John Janssen Explained

Type:Bishop
John Janssen
Bishop of Belleville
Church:Roman Catholic Church
See:Diocese of Belleville
Term:April 25, 1888 - July 2, 1913
Successor:Henry J. Althoff
Ordination:November 19, 1858
Consecration:April 25, 1888
Consecrated By:Patrick Feehan
Birth Date:3 March 1835
Birth Place:Keppeln, Rhine Province, Prussia
Death Place:Belleville, Illinois, USA
Honorific Prefix:The Most Reverend
Ordained By:Henry Damian Juncker

John Janssen (March 3, 1835  - July 2, 1913) was a German-born prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as the first bishop of the new Diocese of Belleville in Illinois from 1888 until his death in 1913.

Biography

Early life

Janssen was born on March 3, 1835, in Keppeln, Rheinish in Prussia (later part of Germany). He studied at the Royal Theological and Philosophical Academy in Munster, Prussia and the Collegium Augustinianum in Goch, Prussia[1] Janssen was recruited in Munster by French Bishop Henry Juncker in 1858 to serve as a priest in the United States.[2] [3]

Priesthood

After immigrating to the United States, Janssen was ordained to the priesthood by Bishop Juncker for the Diocese of Alton in Illinois on November 19, 1858.[4] After his ordination, he was appointed pastor of Saints Peter and Paul Parish, a German-speaking parish in Springfield, Illinois. Jannser also ministered to German immigrants in surrounding counties. In 1863, Janssen left his parish to became secretary to Bishop Juncker and chancellor of the diocese. He was appointed vicar general of the diocese in 1870, holding that position until 1886. He also served as pastor of St. Boniface Parish in Quincy, Illinois, from 1877 to 1879. Bishop Peter Joseph Baltes eventually appointed Janssen as vicar general. After Baltes' death in 1886, Janssen was named as apostolic administrator for the diocese.[5]

Bishop of Belleville

Following the division of the Diocese of Alton into the Dioceses of Alton and Belleville, Janssen was appointed bishop of Belleville on February 28, 1888. He received his episcopal consecration on April 25, 1888, from Archbishop Patrick Feehan, with Bishops John Hogan and Louis Fink serving as co-consecrators. By 1902 the diocese contained 104 churches, 94 priests, 64 parochial schools and 50,000 Catholics.

In 1903, at Janssen's request, the Poor Handmaids of Christ religious order set up a hospital in East St. Louis, Illinois. The hospital was open to all patients, regardless of race or religion.[6]

John Janssen died on July 2, 1913, in Belleview at age 78.

Notes and References

  1. News: The Nation Encyclopedia of American Biography, 1904. JANSSEN, John.
  2. Book: Bateman . Newton . Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois . Selby . Paul . Wilderman . Alonzo St Clair . Wilderman . Augusta A. . 1907 . Munsell Publishing Company . en.
  3. Book: Judge, Thomas E. . Lives of American Prelates ; Or, Illustrated Biographies of the Catholic Bishops of the United States . 1902 . Wm. J. McAssey . en.
  4. News: Catholic-Hierarchy.org. Bishop John Janssen.
  5. Book: Portrait and Biographical Record of St. Clair County, Illinois: Containing Biographical Sketches of Prominent and Representative Citizens Together with Biographies and Portraits of All the Presidents of the United States . 1892 . Chapman Bros. . en.
  6. Book: PHJC, Sr Virginia Kampwerth . With Loving Concern . 2016-10-13 . Xlibris Corporation . 978-1-5245-4179-8 . en.