Roman Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids





































Diocese of Grand Rapids
Dioecesis Grandcataractensis

Diocese coatofarms Color.jpg
Grand Rapids Diocese Coat of arms

Location
Country
 United States
Territory
Counties of Ottawa, Kent, Ionia, Muskegon, Newaygo, Oceana, Montcalm, Mecosta, Lake, Mason, and Osceola
Ecclesiastical province
Detroit
Statistics
Area
6,795 sq mi (17,600 km2)
Population
- Total
- Catholics

(as of 2006)
1,308,000
166,000 [1] (12.7%)
Parishes
82
Schools
29
Information
Denomination
Roman Catholic
Rite
Roman Rite
Established
May 19, 1882 (136 years ago)
Cathedral
Cathedral of Saint Andrew
Patron saint
St. Andrew
Secular priests
110
Current leadership
Pope
Francis
Bishop
David J. Walkowiak
Metropolitan Archbishop
Allen Henry Vigneron
Vicar General
William H. Duncan
Map

Diocese of Grand Rapids map 1.png
Website

www.dioceseofgrandrapids.org


Cathedral of St. Andrew


The Roman Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids (Latin: Dioecesis Grandcataractensis) is a diocese of the Roman Catholic Church in western Michigan, in the United States. It comprises 102 churches in 11 counties in West Michigan. It is a suffragan see to the Archdiocese of Detroit. The mother church of the diocese is the Cathedral of Saint Andrew. On April 18, 2013, Pope Francis accepted Bishop Walter A. Hurley's resignation and appointed the Rev. David J. Walkowiak to be the twelfth Bishop of Grand Rapids.




Contents





  • 1 History


  • 2 Bishops

    • 2.1 Bishops of Grand Rapids


    • 2.2 Coadjutor Bishops


    • 2.3 Auxiliary Bishops



  • 3 High schools


  • 4 See also


  • 5 References


  • 6 External links




History


The diocese was created from territory taken from the Diocese of Detroit on May 19, 1882 by Pope Leo XIII. In 1938, it lost territory when Pope Pius XII established the Diocese of Saginaw in 1970 when Pope Paul VI created both the Diocese of Gaylord to its north and the Diocese of Kalamazoo to its south.[1][2]


The diocese's St. Adalbert Church in Grand Rapids became one of the less than seventy minor basilicas in the United States when Pope John Paul II raised it to that rank in 1979.[3]



Bishops



Bishops of Grand Rapids



  1. Henry J. Richter (1883–1916)


  2. Michael J. Gallagher (1916–1918), appointed Bishop of Detoit


  3. Edward D. Kelly (1919–1926)


  4. Joseph G. Pinten (1926–1940)


  5. Joseph C. Plagens 1941–1943)


  6. Francis J. Haas (1943–1953)


  7. Allen J. Babcock (1954–1970)


  8. Joseph M. Breitenbeck (1969–1989)


  9. Robert J. Rose (1989–2003)


  10. Kevin M. Britt (2003–2004)


  11. Walter A. Hurley (2005–2013)


  12. David J. Walkowiak (2013–present)


Coadjutor Bishops



  1. Michael J. Gallagher (1915-1916)


  2. Kevin M. Britt (2002-2003)


Auxiliary Bishops



  1. Joseph Schrembs (1911), appointed Bishop of Toledo and later Bishop of Cleveland


  2. Charles Salatka (1962-1968), appointed Bishop of Marquette and later Archbishop of Oklahoma City


  3. Joseph Crescent McKinney (1968-2001)


High schools



  • Catholic Central High School, Grand Rapids


  • Muskegon Catholic Central High School, Muskegon


  • St. Patrick High School, Portland


  • West Catholic High School, Grand Rapids


  • Sacred Heart Academy Classical High School, Grand Rapids


See also


  • Catholic Church by country

  • Catholic Church hierarchy

  • List of the Catholic dioceses of the United States





References




  1. ^ ab "Diocese of Grand Rapids". Catholic-Hierarchy. Retrieved 2013-06-06. 


  2. ^ "Diocese of Grand Rapids". Giga Catholic. Retrieved 2013-06-06. 


  3. ^ "Basilica of St. Adalbert". GCatholic. Retrieved 2014-05-28. 




External links




  • Roman Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids Official Site

  • Catholic Hierarchy: Diocese of Grand Rapids

  • WOOD TV8: Hurley named Bishop of Grand Rapids



Coordinates: 42°57′28.8″N 85°40′02″W / 42.958000°N 85.66722°W / 42.958000; -85.66722





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