Émile-Joseph Legal Explained

Émile-Joseph Legal
Archbishop Of:Archbishop of Edmonton, Alberta
See:Edmonton
Enthroned:June 3, 1902
Ended:March 10, 1920
Predecessor:Vital-Justin Grandin
Successor:Henry Joseph O'Leary
Ordination:June 29, 1874
Other Post:Coadjutor Bishop of Saint Albert, Alberta
Birth Date:9 October 1849
Birth Place:Saint-Jean-de-Boiseau, France
Death Place:Edmonton, Alberta

Émile-Joseph Legal (October 9, 1849 – March 10, 1920) was born in France and went to Lachine, Quebec, where he was ordained a Roman Catholic priest in the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate order in 1880.

Legal worked briefly in the United States where he studied to acquire a knowledge of English. He was sent as a missionary to the Canadian northwest in 1881. He arrived at St. Albert, North-West Territories (NWT), and was sent to carry out missionary work with the Northern Peigan Blackfoot people as well as pastoral duties in Fort Macleod, NWT, to take over from Father Constantine Scollen, who had established the first mission to the Blackfoot people of the southern North-West Territory in 1873, along with Father Leon Doucet, near Calgary, NWT.

He was made a bishop in 1897 and bishop of St. Albert in 1902 on the death of Bishop Vital-Justin Grandin. In 1905, the province of Alberta was created out of the NWT, and in 1912 the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Edmonton was created, with Legal made archbishop on the 30th of November.[1]

The town of Legal, Alberta, is named in his honour.

References

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Archbishop Emile-Joseph Legal [Catholic-Hierarchy]]. 2021-04-30. www.catholic-hierarchy.org.