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Henry Damian Juncker

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French-born prelate
The Most Reverend
Henry Damian Juncker
Bishop of Alton
SeeDiocese of Alton
InstalledApril 26, 1857
Term endedOctober 2, 1868
Predecessornone
SuccessorPeter Joseph Baltes
Orders
OrdinationMarch 16, 1834
by John Baptist Purcell
ConsecrationApril 26, 1857
by John Baptist Purcell
Personal details
Born(1809-08-22)August 22, 1809
Fénétrange, Moselle, France
DiedOctober 2, 1868(1868-10-02) (aged 59)
Alton, Illinois, USA

Henry Damian Juncker (August 22, 1809 – October 2, 1868) was a French-born prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He was the first bishop of the Diocese of Alton in Illinois, serving from 1857 until his death in 1868.

Biography

Early life

Henry Juncker was born in Fénétrange, Moselle in France on August 22, 1809. While studying at the Pont-à-Mousson seminary in France, he decided to devote his life to the American missions, attaching himself to the Diocese of Cincinnati in Ohio. Juncker emigrated to the United States, completing his seminary studies in Cincinnati. Contemporary accounts described him as a zealous catechism teacher to his students.

Priesthood

Juncker was ordained a priest by Bishop John Baptist Purcell on March 16, 1834. After his ordination, Juncker was sent to Columbus, Ohio to oversee construction of St. Remigius Church.

Juncker then served as pastor of Holy Trinity, a German-language parish in Cincinnati. In 1836, he was appointed pastor of St. Mary's Parish in Canton, Ohio. In 1846, he was named pastor of Emanuel Parish in Dayton, Ohio. While pastor at Emanuel, he visited many neighboring communities and German settlements to minister to Catholics there.

Bishop of Alton

On January 9, 1857, Juncker was appointed the first bishop of the newly erected Diocese of Alton—now the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois—by Pope Pius IX. He received his consecration on April 26, 1857, from Purcell, with Archbishop John Henni and Bishop Joshua Young serving as co-consecrators. At the time of Juncker's arrival, the diocese contained 58 churches, 30 mission stations, 18 priests, and 50,000 Catholics. Realizing immediately that the new diocese needed more priests, he traveled to Europe in 1857 to recruit priests from France, Germany, Ireland and Italy for his diocese.

Juncker completed the first cathedral in the diocese in 1859, and founded two men's colleges, six girls' academies, a seminary, two hospitals, and one orphanage. By the time of his death, there were 125 churches, over 100 priests, and 80,000 Catholics. During one stay in Randolph County, a delegation from Red Bud, Illinois, asked Juncker to visit them. The townspeople said they had never seen a priest there. During his visit to Red Bud, Juncker heard confession from 1,000 Catholics and received a donation of land from a Protestant businessman for a new church.

When the American Civil War started in 1861, Juncker asked his parishioners to pray for peace. When the Union Army opened a medical camp for wounded soldiers in Cairo, Illinois, he sent priests and nuns there to provide support. Juncker attended the Second Plenary Council of American bishops in Baltimore, Maryland in 1866 and then went to Rome in 1867 to attend the Centenary of the Holy Apostles.

Death

In June 1868, Juncker became incapacitated by Illness. Henry Juncker died in Alton, Illinois, on October 2, 1868, at age 59. He was buried in a vault under his cathedral.

References

  1. ^ "Alton". Catholic Encyclopedia.
  2. ^ Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society. 1917.
  3. ^ "History of the Diocese of Springfield: Bishop Henry Damian Juncker (1857-1868)". Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield in Illinois.
  4. ^ Clarke, Richard Henry (1888). Lives of the Deceased Bishops of the Catholic Church in the United States. R. H. Clarke.
  5. ^ "Bishop Henry Damian Juncker". Catholic-Hierarchy.org.
  6. Hakel, Joseph A., "Holy Cross: Columbus' First Parish", Catholic Record Society, vol. IV, no. 3, March 1978
  7. ^ Clarke, Richard Henry (1888). "Right Rev. Henry Damian Juncker, D.D.". Lives of the Deceased Bishops of the Catholic Church in the United States.
  8. Zurbonsen, A., "The Catholic Bishops of the Diocese of Alton, Illinois", Journal of the Illinois State Historical Society (1908-1984) Vol. 10, No. 1 (Apr., 1917), pp. 127-137
Catholic Church titles
Preceded bynone Bishop of Alton
1857–1868
Succeeded byPeter Joseph Baltes
Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield in Illinois
Bishops
Bishops of Alton
Henry Damian Juncker
Peter Joseph Baltes
James Ryan
Bishops of Springfield in Illinois
James Aloysius Griffin
William Aloysius O'Connor
Joseph Alphonse McNicholas
Daniel L. Ryan
George Joseph Lucas
Thomas John Joseph Paprocki
Churches
Cathedral
Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception
Education
Higher education
Benedictine University at Springfield (closed)
Quincy University
High schools
Marquette Catholic High School, Alton
St. Teresa High School, Decatur
St. Anthony High School, Effingham
Routt Catholic High School, Jacksonville
Father McGivney Catholic High School, Glen Carbon
Notre Dame High School, Quincy
Sacred Heart-Griffin High School, Springfield
Ursuline Academy, Springfield (closed)
Priests
John Janssen
John Baptist Franz
Victor Hermann Balke
Kevin Vann
Carl A. Kemme
Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati
Ordinaries of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati
Bishop
Archbishops
Churches in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati
Cathedral
Cathedral Basilica of Saint Peter in Chains
Parishes
Cincinnati
Church of the Annunciation
Immaculata Church
Old St. Mary's Church
St. Aloysius on the Ohio
St. Francis De Sales Church
Saint Francis Seraph Church
St. Francis Xavier Church
St. Lawrence Church
St. Pius X Church
St. Rose Church
Dayton
Holy Cross Church
Sacred Heart Church
St. Adalbert Church
St. Mary's Church
Springfield
St. Joseph's Church
St. Raphael's Church
Other
Immaculate Conception Church, Botkins
St. Aloysius Church, Carthagena
Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Church, Cassella
Immaculate Conception Church, Celina
Precious Blood Church, Chickasaw
Our Lady of Victory Church, Delhi Township
St. Joseph's Church, Egypt
Holy Family Church, Frenchtown
St. John's Church, Fryburg
St. Patrick's Church, Glynwood
St. John the Baptist Church, Maria Stein
Sacred Heart Church, McCartyville
St. Michael's Church, Mechanicsburg
St. Augustine's Church, Minster
St. Louis Church, North Star
St. Nicholas Church, Osgood
St. Anthony's Church, Padua
St. Remy's Church, Russia
St. Henry's Church, St. Henry
Holy Rosary Church, St. Marys
St. Rose's Church, St. Rose
St. Sebastian's Church, Sebastian
St. Joseph's Church, Wapakoneta
Former parishes
All Saints Church, Cincinnati
Holy Trinity Church, Cincinnati
St. Augustine Church, Cincinnati
St. George's Church, Cincinnati
St. Michael the Archangel Church, Cincinnati
St. Paul Church, Cincinnati
St. Philomena's Church, Cincinnati
St. Patrick's Church, St. Patrick
Shrine
Shrine of the Holy Relics
Education in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati
Higher education
Chatfield College
University of Dayton
Edgecliff College
Mount St. Joseph University
Xavier University
Seminary
Athenaeum of Ohio – Mount St. Mary's Seminary of the West
High schools
Cincinnati
DePaul Cristo Rey High School
Elder High School
La Salle High School
Mercy McAuley High School
Archbishop McNicholas High School
Purcell Marian High School
Seton High School
St. Ursula Academy
St. Xavier High School
Summit Country Day School
Ursuline Academy
Dayton
Carroll High School
Chaminade Julienne High School
Other
Archbishop Alter High School, Kettering
Father Stephen T. Badin High School, Hamilton
Catholic Central School, Springfield
Bishop Fenwick High School, Franklin
Lehman Catholic High School, Sidney
Moeller High School, Kenwood
Mount Notre Dame High School, Reading
Royalmont Academy, Mason
Roger Bacon High School, St. Bernard
St. Rita School for the Deaf, Evendale
Clergy of the Archdiocese of Cincinnati
Auxiliary bishops
Priests
Miscellany
The Catholic Telegraph
Der Wahrheitsfreund
Former St. Charles Seminary
Gruenwald Convent
Minster Elementary School
St. John Cemetery, Cincinnati
New St. Joseph Cemetery, Cincinnati
Old St. Joseph's Cemetery, Cincinnati
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