925; his successor was Edmond Fitzmaurice from the Archdiocese of Philadelphia.
During his 35-year tenure, Fitzmaurice oversaw an increase in the Catholic population from 34,000 to 85,000. [9] To accommodate these numbers, he founded 17 new parishes, eight missions, and 19 elementary and nine secondary schools. [9] Fitzmaurice encouraged participation in Catholic Charities, and founded the Catholic Welfare Guild, Catholic Youth Organization, Society for the Propagation of the Faith, and Knights of Columbus chapter in the diocese. He also established the Catholic Interracial Council, the Catholic Forum of the Air, the Catholic Television Guild, the Diocesan Book Forum, the Catholic Education Guild, and the Young Christian Workers. [9]
In 1945, Fitzmaurice ordered the parents of Catholic students in public high schools in the diocese to prohibit their children from attending sex education courses, which he described as "offensive to the Catholic conscience." [13] Pope Pius XII in 1958 appointed Michael Hyle of Baltimore as coadjutor bishop in Wilmington to assist the bishop. Fitzmaurice donated his personal residence in 1959 to provide a location for the founding of St. Edmond's Academy in Wilmington, which was named in his honor.
When Fitzmaurice resigned in 1960 as bishop of Wilmington, Hyle automatically succeeded him. He dedicated much of his administration to the implementation of the Second Vatican Council reforms, encouraging the formation of parish councils and the ecumenical movement. [9] Hyle also established St. Mark's High School in Wilmington and the University of Delaware's Newman Centre (Thomas More Oratory) in Newark. [9] Hyle died in 1967 and Pope Paul VI appointed Auxiliary Bishop Thomas Mardaga from Baltimore as the next bishop of Wilmington. [9]
During his 16-year tenure, Mardaga continued the implementation of the Second Vatican Council reforms, establishing a council for the laity and participating in ecumenical work. [9] He also reorganized the diocesan curia and created a ministry for migrant workers.
In 1974, Paul VI transferred the two Virginia counties in the Diocese of Wilmington to the Diocese of Richmond, establishing the present territory of the diocese. Following Mardaga's death in 1984, Pope John Paul II in 1985 named Auxiliary Bishop Robert Mulvee from the Diocese of Manchester as Mardaga's replacement.
During his tenure as bishop of Wilmington, Mulvee emphasized collegiality in his administration of the diocese, helped restructure the Delmarva Ecumenical Agency into the Christian Council of Delaware and Maryland's Eastern Shore, and founded three new missions and raised a fourth to parish status. [9] Mulvee's tenure in Wilmington ended in 1995 when John Paul II named him as coadjutor bishop for the Diocese of Providence.
John Paul II named Auxiliary Bishop Michael Saltarelli of the Archdiocese of Newark as Mulvee's replacement in Wilmington in 1996. During his tenure, Saltarelli oversaw an increase of over 60,000 Catholics in the diocese, ordained 23 priests and 47 permanent deacons, and constructed or renovated numerous churches, schools, and other facilities. [14] After Saltarelli retired in 2007, Pope Benedict XVI named Auxiliary Bishop W. Francis Malooly of Baltimore to replace him. Malooly was criticized by some Catholic news outlets for refusing to withhold communion from then Vice President Joseph Biden due to his position on abortion rights for women. [15]
In 2009, the diocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in the face of financial liabilities from lawsuits regarding sexual abuse by priests. [16]
Malooly retired in 2021 and Pope Francis appointed William Koenig of the Diocese of Rockville Centre as the new bishop of Wilmington. As of 2023, Koenig is the current bishop of Wilmington.
Joseph Curry, a former altar boy at St. Dennis Church in Galena, sued the Diocese of Wilmington in August 2008. Curry claimed that he had been sexually abused over 100 times by Edward B. Carley. The abuse started in 1981, when Curry was 10 years old. The lawsuit claimed that the diocese knew that Carley had sexually abused parishioners at St. Ann's Church in Wilmington during the 1950s and early 1960s. [17] Carley died in 1998. Curry and the diocese settled the lawsuit in 2011 for $1.7 million. [18]
In 2011, a bankruptcy court approved a bankruptcy settlement plan for the diocese. Under the plan, 150 victims, including Mary Dougherty, were to receive an average payment of $310,000 each, totaling $77.425 million. The clergy accused of abuse were not identified. [19]