Honorific-Prefix: | The Most Reverend |
John Francis Noll | |
Archbishop ad personam Bishop of Fort Wayne | |
Church: | Roman Catholicism |
See: | Diocese of Fort Wayne |
Appointed: | --> |
Term: | June 30 1925 to July 31 1956 |
Predecessor: | Herman Joseph Alerding |
Successor: | Leo Aloysius Pursley |
Ordination: | June 4 1898 |
Ordained By: | Joseph Rademacher |
Consecration: | June 30 1925 |
Consecrated By: | George Mundelein |
Birth Date: | 25 January 1875 |
Birth Place: | Fort Wayne, Indiana |
Tomb: | --> |
Partner: | --> |
Previous Post: | --> |
Education: | St. Lawrence Seminary |
John Francis Noll (January 25, 1875 - July 31, 1956) was an American prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as Bishop of Fort Wayne from 1925 until his death in 1956.
Noll was active in national church organizations. In 1912, he founded the weekly newspaper Our Sunday Visitor. Noll was called one of the most influential Catholics of his day.[1]
John Noll was born on January 25, 1875, in Fort Wayne, Indiana, one of nineteen children.[2] He attended St. Lawrence Seminary in Mt. Calvary, Wisconsin, from 1888 to 1893.
Noll was ordained a priest on June 4, 1898, for the Diocese of Fort Wayne by Bishop Joseph Rademacher. After his ordination, Noll was assigned to a pastoral position at St. Patrick Parish in Ligonier, Indiana. As a young priest, he frequently challenged anti-Catholicism in the area. He sometimes confronted people claiming to be former priests or nuns with tales of evil practices within the Church. Noll would ask them to prove their identify by asking the name of their religious order or by requesting the recitation of a specific prayer. Sometimes he would pose his questions in Latin. These tactics frequently exposed the speaker as a fraud.
In 1910, Noll was named pastor of St. Mary's Catholic Parish in Huntington, Indiana. Noll bought a printing press and in 1912 founded the weekly newspaper Our Sunday Visitor (OSV) It became widely distributed at many parishes as a supplement or in coordination with the local paper. For a time, it became a popular Catholic newsweekly nationwide. All OSV profits went to religious, educational and charitable causes.[3] He embraced the communication tools of his day — print, radio and television. Noll served on the boards of the Catholic Press Association and the Catholic Church Extension Society. He was named a monsignor in 1921.[4]
Noll was appointed fifth bishop of the Diocese of Fort Wayne by Pope Pius XI on May 12, 1925. Noll was consecrated on July 30, 1925, by Archbishop George Mundelein.
As a bishop, he built a preparatory seminary, several high schools, and an orphanage, and during the Great Depression reorganized the system of Catholic charities. He was active as an organizer the national level, and chaired the Department of Lay Organizations of the National Catholic Welfare Conference. Noll was instrumental in generating support for construction of the Basilica of the Immaculate Conception, in Washington, D.C.[5]
Pope Pius XII elevated Noll to archbishop ad personam on September 2, 1953, meaning that the title was personal to Noll and not passed on to his successors. Noll wrote Father Smith Instructs Jackson.[6]
Noll was strongly associated with conservative elements of the Church during his career as a journalist and churchman, linking arms with the more rabid end of the anti-communist movement in the United States and elsewhere. This included condemnation of many labor unions—much to the chagrin several fellow bishops—and collaboration with the infamous radio priest Charles Coughlin.[7] [8]
John Noll died on July 31, 1956, and is buried in the Victory Noll Cemetery in Huntington, Indiana. Sister Maria Stanisia painted a portrait of Noll and the Bishop Noll Institute is named in his honor.