William Walsh (archbishop of Halifax) explained

William Walsh
Archbishop of Halifax, Nova Scotia
Church:Roman Catholic
Archdiocese:Halifax
Term Start:1844
Term End:1858
Successor:Thomas-Louis Connolly
Ordination:1828
Birth Date:7 November 1804
Birth Place:Waterford, Republic of Ireland
Death Place:Halifax, Nova Scotia
Alma Mater:St. John's College, Waterford
Maynooth College

William Walsh (7 November 1804  - 11 August 1858) was an archbishop of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Halifax. He was born in Waterford, County Waterford, Republic of Ireland and died in Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Biography

Walsh studied at St. John's College, Waterford and Maynooth College and was ordained in Waterford. Following ordination he ministered in Dublin.

Walsh became bishop of Halifax in 1845 and in 1852, was appointed archbishop of an expanded ecclesiastical province of Nova Scotia, also designated as Halifax. He became the first archbishop in British North America outside Quebec.

On 15 September 1856, Walsh confirmed as Mi'kmaq Grand Chief Jacques-Pierre Peminuit Paul at St. Mary's Basilica (Halifax), Paul also receiving a medal from Pope Pius IX and a written endorsement from the Lt. Governor, Sir John Gaspard Le Marchant.[1]

References

Notes and References

  1. http://www.biographi.ca/en/bio/peminuit_paul_jacques_pierre_12E.html Canadian Biography On Line