Roman Catholic Diocese of Davenport explained

Jurisdiction:Diocese
Davenport
Latin:Diœcesis Davenportensis
Coat:Coat of arms of the Diocese of Davenport.svg
Coat Size:150px
Country: United States
Territory:22 Counties in the Southeast quadrant of Iowa
Province:Dubuque
Coordinates:41.5468°N -90.5828°W
Area Sqmi:11,438
Population:784,000
Population As Of:2013
Catholics:104,300
Catholics Percent:13.3
Parishes:78
Denomination:Catholic
Sui Iuris Church:Latin Church
Rite:Roman Rite
Established:May 8, 1881 (years ago)
Cathedral:Sacred Heart Cathedral
Bishop:Dennis Gerard Walsh
Bishop Title:Elect
Metro Archbishop:Thomas Zinkula
Emeritus Bishops:Martin John Amos
William Edwin Franklin
Map:Diocese of Davenport.jpg

The Diocese of Davenport (Latin: Diœcesis Davenportensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical jurisdiction, or diocese, of the Catholic Church for the southeastern quarter of the state of Iowa in the United States.

Pope Francis has appointed Reverend Dennis Gerard Walsh, as Bishop of Davenport on June 25, 2024. The previous bishop, Thomas Zinkula, became Archbishop of Dubuque in 2023. The diocese is a suffragan see of the Archdiocese of Dubuque. The see city for the diocese is Davenport, where Sacred Heart Cathedral is located.

Territory

The Diocese of Davenport covers 11438sqmi.

History

1830 to 1881

From the time of the Louisiana Purchase in 1803 down to 1827, the present day Diocese of Davenport was included in the Diocese of New Orleans. The first Catholic missionaries arrived in the Iowa area during the early 1830s, under the jurisdiction of the Diocese of St. Louis. In 1837, the Vatican erected the Diocese of Dubuque, covering Iowa and adjoining territories.[1]

St. Anthony's Parish in Davenport was established around 1837 by Dominican missionary Samuel Mazzuchelli. Its church was built in 1838 on land donated by French-Potawatomi entrepreneur Antoine Le Claire. The building served as a church, city hall, courthouse, schoolhouse, public forum, and gathering place for the citizens of Davenport.[2]

In 1839, French missionary Jean-Antoine-Marie Pelamourgues was named the first resident pastor of St. Anthony's. His duties included attending the communities of Muscatine, Burlington, Iowa City, Columbus Junction, DeWitt, Lyons, and Stephenson, Illinois, across the Mississippi River from Davenport.[3] Pelamourgues studied to improve his English; when German immigrants began to arrive, he took up that language as well. He helped establish the parish of St. Kunigunda in Davenport, where services were held in Latin and German. When the German pastor at St. Kunigunda refused to serve the needs of Irish immigrants who settled in the west end, Pelamourgues built St. Mary's two blocks away.

Bishop John Hennessy, the third bishop of Dubuque, requested that the Vatican divide Iowa into two dioceses, with the new diocese covering the lower half of the state. Hennessy suggested locating the see of the new diocese in Des Moines, but the Vatican chose Davenport instead.[4]

1881 to 1900

On May 8, 1881, Pope Leo XIII erected the Diocese of Davenport.[5] He selected Monsignor John McMullen, vicar general of the Archdiocese of Chicago, to serve as the first bishop.

As bishop, McMullen chose St. Margaret's Church in Davenport as the new cathedral. Soon after arriving in Davenport, McMullen went to visit the parishes in his diocese. He traveled the diocese by stagecoach, buggy, lumber wagon, hand car and train. While on visitation, he administered confirmations and other sacraments in many locations.

McMullen called the diocese's first synod in 1882 to set its procedures and regulations. In September 1882, he founded St. Ambrose, a seminary and school of commerce in Davenport. By December 1882, McMullen had confirmed over 13,000 people.[6] After almost two years as bishop, McMullen died in 1883.

Reverend Henry Cosgrove, the diocesan administrator and cathedral rector, was appointed by Leo XIII as the second bishop of Davenport in 1884. Deciding that St. Margaret's was no longer adequate as a cathedral, Cosgrove constructed Sacred Heart Cathedral in 1891 to replace it. He established as Sacred Heart Asylum in Davenport 1895, operated by the Sisters Servants of the Sacred Heart. The Congregation of the Humility of Mary took over the asylum in 1896. Sacred Heart Asylum later became St. Vincent's Home for orphans[1] [7] [8]

1900 to 1930

Cosgrove supported the national Temperance Movement and called for a moral crusade in the diocese, especially in Davenport. In 1903, he was quoted in the national media as labeling Davenport "the wicked city of its size in America". This was due to the Bucktown District, an area of speakeasies and brothels close to the cathedral.

In 1904, at Cosgrove's request, Pope Pius X named Reverend James J. Davis, vicar general and cathedral rector, as coadjutor bishop of the diocese to assist with its administration.[9] Cosgrove presided over the diocese's second synod the same year. When Cosgrove died in 1906, Davis automatically became bishop of Davenport. At this time, the Vatican started planning for a new diocese in Des Moines. Rather than splitting the Diocese of Davenport into two small dioceses, Davis proposed that Vatican redraw all the diocese boundaries in Iowa. The Archdiocese of Dubuque had 109,000 Catholics and the Diocese of Sioux City had 50,000 Catholics. He opposed the Vatican leaving their boundaries alone while splitting the Diocese of Davenport. Under the existing plan, Davenport would have 35,000 Catholics and Des Moines 25,000 Catholics.

In 1911, Pius X rejected Davis' request and erected the new Diocese of Des Moines from the Diocese of Davenport. However, Pius X did sever Clinton County from the archdiocese and give it to the Diocese of Davenport. This change gave the diocese 50,000 Catholics out of a total population of 589,000.

After Davis died in 1926, Pope Pius XI named Reverend Henry Rohlman of the Archdiocese of Dubuque as the fourth bishop of Davenport. In 1928, Rohlman commissioned a study to assess the social problems in the diocese. The result of this study was the establishment of Catholic Charities in 1929. Its immediate focus was the welfare of the children at St. Vincent's Home in Davenport.

1930 to 1966

The diocese celebrated its Golden Jubilee in 1931. The next year, Rohlman convoked the diocese's third synod to bring the diocese's regulations in line with the 1917 Code of Canon Law. The synod also set the salary for pastors at $1,000 per year, plus household expenses, and salaries for associate pastors and chaplains at $500. Catholic Charities set up their offices in the Kahl Building. They were joined in 1932 with the chancery and the newly established superintendent of schools. All of these offices and the bishop's office moved into a property on Church Square behind St. Anthony's Church downtown. It was renamed the Cosgrove Building after Bishop Cosgrove. The Catholic Messenger, an independent Catholic newspaper published in Davenport, was experiencing financial problems during the Great Depression; the diocese purchased it in 1937 to use as the diocesan newspaper.

Pope Pius XII named Rohlman as coadjutor archbishop of Dubuque in 1944 and replaced him in Davenport with Bishop Ralph Hayes, rector of the Pontifical North American College in Rome. Catholic school enrollment reached their highest enrollments during Hayes’ episcopate. Elementary school enrollment reached its highest mark in 1960 with 12,074 students and high schools in 1965 with 4,129 students. The National Catholic Welfare Council held a four-day conference in Davenport in 1949, focuring on the themes of industry, education, and rural life. Hayes established the Papal Volunteers of Latin America in the diocese in February 1961 in response to a plea from Pope John XXIII. The diocese sent missionaries to Cuernavaca, Mexico and Ponce, Puerto Rico.

1966 to 1993

Hayes retired in 1966 after 22 years as bishop of Davenport. To replace him, Pope Paul VI named Auxiliary Bishop Gerald O'Keefe of the Archdiocese of St. Paul. O'Keefe established a sister's council for the members of women's religious orders in 1967 and a lay council in 1970. He created the first diocesan pastoral council and created a diocesan board of education. Procedures for due process were written in the late 1960s. In 1978, O'Keefe established the permanent diaconate in the diocese. The first class of deacons was ordained in 1980. A deacons council was also organized.

O’Keefe joined with Bishops Arthur O'Neil of Rockford and John Franz of Peoria to create an office that assisted migrant workers with job and education services. In 1972, the Social Action department established an Immigration Office. The diocese sent priests to Mexico to learn Spanish and to immerse in its culture. Three Spanish-speaking deacons were ordained in 1981.

The economic recession of the 1980s impacted the diocesan population and resources. In 1991, O'Keefe announced a plan for clustering and closing smaller parishes, reflecting both the reduced number of priests and the lower diocese population. The diocese also witnessed a decline in enrollment in Catholic schools, leading to the merger or closing of schools. In 1970, there were ten hospitals in the diocese; by the time O'Keefe retired in 1993, they were reduced to three.

1993 to 2010

To replace O'Keefe, Pope John Paul II named Auxiliary Bishop William Franklin of Dubuque as the next bishop of Davenport in 1993. Franklin revised the diocesan staff, creating an Office of Pastoral Services that combined the ministries of liturgy, education, and social action. He replaced the pastoral council with a pastoral council convocation.

In 2000, the diocese celebrated the Jubilee Year proclaimed by John Paul II. There were no diocesan celebrations. Instead, they were planned and celebrated in the diocese's six deaneries. In 2001, the pope bestowed papal honors on 26 people of the diocese. Four priests were named by the Vatican as chaplains to his holiness, eight laymen were honored as knights of St. Gregory the Great, three women received the honor of dames of the Order of St. Gregory the Great, and 11 men and women received the cross oro ecclesia et pontifice. The three women bestowed with the Order of St. Gregory were the first such recipients in the history of the diocese.[10]

Marycrest International University in Davenport, which began as a woman's college in the 1930s, closed in 2002.[11] Mt. St. Clair College in Clinton, Iowa, expanded and became The Franciscan University in 2002 and then the Franciscan University of the Prairies two years later. In 2005, it was sold to Bridgepoint Education, Inc. and became Ashford University, ending its affiliation with the Catholic Church.[12] Franklin merged or closed several parishes due to changing demographics in the diocese. The Redemptorists, who had served the diocese for 89 years, left in 1997 due to their declining numbers.[13] The Sisters of St. Francis in Clinton built the Canticle, a new motherhouse in Clinton, in 1997.[14] Franklin retired in 2006.

In 2006, Pope Benedict XVI appointed Auxiliary Bishop Martin Amos of the Diocese of Cleveland as the eighth bishop of Davenport.[15] Two days before Amos assumed office, the diocese filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy protection. As a result of the bankruptcy, the diocese was forced to sell off property, including the bishop's residence, to pay for a financial settlement to sexual abuse victims.[16] Amos had previously requested a small fixer-upper house to live in, believing the bishop's residence too big for him.[17]

The diocese also sold the chancery building, the St. Vincent Center, and its surrounding property to St. Ambrose University in May 2009. At the same time, the diocese initiated a $22 million capital campaign to replenish diocesan finances and fund other projects.[18] In March 2010, the diocese repurchased St. Vincent Center and of land from St. Ambrose.[19]

2010 to present

In July 2010, the diocese re-established Catholic Charities. The organization was initially introduced into the diocese in 1929 by Rohlman, but it had been discontinued in 1968.[20] Amos retired in 2017.

Monsignor Thomas Zinkula from Dubuque was appointed bishop of Davenport by Pope Francis in 2017.[21] Zinkula reduced the number of deaneries in the diocese from six to five in 2023.[22] In July 2023, Zinkula was named archbishop of Dubuque. Fr. Dennis G. Walsh was named Bishop of Davenport by Pope Francis on June 25, 2024.[23]

Sex abuse cases

In 1992, Bishop O’Keefe was sued by two women. The plaintiffs claimed that O'Keefe had sexually abused them as young girls when he was rector of St. Paul Cathedral in St. Paul, Minnesota, in the early 1960s. Both women credited recovering repressed memories for their accusations. O'Keefe denied the charges. However, the plaintiffs dropped their lawsuits in 1993 after an investigation revealed that the two women had fabricated the accusations against O'Keefe while together in therapy.[24]

In 2002, Bishop Franklin received allegations of sexual abuse of minors in the 1970s by Reverend William Wiebler. After Wiebler confessed his crimes to Franklin, the bishop ordered him to enter the Vianney Renewal Center, a treatment facility for priests in Dittmer, Missouri. However, Wiebler checked himself out of the facility and never returned to the diocese. The Vatican laicized Wiebler in 2006.[25]

In 2004, the diocese settled the claims of 37 sexual abuse victims for $9 million; Wiebler was named as an abuser in 12 of these lawsuits. [26]

The diocese in October 2006 filed for Chapter 11 protection.[27] By November 2007, the bankruptcy court had allocated $37 million in legal settlements to 156 victims.[28] [29] That same month, Bishop Amos announced that the board of trustees of St. Ambrose University had decided to remove O'Keefe's name from the school library. O'Keefe had covered up sexual abuse crimes by priests in the diocese.[30]

In 2014, documents revealed that Reverend James Janssen, who sexually abused boys and was laicized in 2004, stated in court during lawsuits that "I'm very sick."[31] Janssen died in 2015.

In June 2019, Bishop Zinkula indicated that the diocese would comply with a request from the Iowa Attorney General for sexual abuses records on clerics in the diocese.

In March 2020, the diocese announced that Reverend Robert Grant, a theology professor at St. Ambrose University, had been suspended from teaching and practicing ministry after a sex abuse allegation surfaced.[32] [33] He allegedly committed the sexual abuse while serving in the Diocese of Des Moines in the early 1990s. In November 2020, the diocese announced that Grant was returning to ministry with restrictions. The diocese determined that misconduct had occurred, but that it did not merit a suspension of ministry.[34]

Higher education

Current institutions

St. Ambrose University

Saint Ambrose in Davenport was founded in 1882 by Bishop McMullen. Located in the school building of St. Margaret's Cathedral, it was then a seminary and commerce school for young men. St. Ambrose moved to its current location in 1885 and became St. Ambrose College in 1908. In 1987, St. Ambrose College became St. Ambrose University.[35]

Campus ministry, University of Iowa

Since 1947, the diocese has supported the Newman Catholic Student Center at the University of Iowa in Iowa City.

Defunct institutions

Visitation Academy/Ottumwa Heights College

The Congregation of the Humility of Mary founded Visitation Academy in 1864 at their mother house in Ottumwa. The academy underwent several name changes until 1930, when it became Ottumwa Heights College. Ottumwa Heights merged with Indian Hills Community College (IHCC) in 1979 and closed in 1980. IHCC now occupies the Ottumwa Heights campus.[36]

Marycrest College/Marycrest International University

The Congregation of the Humility of Mary founded Marycrest College in Davenport in 1939 as the woman's division of St. Ambrose. It became a separate college in the 1950's and became coeducational in 1969. In 1990, Marycrest was renamed Teikyo Marycrest University and in 1996 as Marycrest International University. Marycrest closed in 2002.[37]

Mount St. Claire College/Franciscan University

The Sisters of St. Francis of Assisi established Mount St. Claire College for women in 1918 in Clinton. The college began offering online graduate courses in 2002 and changed its name to Franciscan University. In 2004, the school modified its name to Franciscan University of the Prairies. In 2005, the Sisters sold the school to Bridgepoint Education, Inc. which closed it in 2016.[38]

Coat of arms

The coat of arms for the Diocese of Davenport was designed after the arms used by members of the Davenport family in England. The family's arms are described as, "Argent (white or silver), a chevron sable (black) between three cross crosslets fitchée of the second."[39] The diocesan shield maintains the use of the silver color and the black cross crosslets fitchée. The black chevron is replaced with a black crenellated tower.

Bishops

Bishops of Davenport
FromUntilNameNotes
1881 1883 John McMullenAppointed bishop June 14, 1881; consecrated July 25, 1881; installed July 30, 1881; died in office July 4, 1883
1884 1906 Henry CosgroveAppointed bishop July 11, 1884; consecrated and installed September 14, 1884; died in office December 22, 1906
1906 1926 James J. DavisAppointed Titular Bishop of Milopotamus and Coadjutor Bishop October 7, 1904; consecrated November 30, 1904; succeeded December 22, 1906; died in office December 2, 1926
1927 1944 Henry RohlmanAppointed bishop May 20, 1927; consecrated July 25, 1927; installed July 26, 1927; appointed Titular Archbishop of Macra and Coadjutor Archbishop of Dubuque September 8, 1944
1944 1966 Ralph Leo HayesPreviously Bishop of Helena and rector of the Pontifical North American College; appointed Bishop of Davenport November 16, 1944; installed January 11, 1945; appointed Titular bishop of Naraggara and Bishop Emeritus October 20, 1966; died July 5, 1970
1966 1993 Gerald Francis O'KeefePreviously Auxiliary Bishop of St. Paul; appointed Bishop of Davenport October 20, 1966; installed January 4, 1967; resigned November 12, 1993; died April 12, 2000
19932006 William Edwin FranklinPreviously Auxiliary Bishop of Dubuque; appointed Bishop of Davenport November 12, 1993; installed January 20, 1994; resigned October 12, 2006
2006 2017Martin John AmosPreviously Auxiliary Bishop of Cleveland; appointed Bishop of Davenport October 12, 2006; installed November 20, 2006; resigned April 19, 2017
2017 2023Thomas Robert ZinkulaAppointed bishop April 19, 2017; ordained and installed June 22, 2017; appointed Archbishop of Dubuque July 26, 2023
2024(Bishop-elect)Dennis Gerard Walsh Appointed bishop June 25, 2024
Other priests of the diocese of Davenport who became bishops
FromUntilNameNotes
1881 1884 Henry CosgroveAppointed Bishop of Davenport July 11, 1884[40]
1881 1906 James J. DavisAppointed Titular Bishop of Milopotamus and Coadjutor Bishop of Davenport October 7, 1904
1911 1936William Lawrence AdrianAppointed Bishop of Nashville February 2, 1936
1939 1968 Maurice John DingmanAppointed Bishop of Des Moines April 2, 1968
1950 1983 Lawrence Donald SoensAppointed Bishop of Sioux City June 15, 1983
19942011 Robert Dwayne GrussAppointed Bishop of Rapid City May 26, 2011; Appointed Bishop of Saginaw May 24, 2019

Historic structures

The following structures are listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP). Some of the structures are no longer part of the diocese but have historical significance to the parish.

NameImageYearLocationStyleArchitectNotes
Ambrose Hall1885518 W. Locust Street, Davenport
41.5389°N -90.5808°W
Second EmpireVictor HuotAdministrative building at St. Ambrose University
Antoine LeClaire House1855630 E. 7th Street,
Davenport
41.5269°N -90.565°W
ItalianateFormer residence of Bishops McMullen and Cosgrove. Antoine LeClaire helped establish St. Anthony's and the cathedral parishes in Davenport.
Church of All Saints1879–1885301 S. 9th Street, Keokuk
40.3972°N -91.3903°W
Gothic RevivalWilliam John DillenburgChurch of All Saints since the three Keokuk parishes consolidated in 1982. Built as St. Peter's Church
Democrat Building1923411 Brady Street,
Davenport
41.5239°N -90.5739°W
Late 19th and Early 20th Century American MovementsRudolph J.ClausenThe Catholic Messenger newspaper headquarters, housing its newsroom and printing press. Now a loft residence building
F.H. Miller House18711527 Brady Street,
Davenport
41.5358°N -90.5739°W
ItalianateW.L. CarrollOwned by Saint Ambrose University. Former residence of Bishops Davis and Rohlman and the novitiate for the Sisters of St. Francis of Assisi of Clinton
Henry Kahl House19201101 W. 9th Street, Davenport
41.5281°N -90.5883°W
Mission Revival
Spanish Revival
Arthur EbelingPart of the former Kahl Home for the Aged and Infirm, operated by the Carmelite Sisters
Marycrest College Historic District1938W. 12th Street, Davenport
41.53°N -90.5978°W
Queen Anne, othersMultipleThe former Marycrest College campus. It includes the Petersen Mansion.
Old St. Mary's Rectory1854610 E. Jefferson Street, Iowa City
41.6633°N -91.5317°W
Greek RevivalOriginal wood frame rectory for St. Mary's parish in Iowa City. It was moved to E. Jefferson Street when the current rectory was built. A private residence today
Regina Coeli Monastery19161401 Central Avenue, Bettendorf
41.5308°N -90.5125°W
Mission Revival
Spanish Revival
Romanesque Revival
Late Gothic Revival
Arthur EbelingNow a drug and alcohol rehab facility. Former residence for Carmelite nuns from 1916 to 1975 and later for Franciscan brothers. It was then a hotel.
Sacred Heart Cathedral1891422 E. 10th Street,Davenport
41.5303°N -90.5689°W
Late 19th and 20th Century Revivals, Gothic Revival, Tudor GothicJames J. EganHistoric complex includes the cathedral church, the rectory and the former convent
St. Anthony's ChurchOriginal church: 1838
Present church: 1853
407 and 417 Main Street, Davenport
41.5239°N -90.5753°W
Greek RevivalMultipleFirst parish church in the diocese. Its original building is the oldest church building in use in Iowa. The historic complex includes both the original and current church.
St. Boniface Church19082500 N. Pershing Boulevard, Clinton
41.8742°N -90.1806°W
Gothic RevivalMartin Heer Houses the Catholic Historical Center at St. Boniface. Parish merged with the other four Clinton parishes in 1990 to form Jesus Christ, Prince of Peace Parish. The parish used the building until 2007.
St. Irenaeus Church18712811 N. 2nd Street, Clinton
41.8783°N -90.1775°W
Gothic RevivalW.W. Sanborn Vacant building. The parish merged with the other four Clinton parishes in 1990 to form Jesus Christ, Prince of Peace Parish. The parish used it until 2008.
Church of St. John the Baptist1885712 Division Street,
Burlington
40.8078°N -91.1086°W
Gothic RevivalWilliam John DillenburgParish church for Divine Mercy Parish after the Burlington-area parishes consolidated in 2017.
St. Joseph's Church18761 mile east of the junction of County Road G76 and SE. 97th Street, Marion County
41.2033°N -93.3081°W
Romanesque Revival, Late Gothic RevivalPart of an historic district that also includes the cemetery. The parish closed in the 1990s.
St. Joseph's Church1883601 N. Marquette Street, Davenport
41.5258°N -90.59°W
Gothic RevivalVictor HoutNow owned by an Evangelical Christian outreach ministry
St. Joseph's Church1886509 Avenue F, Fort Madison
40.6317°N -91.3067°W
Gothic RevivalNow a wedding chapel. The church, rectory, convent and school buildings are part of an historic district.
St. Joseph Hospital1925312 E. Alta Vista Avenue and 317 Vanness Avenue,
Ottumwa
41.0372°N -92.3991°W
Former hospital campus operated by the Sisters of Humility
St. Mary's Academy18881334 W. 8th Street,
Davenport
41.5278°N -90.5939°W
Romanesque RevivalFormer school building for St. Mary's parish. It became a residence for clergy teaching at St. Ambrose Academy and later Assumption High School. It was sold by the diocese.
St. Mary's Church1885516, 519, 522, and 525 Fillmore Street,
Davenport
41.525°N -90.5942°W
Romanesque Revival, Colonial RevivalVictor Hout, Clause & BurrowsIncluded in the historic complex with rectory, convent, and school buildings
St. Mary of the Assumption Church18711031 Avenue E,
Fort Madison
40.6333°N -91.3167°W
Gothic RevivalWalch & SchmidtPart of Holy Family Parish in Fort Madison
St. Mary's Church1867220 E. Jefferson Street, Iowa City
41.6628°N -91.5317°W
Romanesque RevivalComplex includes the church and rectory buildings
St. Mary's Church1920314 Grand Avenue,
Nichols
41.4781°N -91.3089°W
Gothic Revival
St. Mary's Church190741 St. Mary's Street, Riverside
41.4833°N -91.5817°W
Late Gothic Revival, Romanesque Revival, Colonial RevivalMultiplePart of an historic district that also includes the rectory, the original church building and the former school building
St. Michael's Church1867County Road F 52, Holbrook
41.59°N -91.9133°W
Late Gothic Revival, Romanesque Revival, Colonial RevivalMultiplePart of a historic district that includes the cemetery, rectory and Ancient Order of Hibernians Hall. The parish closed in the 1990s.
St. Patrick's Church1912U.S. Route 34 west of Albia, Georgetown
41.0133°N -92.9556°W
Gothic RevivalRev. Timothy Clifford
St. Paul's Church1895508 N. 4th Street
Burlington
40.812°N -91.1028°W
Gothic RevivalJames J. EganPart of Divine Mercy Parish since the Burlington-area parishes consolidated in 2017.
Saints Peter and Paul Church1898Southeast of Harper, Clear Creek
41.3053°N -92.0056°W
Gothic RevivalFerdinand S. BorgolteFormer parish church. The parish merged with St. Elizabeth in Harper and St. Mary's in Keota to form Holy Trinity Parish in 1992. In 2009, the building was sold.
Saints Peter and Paul Catholic Church19161165 NE. Taft Avenue, Solon
41.8492°N -91.4636°W
Late 19th and 20th Century RevivalsR. K. ParkinsonFormer parish church. The parish consolidated in 1996 with St. Mary's in Solon. Building was sold.[41]
St. Thomas More Parish Center1929108 McLean Street,
Iowa City
41.6694°N -91.5417°W
Tudor RevivalMyron Edwards PughBuilt as Sigma Pi fraternity house in 1929, the building served as the first Catholic Student Center and Newman Club at the University of Iowa. It went to St. Thomas More Parish in 1969. An apartment building since 2009.
Selma Schricker House19021430 Clay Street,
Davenport
41.5305°N -90.5949°W
Georgian RevivalClausen & ClausenResidence of Bishops Rohlman, Hayes, O'Keefe and Franklin.

High schools

SchoolLocation
Assumption High SchoolDavenport
Holy Trinity High SchoolFort Madison
Notre Dame High SchoolBurlington
Prince of Peace PreparatoryClinton
Regina High SchoolIowa City

Former high schools

AquinasFort MadisonMerged with Marquette Catholic to form Holy Trinity in 2005
Cardinal StritchKeokukAbsorbed by Holy Trinity in 2006
Central CatholicFort MadisonConsolidated with St. Joseph's to form Aquinas in 1958
Hayes Catholic (St. Mathias)MuscatineClosed in 1969
Marquette Catholic (St. Mary's)West PointMerged with Aquinas to form Holy Trinity in 2005
St. ElizabethHarperClosed in 1966
St. JamesSt. PaulMerged with St. Mary's and St. John's to create Marquette Catholic High School in 1966
St. John'sVictorClosed in 1962
St. Joseph'sDeWittAbsorbed by St. Mary's in 1968
St. Joseph'sFort MadisonConsolidated with Central Catholic to form Aquinas in 1958
St. Mary'sClintonSucceeded by Mater Dei (later Prince of Peace Preparatory) in 1980
St. Mary'sIowa CityConsolidated with St. Wenceslaus and St. Patrick's to form Regina in 1959
St. Mary'sRiversideClosed in 1960
St. Patrick'sIowa CityConsolidated with St. Wenceslaus and St. Mary's to form Regina in 1959
St. Peter'sCosgroveClosed in 1955
St. Peter'sKeokukMerged with St. Peter's to form Cardinal Stritch in 1958
St. Paul'sBurlingtonSucceeded by Notre Dame
St. Paul'sKeokukMerged with St. Peter's to form Cardinal Stritch in 1958
St. WenceslausIowa CityConsolidated with St. Patrick's and St. Mary's to form Regina in 1959
Walsh CatholicOttumwaClosed in 1969

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04640a.htm Shannahan, William. "Davenport." The Catholic Encyclopedia
  2. Web site: History of Davenport and Scott County, Chapter 35. Scott County Iowa USGenWeb Project.
  3. Kempker, J.F. "Very Rev. J. A. M. Pelamourgues, Missionary priest and educator. Distinguished in the annals of the Roman Catholic Church of early Iowa" The Annals of Iowa, A Historical Quarterly. Vol. 6, 3rd series, Charles Aldrich, editor. (Des Moines: Historical Department of Iowa, 1903) 117
  4. Book: Coogan, BVM, Mary Jane. Mary Kevin Gallagher, BVM. Seed/Harvest: A History of the Archdiocese of Dubuque. 1987. Archdiocese of Dubuque Press. Dubuque, Iowa. 41.
  5. Book: McGovern, James J.. The Life and Writings of Right Reverend John McMullen, DD First Bishop of Davenport, Iowa. 1888. Hoffman Brothers. Chicago. 227.
  6. Book: Schmidt, Madeleine M. . Seasons of Growth: History of the Diocese of Davenport . Diocese of Davenport . 1981 . Davenport, Iowa . 111.
  7. Book: Delaney, John J, Tobin, James Edward . Dictionary of Catholic Biography . Doubleday . 1961 . Garden City, New York.
  8. Web site: 1907 . Annals of Iowa: Henry Cosgrove . July 16, 2022 . Historical Division of the Department of Cultural Affairs of the State of Iowa.
  9. Web site: Bishop James J. Davis . 2010-05-28 . www.catholic-hierarchy.org.
  10. News: Barb Arland-Fye . November 21, 2001 . Davenport Diocese honors Outstanding Catholics today . . Davenport . 2010-07-22.
  11. News: Ann McGlynn, Lee Nelson . December 18, 2001 . Marycrest to close doors . Quad-City Times . Davenport . 2010-06-03.
  12. News: Ann McGlynn . May 30, 2005 . Bridgepoint Education buys Franciscan college . Quad-City Times . Davenport . 2010-06-03.
  13. Book: St. Alphonsus Parish Davenport, Iowa 100th Anniversary 1908–2008 . St. Alphonsus Parish . 2008 . Davenport, Iowa.
  14. Web site: History . 2010-06-03 . Clinton Franciscans.
  15. Book: The Official Catholic Directory . P.J. Kenedy & Sons . 2009 . New Providence, New Jersey . 362.
  16. News: Aaron Cox Baker . December 9, 2011 . Diocese to sell off properties . Quad-City Times. Davenport . April 15, 2010.
  17. Web site: Baker . Deirdre . Amos took on daunting challenge . 2021-11-27 . The Quad-City Times . 19 April 2017 . en.
  18. News: Ann McGlynn . March 12, 2010 . Proceeds from campaign split up across diocese . Quad-City Times . Davenport . April 15, 2010.
  19. News: Ann McGlynn . March 12, 2010 . Diocese reclaims HQ in $1.2M post-bankruptcy deal . Quad-City Times . Davenport . April 15, 2010.
  20. Web site: Barb Arland-Fye . Catholic Charities to start in diocese . June 9, 2010. July 11, 2010 . The Catholic Messenger . Davenport.
  21. News: Deirdre Cox Baker. Monsignor Zinkula named bishop of Diocese of Davenport. Quad-City Times. Davenport. April 19, 2017. 2017-04-19.
  22. News: Barb Arland-Fye . Reconfiguration aims to serve parishes, priests better. May 4, 2023. May 13, 2023. The Catholic Messenger . Davenport.
  23. Web site: Pope Francis Appoints Father Dennis Walsh as Bishop of Davenport USCCB . 2024-06-25 . www.usccb.org . en.
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  25. Web site: Retired Priest Accused of Abuse Is Defrocked, by Ken Leiser, St. Louis Post-Dispatch, May 13, 2006 . 2023-07-27 . www.bishop-accountability.org.
  26. Web site: 2006-10-04 . Abusive priest, from Iowa, dies in St. Louis-area hospice . 2022-01-19 . STLPR . en.
  27. Web site: Iowa Diocese Files For Bankruptcy . 2020-04-04 . www.cbsnews.com . 10 October 2006 . en-US.
  28. Web site: Baker . Deirdre . 10 years later: Davenport diocese recovering decade after bankruptcy . 2020-04-04 . The Quad-City Times . 9 March 2016 . en.
  29. News: Frosch . Dan . 2007-12-04 . Diocese in Iowa Settles With Abuse Victims for $37 Million . en-US . The New York Times . 2020-04-04 . 0362-4331.
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  31. Web site: Wellner . Brian . Defrocked priest James Janssen says, 'I'm very sick' . 2020-04-04 . Quad-City Times . 2 May 2014 . en.
  32. Web site: 2020-03-20 . Davenport priest suspended amid inquiry into sex misconduct claim . 2020-04-04 . KGAN . Associated Press.
  33. Web site: 2020-03-18 . Iowa Priest Suspended Amid Inquiry Into Sex Misconduct Claim . 2020-04-04 . whotv.com . en-US.
  34. Web site: Montgomery . David . November 24, 2020 . Rev. Robert "Bud" Grant Returned to Ministry . July 27, 2023 . Diocese of Davenport.
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  37. News: Ann McGlynn, Lee Nelson. Marycrest to close doors. Quad-City Times. Davenport. December 18, 2001. 2010-06-03.
  38. News: Ashford Clinton campus to close in 2016. Quad-City Times. Davenport. July 9, 2015. 2017-02-19. Thomas Geyer, Brian Wellner.
  39. Book: Davenport, Amzi Benedict. A History and Genealogy of the Davenport Family: In England and America, from A. D. 1086 to 1850 .... 1851. S. W. Benedict. en.
  40. Web site: Bishop. Diocese of Davenport. 2013-01-09. dead. https://archive.today/20130414140422/http://www.davenportdiocese.org/bishops/index.htm. 2013-04-14.
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