American Catholic Church | |
Abbreviation: | ACC |
Leader Title: | Metropolitan Archbishop and Primate |
Leader Name: | Joseph Vilatte |
Leader Title1: | Vicar general |
Leader Name1: | Anton Kolaszewski |
Leader Title2: | Consultor |
Leader Name2: | Stephen Kaminski |
Headquarters: | Greenbay, Wisconsin |
Founder: | Anton Kolaszewski |
Founded Place: | Cleveland, Ohio |
Separated From: | Catholic Church |
Number Of Followers: | --> |
Publications: | Jutrzenka |
The American Catholic Church (1894 -) was an independent confederation of congregations, which individually separated from the Catholic Church. It was founded by Anton Francis Kołaszewski and Alfons Mieczysław Chrostowski in the United States.
The first convention of the American Catholic Church (ACC1894) appointed Joseph René Vilatte as its ecclesiastical head who was "without arbitrary powers".[1] Constantine Klukowski wrote, in History of St. Mary of the Angels Catholic Church, Green Bay, Wisconsin, 1898–1954, that the 1894 Green Bay city directory lists Vilatte's cathedral, which was built in 1894, "as 'American Catholic and its officials as: Vilatte, archbishop metropolitan and primate; Kolaszewski, vicar general; Stephen Kaminski, consultor; and, Brother Nicholas, church manager.[2]