Bartholomew Woodlock Explained

Type:Archbishop
Honorific-Prefix:His Grace
Bartholomew Woodlock
Bishop Emeritus of Ardagh and Clonmacnoise
Titular Bishop of Trapezopolis
Appointed:4 April 1879
Term End:1890
Predecessor:George Michael Conroy
Successor:Joseph Hoare
Other Post:Rector of the Catholic University of Ireland
President of Catholic University School
Ordination:1831-priest, 1877–Monsignor, 1879-Bishop
Rank:Bishop
Birth Date:1819 3, df=y
Buried:St Mel's Cathedral, Longford
Nationality:Irish
Parents:William and Mary (Cleary) Woodlock
Alma Mater:Clongowes Wood College, Roman College, Appolinare Seminary
Module:
Nocat Wdimage:yes
Embed:yes
Region:Western philosophy
Era:19th-century philosophy
School Tradition:Aristotelianism[1]
Empiricism[2]
Personalism[3]
Main Interests:Faith and rationality
Religious epistemology
Historical theology
Christian apologetics
Philosophy of education
Classical education
Influences:Aristotle, Plato, Socrates, St Augustine, St Thomas Aquinas, Dante Alighieri, St Thomas More, Cicero, Clement of Alexandria, Tertullian, Origen, Athanasius, Basil of Caesarea, Hume, Edmund Burke, Locke, Butler, Richard Whately

Bartholomew Woodlock (30 March 1819 – 13 December 1902) was a Roman Catholic bishop, philosopher and educator. He established the Catholic University School, Dublin, and founded the Society of St Vincent de Paul in Ireland. He was the 2nd Rector of the Catholic University of Ireland, now University College Dublin, after Cardinal John Henry Newman.

Early life

He was born on 30 March 1819 in Dublin, to William Woodlock and Mary Cleary. His father was a lawyer and associate of Daniel O'Connell. His parents were from Roscrea, County Tipperary. His sister Johanna married Sir Dominic Corrigan, a noted physician.

Woodlock was educated at the Jesuit Day-School, in Dublin and Clongowes Wood College. Thereafter, supported by the Archbishop of Dublin and the Jesuits, he entered the Appolinare Seminary in Rome,[4] winning prizes in Theology and Philosophy during his studies, he was awarded the degree of Doctor of Divinity at the age of 22. He joined the staff of All Hallows College in Drumcondra in Dublin, in 1843, which had been just set up by Fr. John Hand, following meeting him in Rome. He served as professor of Dogmatic Theology until 1854, when he was appointed President of the college. He also served as vice-rector and vice president of the College, as well as a priest in the Dublin Diocese.

Woodlock's sister-in-law, the philanthropist Ellen Woodlock, helped establish what became Temple Street Children's University Hospital, she was also the only woman to contribute to the House of Commons select committee meetings on Irish Poor Relief.[5]

Diocesan Work

In 1844 he helped set up the first branch of the St Vincent De Paul in Ireland,[6] chairing the first meeting on 14 December 1844. He was appointed Spiritual Director of the organisation and was active in it up until his appointment as a bishop.[7] Along with the architect J.J. McCarthy and William Nugent he helped found the Irish Ecclesiological Society in 1849.

In 1861, Woodlock was appointed rector of the Catholic University of Ireland succeeding Cardinal John Henry Newman. He held the position until he was appointed a bishop.[8] In line with Newman's educational philosophy, Woodlock set up the Catholic University School in 1867 as a preparatory school for the Catholic University of Ireland.

Woodlock was appointed Monsignor in 1877 and consecrated Bishop of Ardagh in 1879 in the Sistine Chapel in Rome by Pope Leo XIII, serving in Longford until 1895 when he reached retirement age and was appointed Titular bishop of Trapezopolis.

Death

Woodlock died on 13 December 1902, and is buried at St Mel's Cathedral, Longford. His papers are held in Clonliffe College.[9]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Joshua P. Hochschild, "The Re-Imagined Aristotelianism of John Henry Newman", mmisi.org. Accessed 15 November 2022.
  2. John Henry Newman, Empiricist Philosophy, and the Certainty of Faith, University of Oxford, 1974.
  3. John Crosby, The Personalism of John Henry Newman, The Catholic University of America Press, 2014.
  4. Book: Canning, Bernard. Bishops of Ireland 1870-1987. . Donegal Democrat. 69–71. 1988 . 1870963008.
  5. Women and Philanthropy in Nineteenth-Century Ireland by Maria Luddy.
  6. https://archive.today/20120911012000/http://www.svp-ni.org/about_us.htm About us SVP
  7. Memoir of the Most Rev Dr Woodlock (Dublin, 1903)
  8. http://www.ucd.ie/president/universityhistory/timeline/ UCD Timeline
  9. http://www.dublindiocese.ie/content/archives Archives