James Trobec Explained

Honorific Prefix:His Excellency, The Most Reverend
James Trobec
Bishop of Saint Cloud
Church:Catholic Church
Diocese:Diocese of Saint Cloud
Appointed:July 5, 1897
Term End:April 15, 1914
Predecessor:Martin Marty
Successor:Joseph Francis Busch
Ordination:September 8, 1865
Ordained By:Thomas Grace
Consecration:September 21, 1897
Consecrated By:John Ireland
Birth Date:10 July 1838
Birth Place:Log pri Polhovem Gradcu, Slovenia
Death Place:Brockway, Minnesota, U.S.
Nationality:Slovenian

James Trobec (July 10, 1838 – December 14, 1921) was a Slovenian-born American prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as the third Bishop of Saint Cloud from 1897 to 1914.

Biography

Early life

Trobec was baptized Jakob Trobez[1] on July 10, 1838 in Log pri Polhovem Gradcu, then part of the Austrian Empire. His parents were listed as Matthæus Trobez, a farmer, and Helena Pezhovnik.[1] [2] Three of his nephews also became priests in Minnesota: John Trobec, Joseph Trobec, and John Seliškar.[3]

Trobec received his early education at the parochial school of Polhov Gradec and continued his studies at the Bežigrad Gymnasium in Ljubljana.[4] He began his studies for the priesthood in Ljubljana, but in 1864 he and fifteen other seminarians were recruited by Rev. Francis Xavier Pierz to serve as missionaries in the United States.[4] After his arrival in the spring of 1864, he finished his theological studies at Saint Vincent Seminary in Latrobe, Pennsylvania.[2]

Priesthood

Trobec then went to Minnesota and was ordained a priest on September 8, 1865 by Bishop Thomas Grace in Saint Paul.[5] After his ordination, he served as an assistant pastor in Belle Prairie, MInnesota. In October 1866, he was appointed pastor of Saint Felix Parish in Wabasha, Minnesota and the surrounding missions.[3] At Wabasha, he established a new parochial school that was staffed by the School Sisters of Notre Dame and completed construction on a new church in 1874.[6]

In October 1887, Trobec was assigned to organize and lead a new parish, the Church of St. Agnes, for German-speaking immigrants in Saint Paul.[7] This required building a new church, school, convent, and rectory. Trobec laid the cornerstone for the church in November 1887 and it was dedicated by Archbishop John Ireland in September 1888.[7] The parochial school also opened its doors in 1888, under the direction of the School Sisters of Notre Dame.[7] By 1897, the parish's continued growth required a larger church. Construction on a new building began in April 1897 but Trobec received a new appointment before he could see it completed.

Bishop of Saint Cloud

On July 5, 1897, Trobec was named by Pope Leo XIII to succeed the late Martin Marty as bishop of the Diocese of Saint Cloud.[5] He received his episcopal consecration on September 21, 1897, from Archbishop Ireland, with Archbishop Frederick Katzer and Bishop John Vertin serving as co-consecrators, in Saint Paul.[5]

Trobec led the diocese through a time of growth, with a particular focus on priestly vocations and Catholic education.[8] By 1911, the Catholic population grew by 25,000, the number of priests and parishes both increased by 35, and there were two more hospitals.[3]

Retirement and legacy

Due to ill health, Trobec submitted his resignation to the Vatican as bishop of Saint Cloud on April 15, 1914 and it was accepted by Pope Pius X the following June. He was then given the titular see of Lycopolis. Trobec spent his retirement living with his sisters at the rectory of the Church of St. Stephen Parish in St. Stephen, Minnesota, where his nephew was pastor.[9] James Trobec died there on December 14, 1921, at age 83.

The James Trobec Arts Center (Slovenian: Kulturni dom Jakoba Trobca) in Polhov Gradec, Slovenia is named for him.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Taufbuch . 1835–1844 . Polhov Gradec . 11 . October 31, 2022.
  2. Book: McGrath, Hugh J.. History of the Great Northwest and Its Men of Progress: A Select List of Biographical Sketches and Portraits of the Leaders in Business, Professional and Official Life. 1901. Minneapolis Journal. https://archive.org/details/historyofgreatno00hyde.
  3. Web site: Prominent Slovenes. Trunk. Rev. J.M.. Foundation for East European Family History Studies. Slovenian Genealogy Society International.
  4. Book: Acta et dicta. 1911. The St. Paul Catholic Historical Society.
  5. Web site: Bishop James Trobec. The Hierarchy of the Catholic Church.
  6. Web site: Bishop James Trobec. St. Felix Catholic Church.
  7. Web site: History. Church of St. Agnes (Saint Paul, Minnesota).
  8. Web site: Bishop James Trobec. Roman Catholic Diocese of Saint Cloud.
  9. Web site: Bishop Trobec. Church of St. Stephen (St. Stephen, Minnesota).