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Tobias Mullen

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Irish-born clergyman

His Excellency, The Most Reverend
Tobias Mullen
Bishop of Erie
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
SeeDiocese of Erie
In officeMarch 3, 1868 – August 10, 1899
PredecessorJoshua Maria Young
SuccessorJohn Edmund Fitzmaurice
Orders
OrdinationSeptember 1, 1844
by Michael O'Connor
ConsecrationAugust 2,1868
by Michael Domenec
Personal details
Born(1818-03-04)March 4, 1818
Urney, County Tyrone, Ireland
DiedApril 22, 1900(1900-04-22) (aged 82)
Erie, Pennsylvania, US
Alma materMaynooth College

Tobias Mullen (March 4, 1818 – April 22, 1900) was an Irish-born clergyman of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as bishop of the Diocese of Erie in Pennsylvania from 1868 to until his death in 1899.

Biography

Early life

Tobias Mullen was born on March 4, 1818, in Urney, County Tyrone, in Ireland the youngest of the six sons of James and Mary (née Travers) Mullen. He was educated at Castlefin school in Ulster and at Maynooth College in Maynooth, Ireland, where he studied theology and received minor orders. In 1843, Mullen accepted an invitation from Bishop Michael O'Connor to immigrate to the United States and join the Diocese of Pittsburgh.

Priesthood

After completing his theological studies, he was ordained to the priesthood for the Diocese of Pittsburgh by Bishop O'Connor on September 1, 1844. He served for about two years as curate at the Cathedral of Pittsburgh, and was afterwards charged with the care of congregations at Johnstown and in Jefferson County. He was transferred to the rectorship of St. Peter's Church at Allegheny in 1854, and served as vicar general of the Diocese of Pittsburgh from 1864 to 1868.

Bishop of Erie

On March 3, 1868, Mullen was appointed the third Bishop of Erie by Pope Pius IX. He received his episcopal consecration on the following August 2 from Bishop Michael Domenec, with Bishops James Frederick Wood and Louis Amadeus Rappe serving as co-consecrators.

During his 31-year-long administration many priests were ordained, parishes established, churches and schools built, and conferences for the clergy held. He also founded the weekly Lake Shore Visitor, an orphanage, and two hospitals. His greatest accomplishment was the erection of St. Peter's Cathedral. Originally dubbed as "Mullen's Folly", its cornerstone was laid in 1875 and it was later dedicated in 1893.Mullen suffered a paralytic stroke on May 20, 1897. He received John Fitzmaurice as his coadjutor bishop in 1898.

Tobias Mullen remained in ill health until his death at on April 22, 1900, at age 82.

References

  1. ^ Shea, John Gilmary (1886). The Hierarchy of the Catholic Church in the United States. New York: The Office of Catholic Publications.
  2. ^ Brown, John Howard, ed. (1903). Lamb's Biographical Dictionary of the United States. Vol. V. Boston: Federal Book Company of Boston.
  3. ^ "Bishop Tobias Mullen". Catholic-Hierarchy.org.
  4. ^ "Erie". Catholic Encyclopedia.
  5. ^ "1853-1900: Early History". Roman Catholic Diocese of Erie. Archived from the original on 4 December 2008.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded byJoshua Maria Young Bishop of Erie
1868–1899
Succeeded byJohn Edmund Fitzmaurice
VacantTitle last held byAugustin Dontenwill — TITULAR —
Bishop of Germanicopolis
1889–1900
VacantTitle next held byJoseph Maria Koudelka
Roman Catholic Diocese of Erie
Ordinaries
Bishops
Michael O'Connor
Joshua Maria Young
Tobias Mullen
John Edmund Fitzmaurice
John Mark Gannon
John Francis Whealon
Alfred Michael Watson
Michael Joseph Murphy
Donald Walter Trautman
Lawrence T. Persico
Auxiliary bishops
John Mark Gannon
Edward Peter McManaman
Alfred Michael Watson
Churches
Cathedral
St. Peter Cathedral, Erie
Parishes
Decker's Chapel, St. Marys, Elk County
St. Severin's Old Log Church, Cooper Settlement
Sacred Heart Church, Sharon
Education
High schools
Cathedral Preparatory School, Erie
Central Catholic High School, DuBois
Elk County Catholic High School, St. Marys
Kennedy Catholic High School, Hermitage
Mercyhurst Preparatory School, Erie
Venango Catholic High School, Oil City
Villa Maria Academy, Erie
Diocesan seminary
St. Mark Seminary
Priests
Lawrence Eugene Brandt
Roman Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh
Ordinaries
Bishops
Michael O'Connor
Michael Domenec
John Tuigg
Richard Phelan
Regis Canevin
Hugh Boyle
John Dearden
John Joseph Wright
Vincent Leonard
Anthony Bevilacqua
Donald Wuerl
David A. Zubik
Auxiliary bishops
Coleman F. Carroll
Vincent Martin Leonard
John Bernard McDowell
Anthony G. Bosco
William Winter
Thomas Joseph Tobin
David A. Zubik
Paul J. Bradley
William Waltersheid
Mark Eckman
Churches
Cathedral
Cathedral of St. Paul
Churches
List of churches in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh
Epiphany
Immaculate Heart of Mary
Our Lady of the Angels
St. Benedict the Moor
St. Boniface
St. Nicholas
St. Stanislaus Kostka
Former churches
Holy Family
St. Agnes
St. Ann
St. George
St. John the Baptist
St. Mary
St. Michael
St. Nicholas
St. Philomena
Ss. Peter and Paul
Chapels and shrines
St. Anthony's Chapel
Education
Higher education
Duquesne
Carlow
La Roche
Saint Paul Seminary
High schools
Aquinas
Bishop Canevin
Central Catholic
Nazareth Prep
North Catholic High School
Oakland Catholic
Our Lady of the Sacred Heart
Serra Catholic
Seton-La Salle
St. Joseph
Vincentian
Elementary schools
St. Anne School
Priests
Miscellany
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