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Anthony Kohlmann

Anthony Kohlmann SJ (born Anton; July 13, 1771 – April 11, 1836) was an Alsatian Catholic priest, missionary, theologian, and Jesuit educator. He played a decisive role in the early formation of the Archdiocese of New York, where he was the subject of a lawsuit that for the first time recognized the confessional privilege in the United States, and served as the president of Georgetown College from 1817 to 1820.

Anthony Kohlmann
11th President of Georgetown College
In office
1817–1820
Preceded byBenedict Joseph Fenwick
Succeeded byEnoch Fenwick
Personal details
Born
Anton Kohlmann

(1771-07-13)July 13, 1771
Kaysersberg, Alsace, Kingdom of France
DiedApril 11, 1836(1836-04-11) (aged 64)
Rome, Papal States
Alma materCollège Saint-Michel
Orders
OrdinationApril 1796

Kohlmann joined the Society of the Sacred Heart and ministered throughout Europe before entering the Society of Jesus. He left for the United States in 1806, where he taught at Georgetown College and ministered to German-speaking congregations in the mid-Atlantic region. In 1808, he became the pastor of New York City's only Catholic church, and then was made the apostolic administrator and first vicar general of the newly created Diocese of New York. He established the diocese's first cathedral in 1809. Kohlmann also founded a school, the New York Literary Institution; established an orphanage; and invited the first Ursuline nuns to the United States.

In 1813, the City of New York sought to compel Kohlmann to disclose the identity of a thief, which he learned during a confession. In a landmark decision, the state court ruled that he could not be compelled to violate the seal of the confessional, recognizing the confessional privilege for the first time in the United States. Kohlmann returned to Maryland in 1815 as superior of the Jesuits' Maryland Mission and president of Georgetown College. Three years later, he left Georgetown to establish the Washington Seminary, which became Gonzaga College High School. In 1824, Pope Leo XII named Kohlmann the chair of theology at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome. Kohlmann later became a consultor to the College of Cardinals and various curial congregations, and was then appointed Qualificator of the Inquisition.

Early life Edit

Anton Kohlmann was born on July 13, 1771, in Kaysersberg, in the region of Alsace in the Kingdom of France.[1] As a youth, he began his studies in the nearby town of Colmar. He joined the Capuchin order, but fled to Switzerland because the order was persecuted as part of the larger dechristianization of France during the French Revolution.[2] He completed his theological studies at the Collège Saint-Michel,[3] and was ordained a priest in Fribourg in April 1796.[4] Kohlmann's brother, Paul, also became a priest and would join him in the United States.[5]

Ministry Edit

Shortly after his ordination,[3] he joined the Society of the Sacred Heart,[a] and completed his novitiate period in Göggingen, located in the Holy Roman Empire.[2] He ministered throughout Austria for two years,[3] during which he drew commendations for his work in Hagenbrunn during a plague. He then went to Italy, where he was chaplain at a military hospital in Pavia for two years.[2] Kohlmann was sent to Bavaria in 1801, where he became the director of the Ecclesiastical Seminary at Dillingen. He then spent time as the rector of a college in Berlin,[2] before founding a college in Amsterdam,[8] which was run by the Society of the Faith of Jesus, an order with which the Society of the Sacred Heart had merged in 1799.[3]

Kohlmann applied for admission to the Society of Jesus, which, despite its worldwide suppression since 1773, had been operating in the Russian Empire. During the two years that his application being considered, he resided at Kensington College in London,[8] where he learned English.[9] He eventually was instructed to travel to Russia, and he arrived in Riga in June 1805.[8] He entered the Jesuit novitiate in Daugavpils on June 21, 1803,[3] where he spent only a year before the superiors were satisfied that he was academically qualified.[8] The following year, John Carroll, the Bishop of Baltimore, put out a call for additional Jesuits in the United States,[9] and Kohlmann was sent as a missionary, prior to taking his final vows.[3]

Missionary to the United States Edit

Kohlmann left Hamburg on August 20, 1806, arrived in Baltimore on November 4.[8] In the United States, he began anglicizing his name as Anthony.[10] The Jesuit Superior General formally permitted the Jesuits to be restored in the United States in 1805, and a novitiate was opened the following year at Georgetown College in Washington, D.C. Francis Neale was named the master of novices, and Kohlmann, though still a novice himself, was made the socius[b] to the master of novices. He was also assigned to teach philosophy.[8]

Kohlmann introduced many of the customs that the Jesuits in exile the Russian Empire observed. While at Georgetown, he made trips to minister to the people of Alexandria, Virginia, and Baltimore, as well as to German-speaking congregations in rural Pennsylvania. He also heard confessions from parishioners at Holy Trinity Church in Philadelphia because their pastor had not mastered the English language.[12]

New York Edit

 
St. Peter's Church (pictured) was the only Catholic church in New York City when Kohlmann became its pastor in 1808.

Bishop Carroll found it difficult to govern a diocese whose territory encompassed the entire United States.[12] The church in New York suffered neglect and mismanagement,[3] and he had repeatedly requested that the authorities in Rome remove New York to form a separate diocese.[12] Before news could arrive that his request was granted and R. Luke Concanen was appointed as the first Bishop of New York,[c] Carroll sent a party of clergy to New York City. Headed by Kohlmann, it consisted of the future bishop Benedict Fenwick and four Jesuit scholastics.[14] Arriving in October 1808, Kohlmann assumed pastoral responsibility for approximately 14,000 Catholics, who were primarily Irish, French, and German.[3] Upon his arrival, Kohlmann found New York suffering an economic depression resulting from the Embargo Act of 1807.[3]

Kohlmann became the pastor of St. Peter's Church, replacing Matthew Byrne, who sought to be relieved so that he could join the Society of Jesus.[14] There, he celebrated Masses in English, French, and German for the congregation's multilingual parishioners. He also was prolific in administering the other sacraments, visiting hospitals, and teaching catechesis.[15] He also created a subscription among parishioners to raise money for the poor.[16]

Kohlmann determined that St. Peter's was inadequate to serve the entire Catholic population of New York City. He began establishing a new church that would serve as the cathedral of the diocese. He purchased land on what were then the outskirts of New York City, among farmland and on the edge of the wilderness.[17] The cornerstone of the St. Patrick's Old Cathedral was laid on June 8, 1809.[3] He oversaw its completion and gave it the name of St. Patrick.[18] In 1809, he became the cathedral's first pastor, alongside Fenwick.[19] Upon its completion, Old St. Patrick's became the largest and most ornate church in New York State.[15] By this time, Cooncanen still had not yet arrived from Europe, delayed by the Napoleonic Wars.[17] Therefore, on October 11 of that year, upon Bishop Concanen's request, John Carroll named Kohlmann the first vicar general of the Diocese of New York.[20][21]

In 1809, in the course of their pastoral duties, Kohlmann and Fenwick were called to the deathbed of the American revolutionary and avowed atheist Thomas Paine, who hoped that the priests would be able to heal him. When they attempted to persuade him to disavow his atheist beliefs, Paine became enraged and expelled them from his house.[22] In 1810, Bishop Concanen died in Naples, having never reached his diocese in America.[23] Therefore, Kohlmann was made apostolic administrator of the diocese. When it appeared that Concanen's successor, John Connolly, would arrive in the United States,[3] Kohlmann was recalled to Maryland in January 1815.[24] He was succeeded by Fenwick as vicar general and administrator of New York and pastor of St. Peter's Church.[25][26]

New York Literary Institution Edit

 
Kohlmann founded both the New York Literary Institution and what was then St. Patrick's Cathedral (pictured), which were across the street from each other.

In addition to his pastoral work, Carroll charged Kohlmann with establishing a Catholic college in the city.[14] In 1808,[27] he opened a classical school called the New York Literary Institution,[3] which functioned as an offshoot of Georgetown College.[10] He rented a house on Mulberry Street, across from the cathedral, where the four Jesuit scholastics began teaching 35 Catholic and Protestant students, a minority of whom boarded at the school.[28] With the school outgrowing its location, in September 1809, it moved to Broadway, and, in March of the following year, Kohlmann relocated the school far into the countryside of New York City, across the street from the Elgin Botanic Garden. The new site of the New York Literary Institution would later house the new St. Patrick's Cathedral in Midtown Manhattan.[27] Following its move, the school began to prosper. Kohlmann, however, continued to reside at Mulberry Street, where he could perform his pastoral duties at Old St. Patrick's and St. Peter's. He made Benedict Fenwick the president of the school.[23]

Kohlmann became convinced that New York City would remain the preeminent city in the United States and that the Jesuits should shift their ministerial efforts to it,[14] rather than focus on their rural plantations in Maryland, which he described as "graveyards for Europeans". He went so far as to advocate the relocation of Georgetown College to New York,[10] which he argued was of "greater importance to the Society than all the other states together".[29] Before long, the Jesuit superiors in Maryland determined that there were not enough Jesuits to staff both the New York school and Georgetown. Despite Kohlmann's protestations, the New York Literary Institution was disbanded in 1813, and the Jesuits were recalled to Maryland.[29]

In addition to the New York Literary Institution, Kohlmann established a school for girls in April 1812 near the literary institution. The school was put under the care of the Ursuline nuns, whom he had invited from County Cork, Ireland, to run the new school.[3] The nuns accepted Kohlmann's invitation on the condition that they would remain only as long as they received novices for their order.[30] Their arrival marked the Ursuline order's first presence in the United States.[31] When their desire for novices did not materialize, the nuns returned to Ireland three years after their arrival. Kohlmann also established an orphanage, which he placed under the care of Trappist nuns who had fled persecution in France. This institution was short-lived, as the Trappists left for Le Havre in October 1814.[30]

Seal of the confessional Edit

In 1813, Kohlmann became the subject of a lawsuit that rose to the national interest.[3] A New York City merchant,[15] James Keating, accused a man named Phillips and Phillips' wife of stealing goods from him. The police prosecuted the two accused, but before the trial could be brought to a close, Keating declared that he had been paid restitution, with Kohlmann acting as an intermediary in the transaction. The New York County District Attorney subpoenaed Kohlmann to provide the name of the thief who paid the restitution, but Kohlmann refused to reveal his identity, stating that it had been disclosed to him during the Sacrament of Penance and was therefore protected under canon law by the seal of the confessional.[22] In response to the district attorney's demand that he disclose the thief, Kohlmann stated that he would suffer imprisonment or death before violating the seal.[15]

Kohlmann was brought before the Court of General Sessions to compel him to provide the identity of the thief.[3] He was represented by two Protestant defense attorneys: Richard Riker and William Sampson.[22] The four judges, DeWitt Clinton, Josiah Ogden Hoffman, Richard Cunnin, and Isaac Douglas, ruled in favor of Kohlmann, citing religious liberty as the basis of their decision.[32] Speaking for a unanimous court,[33] DeWitt Clinton wrote:

It is essential to the free exercise of religion, that its ordinances should be administered—that its ceremonies as well as its essentials should be protected... Secrecy is the essence of penance. The sinner will not confess, nor will the priest receive his confession, if the veil of secrecy is removed.[34]

The court's decision represented the first legal recognition of the confessional privilege in the United States.[35] As a result, the New York State Legislature passed a law on December 10, 1828, codifying the confessional privilege: that when clergy members come to know of facts through their ministerial capacity and their denomination imposes a requirement of secrecy, they cannot be compelled to reveal those facts. Kohlmann also wrote a book directed at non-Catholics, explaining the Catholic doctrine on the Sacrament of Penance.[30]

Maryland and Washington, D.C. Edit

Upon his arrival in Maryland in 1815, Kohlmann was made the master of novices at the novitiate at White Marsh Manor. Shortly after that, Giovanni Antonio Grassi left Maryland for Rome, and Kohlmann succeeded him as the superior of the Jesuits' Maryland Mission on September 10, 1817.[24] As superior, Kohlmann advocated selling the Jesuits' plantations in rural Maryland to finance the establishment of other colleges in the major American cities. The Anglo-American Jesuits fiercely opposed this proposal. Disagreements between the Continental European Jesuits in the United States and the Anglo-American ones became so entrenched that the Jesuit Superior General sent the Irish Jesuit Peter Kenney as an ecclesiastical visitor.[36] He also assumed Kohlmann's role of mission superior on April 23, 1819.[37]

Georgetown College Edit

 
Early depiction of Georgetown College's campus, with Old North on the right.

When Benedict Fenwick left for Rome in 1817, Kohlmann was selected to succeed him as president of Georgetown College. Though Kohlmann remained convinced that the Jesuits must close Georgetown to concentrate their meager resources on the training of Jesuits, he did not attempt to close the college while in office.[38] Kohlmann aligned with the European Jesuits who advocated a rigorous classical curriculum that placed a special emphasis on Latin and Ancient Greek, while the Anglo-American Jesuits supported a diminished emphasis on the classics in favor of mathematics and science.[39] He also encouraged proselytization of the Protestant students, to which their parents and some of the Anglo-American Jesuits objected.[40]

During his administration, the number of students enrolled at the college declined somewhat. This was due in large part to the Panic of 1819[38] and partly to the strict discipline that Kohlmann enforced, which resulted in a significant number of students being expelled or transferring out. In 1818, students at the college staged a revolt by plotting to kill the prefect of students, Stephen Larigaudelle Dubuisson, who was responsible for maintaining discipline. While such conspiracies had become frequent at other American colleges, this was the first time such a design had appeared at a Catholic college. However, the plot was discovered before it could be acted upon, and Kohlmann expelled the six conspirators. Overall, his leadership of the college was not considered successful.[41] Kohlmann's term as president of the college ended in 1820,[4] and he was succeeded by Enoch Fenwick.[42]

Washington Seminary Edit

In 1819, a building was constructed next to St. Patrick's Church in downtown Washington, D.C. It was to serve as the home of the Washington Seminary, which was envisioned as a standalone Jesuit novitiate, to alleviate overcrowding at Georgetown.[43] This never came to fruition, however, and the building went unused for one or two years. Instead, the novitiate found another location, and the Washington Seminary opened as a Jesuit scholasticate under Kohlmann's leadership. He became the first president and rector of the school on August 15, 1820, and also assumed the position of professor of dogma.[24]

Soon after its founding, prominent Catholics in the area petitioned Kohlmann to open the school to lay students, which he did. The first lay students enrolled on September 1, 1821, alongside the Jesuit scholastics.[24] Kohlmann admitted day students reluctantly and out of financial necessity,[44] as it violated a law of the Jesuit order that forbade them from accepting compensation for educating youths.[45] As a result of it no longer being exclusively for priestly training, the school would later become Gonzaga College High School. The school prospered and came to be the preeminent day school in Washington.[46]

In response to the writings of the Unitarian minister Jared Sparks, which were aimed at Baltimore readers,[46] Kohlmann published an apologetical book titled Unitarianism, Theologically and Philosophically Considered.[3] The book was well received in Catholic circles; several editions were published, and it was considered sufficiently authoritative to be read aloud in the refectory of St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore.[46] Kohlmann's tenure as president came to an end in 1824 when he was recalled to Rome by Pope Leo XII,[47] and he was succeeded by Adam Marshall.[48]

Kohlmann became involved in the purported miraculous cure of Ann Mattingly, the sister of Thomas Carbery, the Mayor of the District of Columbia. Kohlmann instructed her to pray a novena in union with the German Prince Alexander von Hohenlohe,[46] who had gained a reputation as a miracle worker.[49] On March 10, 1824, Mattingly was restored to health.[46] Despite wariness by Archbishop Ambrose Maréchal and William Matthews (Mattingly's pastor), Kohlmann was the most emphatic priest in declaring the cure a miracle and published an account of it in a Baltimore newspaper.[50] Seeking to have the miracle declare true, he would later arrange an audience with Pope Leo XII, in which the pope was impressed by the event and ordered a pamphlet about it translated into Italian and published.[51]

Roman career Edit

 
Kohlmann Hall at Fordham University was constructed in 1923.

In 1824, Pope Leo XII placed the Pontifical Gregorian University under the care of the Society of Jesus, as it had been before the order's suppression. Impressed by Kohlmann's book on Unitarianism,[46] he named Kohlmann as the university's chair of theology. He held this post for five years, during which time one of his students was Vincenzo Gioacchino Pecci, who would go on to become Pope Leo XIII; another was Paul Cullen, who would become the Archbishop of Dublin and the first Irish cardinal.[3]

Kohlmann's inquisition of Pecci during the latter's public academic defense again caught the attention of the pope, who named him a consultor to the Congregation for Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs and the Congregation of Bishops and Regulars.[46] He also became a consultor to the staff of the College of Cardinals.[3] Pope Gregory XVI promoted him within the curial staff to the position of Qualificator of the Inquisition[46] and considered making him a cardinal. In 1830, he resigned and spent a year as spiritual director at the Roman College. Kohlmann retired to the Jesuit house attached to the Church of the Gesù in 1831, where he served as confessor, aided by his knowledge of several languages.[52] In 1833, he met the future theologian Augustin Theiner; along with the future cardinal Karl-August von Reisach, Kohlmann influenced Theiner's decision to convert to Catholicism.[53]

By 1836, Kohlmann's health had begun to deteriorate,[52] and he died on April 11, 1836.[3] Kohlmann Hall at Fordham University was constructed in 1923 and named in his honor.[54] Originally the headquarters of the Jesuit Order's New York province, it was later converted into the residence for Jesuits teaching at Fordham Preparatory School.[55]

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The Society of the Sacred Heart was founded by two seminarians, Joseph Varin and Joseph de Tournély.[6] Its early members were primarily former Jesuits, who joined after the suppression of the Society of Jesus in 1773.[2] The Society of the Sacred Heart merged into the Society of the Faith of Jesus in 1799, which then disbanded in 1814.[7]
  2. ^ The socius magistri novitiorum is the associate to the master of novices, and is responsible for the day-to-day affairs of the novices.[11]
  3. ^ R. Luke Concanen was appointed Bishop of New York and consecrated on April 24, 1808, but word of his appointment would not reach Carroll until September 24, 1808.[13]

References Edit

Citations Edit

  1. ^ Buckley 2013, p. 76
  2. ^ a b c d e Parsons 1918, p. 38
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Meehan 1910
  4. ^ a b Shea 1891, p. 57
  5. ^ Parsons 1918, p. 48
  6. ^ Mayer 1935, pp. 24–25
  7. ^ Dudon 1952, pp. 341–342
  8. ^ a b c d e f Parsons 1918, p. 39
  9. ^ a b Miller et al. 2003, p. 425
  10. ^ a b c McKevitt 2017, p. 64
  11. ^ Gramatowski 2013, p. 27
  12. ^ a b c Parsons 1918, p. 40
  13. ^ Parsons 1918, pp. 40–41
  14. ^ a b c d Parsons 1918, p. 41
  15. ^ a b c d Egan, Edward (June 8, 2006). "Our History: Seven Years and No Bishop". Catholic New York. Archdiocese of New York. from the original on July 4, 2020. Retrieved July 4, 2020.
  16. ^ Parsons 1918, p. 43
  17. ^ a b Parsons 1918, p. 42
  18. ^ The Catholic Church in the United States of America 1914, p. 276
  19. ^ The Catholic Church in the United States of America 1914, p. 304
  20. ^ Parsons 1918, pp. 41–42
  21. ^ Egan, Edward (April 12, 2007). "Our Bicentennial". Archdiocese of New York. from the original on August 31, 2021. Retrieved August 31, 2021.
  22. ^ a b c Parsons 1918, p. 46
  23. ^ a b Parsons 1918, p. 45
  24. ^ a b c d Parsons 1918, p. 49
  25. ^ The Catholic Church in the United States of America 1914, p. 366
  26. ^ Clarke 1872, p. 385
  27. ^ a b McGucken 2008, p. 72
  28. ^ Parsons 1918, p. 44
  29. ^ a b McGucken 2008, p. 73
  30. ^ a b c Parsons 1918, p. 47
  31. ^ Hill 1922, p. 23
  32. ^ Parsons 1918, pp. 46–47
  33. ^ Sampson 1813, p. 95
  34. ^ Sampson 1813, p. 111
  35. ^ Marlin & Miner 2017, p. 22
  36. ^ Curran 1993, p. 88
  37. ^ Ramspacher 1962, p. 300
  38. ^ a b Curran 1993, p. 84
  39. ^ Curran 1993, p. 86
  40. ^ Curran 1993, p. 87
  41. ^ Curran 1993, p. 85
  42. ^ Shea 1891, p. 58
  43. ^ Hill 1922, pp. 20–21
  44. ^ Hill 1922, p. 25
  45. ^ Hill 1922, p. 24
  46. ^ a b c d e f g h Parsons 1918, p. 50
  47. ^ Hill 1922, p. 26
  48. ^ Hill 1922, p. 27
  49. ^ Schultz 2011, p. 11
  50. ^ Curran 1987, pp. 45–46
  51. ^ Curran 1987, p. 52
  52. ^ a b Parsons 1918, p. 51
  53. ^ Brandt 2003, p. 702
  54. ^ As I Remember Fordham 1991, p. 202
  55. ^ . Fordham University. Archived from the original on October 10, 2014. Retrieved July 5, 2020.

Sources Edit

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  • Buckley, Cornelius Michael (2013). Stephen Larigaudelle Dubuisson, S.J. (1786–1864) and the Reform of the American Jesuits. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America. ISBN 9780761862321. from the original on June 26, 2020. Retrieved June 26, 2020 – via Google Books.
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  • Curran, Robert Emmett (January 1987). ""The Finger of God Is Here": The Advent of the Miraculous in the Nineteenth-Century American Catholic Community". The Catholic Historical Review. 73 (1): 41–61. JSTOR 25022452.
  • Curran, Robert Emmett (1993). The Bicentennial History of Georgetown University: From Academy to University, 1789–1889. Vol. 1. Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University Press. ISBN 978-0-87840-485-8. from the original on July 4, 2020. Retrieved July 4, 2020 – via Google Books.
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  • Gramatowski, Wiktor (2013). Jesuit Glossary: Guide to understanding the documents (PDF). Translated by Russell, Camilla. Rome: Archivum Romanum Societatis Iesu. (PDF) from the original on July 4, 2019. Retrieved June 27, 2020.
  • Hill, Owen Aloysius (1922). "Chapter 1: Rev. Anthony Kohlmann, S.J. (1821–1824)". Gonzaga College, an Historical Sketch: From Its Foundation in 1821, to the Solemn Celebration of Its First Centenary in 1921. Washington, D.C.: Gonzaga College. pp. 17–26. OCLC 1266588. from the original on June 26, 2020. Retrieved June 26, 2020 – via Google Books.
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  • Miller, Kerby A.; Schrier, Arnold; Boling, Bruce D.; Doyle, David N., eds. (2003). Irish Immigrants in the Land of Canaan: Letters and Memoirs from Colonial and Revolutionary America, 1675–1815. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504513-0. from the original on June 27, 2020. Retrieved June 27, 2020 – via Google Books.
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  • Ramspacher, Joseph H. (July 1962). "Major Superiors in the Northern United States" (PDF). Woodstock Letters. XCI (3): 300–303. (PDF) from the original on February 11, 2020. Retrieved July 4, 2020 – via Jesuit Archives.
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  • Schultz, Nancy Lusignan (2011). Mrs. Mattingly's Miracle: The Prince, the Widow, and the Cure that Shocked Washington City. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-11846-9. Retrieved July 5, 2020 – via Internet Archive.
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Further reading Edit

  • Garrity, Jim (June 27, 2012). "Religious Freedom at Heart of New York Case Two Centuries Ago". Catholic New York. Archdiocese of New York. from the original on June 26, 2020. Retrieved June 26, 2020.
  • Joachim, Jules (1937). Au berceau de la Compagnie de Jésus renaissante: le Père Antoine Kohlmann, S. J., père de la foi, missionnaire aux États-Unis, professeur au Collège Romain, 1771–1836 (in French). Paris: Éditions Alsatia. OCLC 64830784.
  • O'Toole, James M. (September 1994). "From Advent to Easter: Catholic Preaching in New York City, 1808–1809". Church History. 63 (3): 365–377. doi:10.2307/3167534. JSTOR 3167534. S2CID 162197523.

Bibliography Edit

  • Kohlmann, Anthony (1821). Unitarianism Philosophically and Theologically Examined (1st ed.). Washington, D.C.: Henry Guegan. OCLC 4668988. from the original on July 5, 2020. Retrieved July 5, 2020 – via Google Books.
  • Kohlmann, Anthony (May 1875). "Unpublished Letters of Fr. Anthony Kohlmann, S.J., with a Short Account of His Life" (PDF). Woodstock Letters. 4 (2): 137–150. (PDF) from the original on March 9, 2020. Retrieved June 26, 2020 – via Jesuit Archives.
  • Kohlmann, Anthony (April 1906). "Exemplar Litterarum P. Antonii Kohlmann ad A. R. P. N. Datarum Ex Amereica Fœderata" [A Copy of the Letters of Fr. Anthony Kohlmann to the A.R.P.N. from the American Federation] (PDF). Woodstock Letters (in Latin). 35 (1): 1–10. (PDF) from the original on June 26, 2020. Retrieved June 26, 2020 – via Jesuit Archives.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Matthew Byrne
Pastor of St. Peter's Church
1808–1815
Succeeded by
First Vicar General of the Diocese of New York
1809–1815
Succeeded by
First Pastor of St. Patrick's Old Cathedral
1809–1815
with Benedict Joseph Fenwick
Vacant
Title next held by
John Power
Preceded byas Bishop of New York Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of New York
1810–1815
Succeeded by
Preceded by 24th Superior of the Jesuit Maryland Mission
1817–1819
Succeeded by
Academic offices
Preceded by 11th President of Georgetown College
1817–1820
Succeeded by
New office 1st President of the Washington Seminary
1820–1824
Succeeded by

anthony, kohlmann, born, anton, july, 1771, april, 1836, alsatian, catholic, priest, missionary, theologian, jesuit, educator, played, decisive, role, early, formation, archdiocese, york, where, subject, lawsuit, that, first, time, recognized, confessional, pr. Anthony Kohlmann SJ born Anton July 13 1771 April 11 1836 was an Alsatian Catholic priest missionary theologian and Jesuit educator He played a decisive role in the early formation of the Archdiocese of New York where he was the subject of a lawsuit that for the first time recognized the confessional privilege in the United States and served as the president of Georgetown College from 1817 to 1820 The ReverendAnthony KohlmannSJ11th President of Georgetown CollegeIn office 1817 1820Preceded byBenedict Joseph FenwickSucceeded byEnoch FenwickPersonal detailsBornAnton Kohlmann 1771 07 13 July 13 1771Kaysersberg Alsace Kingdom of FranceDiedApril 11 1836 1836 04 11 aged 64 Rome Papal StatesAlma materCollege Saint MichelOrdersOrdinationApril 1796Kohlmann joined the Society of the Sacred Heart and ministered throughout Europe before entering the Society of Jesus He left for the United States in 1806 where he taught at Georgetown College and ministered to German speaking congregations in the mid Atlantic region In 1808 he became the pastor of New York City s only Catholic church and then was made the apostolic administrator and first vicar general of the newly created Diocese of New York He established the diocese s first cathedral in 1809 Kohlmann also founded a school the New York Literary Institution established an orphanage and invited the first Ursuline nuns to the United States In 1813 the City of New York sought to compel Kohlmann to disclose the identity of a thief which he learned during a confession In a landmark decision the state court ruled that he could not be compelled to violate the seal of the confessional recognizing the confessional privilege for the first time in the United States Kohlmann returned to Maryland in 1815 as superior of the Jesuits Maryland Mission and president of Georgetown College Three years later he left Georgetown to establish the Washington Seminary which became Gonzaga College High School In 1824 Pope Leo XII named Kohlmann the chair of theology at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome Kohlmann later became a consultor to the College of Cardinals and various curial congregations and was then appointed Qualificator of the Inquisition Contents 1 Early life 1 1 Ministry 2 Missionary to the United States 3 New York 3 1 New York Literary Institution 3 2 Seal of the confessional 4 Maryland and Washington D C 4 1 Georgetown College 4 2 Washington Seminary 5 Roman career 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 Further reading 8 1 BibliographyEarly life EditAnton Kohlmann was born on July 13 1771 in Kaysersberg in the region of Alsace in the Kingdom of France 1 As a youth he began his studies in the nearby town of Colmar He joined the Capuchin order but fled to Switzerland because the order was persecuted as part of the larger dechristianization of France during the French Revolution 2 He completed his theological studies at the College Saint Michel 3 and was ordained a priest in Fribourg in April 1796 4 Kohlmann s brother Paul also became a priest and would join him in the United States 5 Ministry Edit Shortly after his ordination 3 he joined the Society of the Sacred Heart a and completed his novitiate period in Goggingen located in the Holy Roman Empire 2 He ministered throughout Austria for two years 3 during which he drew commendations for his work in Hagenbrunn during a plague He then went to Italy where he was chaplain at a military hospital in Pavia for two years 2 Kohlmann was sent to Bavaria in 1801 where he became the director of the Ecclesiastical Seminary at Dillingen He then spent time as the rector of a college in Berlin 2 before founding a college in Amsterdam 8 which was run by the Society of the Faith of Jesus an order with which the Society of the Sacred Heart had merged in 1799 3 Kohlmann applied for admission to the Society of Jesus which despite its worldwide suppression since 1773 had been operating in the Russian Empire During the two years that his application being considered he resided at Kensington College in London 8 where he learned English 9 He eventually was instructed to travel to Russia and he arrived in Riga in June 1805 8 He entered the Jesuit novitiate in Daugavpils on June 21 1803 3 where he spent only a year before the superiors were satisfied that he was academically qualified 8 The following year John Carroll the Bishop of Baltimore put out a call for additional Jesuits in the United States 9 and Kohlmann was sent as a missionary prior to taking his final vows 3 Missionary to the United States EditKohlmann left Hamburg on August 20 1806 arrived in Baltimore on November 4 8 In the United States he began anglicizing his name as Anthony 10 The Jesuit Superior General formally permitted the Jesuits to be restored in the United States in 1805 and a novitiate was opened the following year at Georgetown College in Washington D C Francis Neale was named the master of novices and Kohlmann though still a novice himself was made the socius b to the master of novices He was also assigned to teach philosophy 8 Kohlmann introduced many of the customs that the Jesuits in exile the Russian Empire observed While at Georgetown he made trips to minister to the people of Alexandria Virginia and Baltimore as well as to German speaking congregations in rural Pennsylvania He also heard confessions from parishioners at Holy Trinity Church in Philadelphia because their pastor had not mastered the English language 12 New York Edit nbsp St Peter s Church pictured was the only Catholic church in New York City when Kohlmann became its pastor in 1808 Bishop Carroll found it difficult to govern a diocese whose territory encompassed the entire United States 12 The church in New York suffered neglect and mismanagement 3 and he had repeatedly requested that the authorities in Rome remove New York to form a separate diocese 12 Before news could arrive that his request was granted and R Luke Concanen was appointed as the first Bishop of New York c Carroll sent a party of clergy to New York City Headed by Kohlmann it consisted of the future bishop Benedict Fenwick and four Jesuit scholastics 14 Arriving in October 1808 Kohlmann assumed pastoral responsibility for approximately 14 000 Catholics who were primarily Irish French and German 3 Upon his arrival Kohlmann found New York suffering an economic depression resulting from the Embargo Act of 1807 3 Kohlmann became the pastor of St Peter s Church replacing Matthew Byrne who sought to be relieved so that he could join the Society of Jesus 14 There he celebrated Masses in English French and German for the congregation s multilingual parishioners He also was prolific in administering the other sacraments visiting hospitals and teaching catechesis 15 He also created a subscription among parishioners to raise money for the poor 16 Kohlmann determined that St Peter s was inadequate to serve the entire Catholic population of New York City He began establishing a new church that would serve as the cathedral of the diocese He purchased land on what were then the outskirts of New York City among farmland and on the edge of the wilderness 17 The cornerstone of the St Patrick s Old Cathedral was laid on June 8 1809 3 He oversaw its completion and gave it the name of St Patrick 18 In 1809 he became the cathedral s first pastor alongside Fenwick 19 Upon its completion Old St Patrick s became the largest and most ornate church in New York State 15 By this time Cooncanen still had not yet arrived from Europe delayed by the Napoleonic Wars 17 Therefore on October 11 of that year upon Bishop Concanen s request John Carroll named Kohlmann the first vicar general of the Diocese of New York 20 21 In 1809 in the course of their pastoral duties Kohlmann and Fenwick were called to the deathbed of the American revolutionary and avowed atheist Thomas Paine who hoped that the priests would be able to heal him When they attempted to persuade him to disavow his atheist beliefs Paine became enraged and expelled them from his house 22 In 1810 Bishop Concanen died in Naples having never reached his diocese in America 23 Therefore Kohlmann was made apostolic administrator of the diocese When it appeared that Concanen s successor John Connolly would arrive in the United States 3 Kohlmann was recalled to Maryland in January 1815 24 He was succeeded by Fenwick as vicar general and administrator of New York and pastor of St Peter s Church 25 26 New York Literary Institution Edit nbsp Kohlmann founded both the New York Literary Institution and what was then St Patrick s Cathedral pictured which were across the street from each other In addition to his pastoral work Carroll charged Kohlmann with establishing a Catholic college in the city 14 In 1808 27 he opened a classical school called the New York Literary Institution 3 which functioned as an offshoot of Georgetown College 10 He rented a house on Mulberry Street across from the cathedral where the four Jesuit scholastics began teaching 35 Catholic and Protestant students a minority of whom boarded at the school 28 With the school outgrowing its location in September 1809 it moved to Broadway and in March of the following year Kohlmann relocated the school far into the countryside of New York City across the street from the Elgin Botanic Garden The new site of the New York Literary Institution would later house the new St Patrick s Cathedral in Midtown Manhattan 27 Following its move the school began to prosper Kohlmann however continued to reside at Mulberry Street where he could perform his pastoral duties at Old St Patrick s and St Peter s He made Benedict Fenwick the president of the school 23 Kohlmann became convinced that New York City would remain the preeminent city in the United States and that the Jesuits should shift their ministerial efforts to it 14 rather than focus on their rural plantations in Maryland which he described as graveyards for Europeans He went so far as to advocate the relocation of Georgetown College to New York 10 which he argued was of greater importance to the Society than all the other states together 29 Before long the Jesuit superiors in Maryland determined that there were not enough Jesuits to staff both the New York school and Georgetown Despite Kohlmann s protestations the New York Literary Institution was disbanded in 1813 and the Jesuits were recalled to Maryland 29 In addition to the New York Literary Institution Kohlmann established a school for girls in April 1812 near the literary institution The school was put under the care of the Ursuline nuns whom he had invited from County Cork Ireland to run the new school 3 The nuns accepted Kohlmann s invitation on the condition that they would remain only as long as they received novices for their order 30 Their arrival marked the Ursuline order s first presence in the United States 31 When their desire for novices did not materialize the nuns returned to Ireland three years after their arrival Kohlmann also established an orphanage which he placed under the care of Trappist nuns who had fled persecution in France This institution was short lived as the Trappists left for Le Havre in October 1814 30 Seal of the confessional Edit In 1813 Kohlmann became the subject of a lawsuit that rose to the national interest 3 A New York City merchant 15 James Keating accused a man named Phillips and Phillips wife of stealing goods from him The police prosecuted the two accused but before the trial could be brought to a close Keating declared that he had been paid restitution with Kohlmann acting as an intermediary in the transaction The New York County District Attorney subpoenaed Kohlmann to provide the name of the thief who paid the restitution but Kohlmann refused to reveal his identity stating that it had been disclosed to him during the Sacrament of Penance and was therefore protected under canon law by the seal of the confessional 22 In response to the district attorney s demand that he disclose the thief Kohlmann stated that he would suffer imprisonment or death before violating the seal 15 Kohlmann was brought before the Court of General Sessions to compel him to provide the identity of the thief 3 He was represented by two Protestant defense attorneys Richard Riker and William Sampson 22 The four judges DeWitt Clinton Josiah Ogden Hoffman Richard Cunnin and Isaac Douglas ruled in favor of Kohlmann citing religious liberty as the basis of their decision 32 Speaking for a unanimous court 33 DeWitt Clinton wrote It is essential to the free exercise of religion that its ordinances should be administered that its ceremonies as well as its essentials should be protected Secrecy is the essence of penance The sinner will not confess nor will the priest receive his confession if the veil of secrecy is removed 34 The court s decision represented the first legal recognition of the confessional privilege in the United States 35 As a result the New York State Legislature passed a law on December 10 1828 codifying the confessional privilege that when clergy members come to know of facts through their ministerial capacity and their denomination imposes a requirement of secrecy they cannot be compelled to reveal those facts Kohlmann also wrote a book directed at non Catholics explaining the Catholic doctrine on the Sacrament of Penance 30 Maryland and Washington D C EditUpon his arrival in Maryland in 1815 Kohlmann was made the master of novices at the novitiate at White Marsh Manor Shortly after that Giovanni Antonio Grassi left Maryland for Rome and Kohlmann succeeded him as the superior of the Jesuits Maryland Mission on September 10 1817 24 As superior Kohlmann advocated selling the Jesuits plantations in rural Maryland to finance the establishment of other colleges in the major American cities The Anglo American Jesuits fiercely opposed this proposal Disagreements between the Continental European Jesuits in the United States and the Anglo American ones became so entrenched that the Jesuit Superior General sent the Irish Jesuit Peter Kenney as an ecclesiastical visitor 36 He also assumed Kohlmann s role of mission superior on April 23 1819 37 Georgetown College Edit nbsp Early depiction of Georgetown College s campus with Old North on the right When Benedict Fenwick left for Rome in 1817 Kohlmann was selected to succeed him as president of Georgetown College Though Kohlmann remained convinced that the Jesuits must close Georgetown to concentrate their meager resources on the training of Jesuits he did not attempt to close the college while in office 38 Kohlmann aligned with the European Jesuits who advocated a rigorous classical curriculum that placed a special emphasis on Latin and Ancient Greek while the Anglo American Jesuits supported a diminished emphasis on the classics in favor of mathematics and science 39 He also encouraged proselytization of the Protestant students to which their parents and some of the Anglo American Jesuits objected 40 During his administration the number of students enrolled at the college declined somewhat This was due in large part to the Panic of 1819 38 and partly to the strict discipline that Kohlmann enforced which resulted in a significant number of students being expelled or transferring out In 1818 students at the college staged a revolt by plotting to kill the prefect of students Stephen Larigaudelle Dubuisson who was responsible for maintaining discipline While such conspiracies had become frequent at other American colleges this was the first time such a design had appeared at a Catholic college However the plot was discovered before it could be acted upon and Kohlmann expelled the six conspirators Overall his leadership of the college was not considered successful 41 Kohlmann s term as president of the college ended in 1820 4 and he was succeeded by Enoch Fenwick 42 Washington Seminary Edit In 1819 a building was constructed next to St Patrick s Church in downtown Washington D C It was to serve as the home of the Washington Seminary which was envisioned as a standalone Jesuit novitiate to alleviate overcrowding at Georgetown 43 This never came to fruition however and the building went unused for one or two years Instead the novitiate found another location and the Washington Seminary opened as a Jesuit scholasticate under Kohlmann s leadership He became the first president and rector of the school on August 15 1820 and also assumed the position of professor of dogma 24 Soon after its founding prominent Catholics in the area petitioned Kohlmann to open the school to lay students which he did The first lay students enrolled on September 1 1821 alongside the Jesuit scholastics 24 Kohlmann admitted day students reluctantly and out of financial necessity 44 as it violated a law of the Jesuit order that forbade them from accepting compensation for educating youths 45 As a result of it no longer being exclusively for priestly training the school would later become Gonzaga College High School The school prospered and came to be the preeminent day school in Washington 46 In response to the writings of the Unitarian minister Jared Sparks which were aimed at Baltimore readers 46 Kohlmann published an apologetical book titled Unitarianism Theologically and Philosophically Considered 3 The book was well received in Catholic circles several editions were published and it was considered sufficiently authoritative to be read aloud in the refectory of St Mary s Seminary in Baltimore 46 Kohlmann s tenure as president came to an end in 1824 when he was recalled to Rome by Pope Leo XII 47 and he was succeeded by Adam Marshall 48 Kohlmann became involved in the purported miraculous cure of Ann Mattingly the sister of Thomas Carbery the Mayor of the District of Columbia Kohlmann instructed her to pray a novena in union with the German Prince Alexander von Hohenlohe 46 who had gained a reputation as a miracle worker 49 On March 10 1824 Mattingly was restored to health 46 Despite wariness by Archbishop Ambrose Marechal and William Matthews Mattingly s pastor Kohlmann was the most emphatic priest in declaring the cure a miracle and published an account of it in a Baltimore newspaper 50 Seeking to have the miracle declare true he would later arrange an audience with Pope Leo XII in which the pope was impressed by the event and ordered a pamphlet about it translated into Italian and published 51 Roman career Edit nbsp Kohlmann Hall at Fordham University was constructed in 1923 In 1824 Pope Leo XII placed the Pontifical Gregorian University under the care of the Society of Jesus as it had been before the order s suppression Impressed by Kohlmann s book on Unitarianism 46 he named Kohlmann as the university s chair of theology He held this post for five years during which time one of his students was Vincenzo Gioacchino Pecci who would go on to become Pope Leo XIII another was Paul Cullen who would become the Archbishop of Dublin and the first Irish cardinal 3 Kohlmann s inquisition of Pecci during the latter s public academic defense again caught the attention of the pope who named him a consultor to the Congregation for Extraordinary Ecclesiastical Affairs and the Congregation of Bishops and Regulars 46 He also became a consultor to the staff of the College of Cardinals 3 Pope Gregory XVI promoted him within the curial staff to the position of Qualificator of the Inquisition 46 and considered making him a cardinal In 1830 he resigned and spent a year as spiritual director at the Roman College Kohlmann retired to the Jesuit house attached to the Church of the Gesu in 1831 where he served as confessor aided by his knowledge of several languages 52 In 1833 he met the future theologian Augustin Theiner along with the future cardinal Karl August von Reisach Kohlmann influenced Theiner s decision to convert to Catholicism 53 By 1836 Kohlmann s health had begun to deteriorate 52 and he died on April 11 1836 3 Kohlmann Hall at Fordham University was constructed in 1923 and named in his honor 54 Originally the headquarters of the Jesuit Order s New York province it was later converted into the residence for Jesuits teaching at Fordham Preparatory School 55 Notes Edit The Society of the Sacred Heart was founded by two seminarians Joseph Varin and Joseph de Tournely 6 Its early members were primarily former Jesuits who joined after the suppression of the Society of Jesus in 1773 2 The Society of the Sacred Heart merged into the Society of the Faith of Jesus in 1799 which then disbanded in 1814 7 The socius magistri novitiorum is the associate to the master of novices and is responsible for the day to day affairs of the novices 11 R Luke Concanen was appointed Bishop of New York and consecrated on April 24 1808 but word of his appointment would not reach Carroll until September 24 1808 13 References EditCitations Edit Buckley 2013 p 76 a b c d e Parsons 1918 p 38 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Meehan 1910 a b Shea 1891 p 57 Parsons 1918 p 48 Mayer 1935 pp 24 25 Dudon 1952 pp 341 342 a b c d e f Parsons 1918 p 39 a b Miller et al 2003 p 425 a b c McKevitt 2017 p 64 Gramatowski 2013 p 27 a b c Parsons 1918 p 40 Parsons 1918 pp 40 41 a b c d Parsons 1918 p 41 a b c d Egan Edward June 8 2006 Our History Seven Years and No Bishop Catholic New York Archdiocese of New York Archived from the original on July 4 2020 Retrieved July 4 2020 Parsons 1918 p 43 a b Parsons 1918 p 42 The Catholic Church in the United States of America 1914 p 276 The Catholic Church in the United States of America 1914 p 304 Parsons 1918 pp 41 42 Egan Edward April 12 2007 Our Bicentennial Archdiocese of New York Archived from the original on August 31 2021 Retrieved August 31 2021 a b c Parsons 1918 p 46 a b Parsons 1918 p 45 a b c d Parsons 1918 p 49 The Catholic Church in the United States of America 1914 p 366 Clarke 1872 p 385 a b McGucken 2008 p 72 Parsons 1918 p 44 a b McGucken 2008 p 73 a b c Parsons 1918 p 47 Hill 1922 p 23 Parsons 1918 pp 46 47 Sampson 1813 p 95 Sampson 1813 p 111 Marlin amp Miner 2017 p 22 Curran 1993 p 88 Ramspacher 1962 p 300 a b Curran 1993 p 84 Curran 1993 p 86 Curran 1993 p 87 Curran 1993 p 85 Shea 1891 p 58 Hill 1922 pp 20 21 Hill 1922 p 25 Hill 1922 p 24 a b c d e f g h Parsons 1918 p 50 Hill 1922 p 26 Hill 1922 p 27 Schultz 2011 p 11 Curran 1987 pp 45 46 Curran 1987 p 52 a b Parsons 1918 p 51 Brandt 2003 p 702 As I Remember Fordham 1991 p 202 Kohlmann Hall Fordham University Archived from the original on October 10 2014 Retrieved July 5 2020 Sources Edit As I Remember Fordham Selections from the Sesquicentennial Oral History Project New York Fordham University Press 1991 ISBN 0 8232 1338 2 Archived from the original on July 5 2020 Retrieved July 5 2020 via Google Books Brandt Patricia October 2003 A Character of Extravagance Establishment of the Second Archdiocese in the United States The Catholic Historical Review 89 4 696 711 doi 10 1353 cat 2003 0190 JSTOR 25026463 S2CID 154087812 Buckley Cornelius Michael 2013 Stephen Larigaudelle Dubuisson S J 1786 1864 and the Reform of the American Jesuits Lanham Maryland University Press of America ISBN 9780761862321 Archived from the original on June 26 2020 Retrieved June 26 2020 via Google Books Clarke Richard H 1872 Rt Rev Benedict Joseph Fenwick D D Lives of the Deceased Bishops of the Catholic Church in the United States Vol 1 New York P O Shea pp 374 413 OCLC 809578529 Retrieved May 28 2020 via Internet Archive Curran Robert Emmett January 1987 The Finger of God Is Here The Advent of the Miraculous in the Nineteenth Century American Catholic Community The Catholic Historical Review 73 1 41 61 JSTOR 25022452 Curran Robert Emmett 1993 The Bicentennial History of Georgetown University From Academy to University 1789 1889 Vol 1 Washington D C Georgetown University Press ISBN 978 0 87840 485 8 Archived from the original on July 4 2020 Retrieved July 4 2020 via Google Books Dudon Paul November 1952 The Resurrection of the Society of Jesus PDF Woodstock Letters 81 4 311 360 Archived PDF from the original on September 3 2021 Retrieved September 3 2021 via Jesuit Archives Gramatowski Wiktor 2013 Jesuit Glossary Guide to understanding the documents PDF Translated by Russell Camilla Rome Archivum Romanum Societatis Iesu Archived PDF from the original on July 4 2019 Retrieved June 27 2020 Hill Owen Aloysius 1922 Chapter 1 Rev Anthony Kohlmann S J 1821 1824 Gonzaga College an Historical Sketch From Its Foundation in 1821 to the Solemn Celebration of Its First Centenary in 1921 Washington D C Gonzaga College pp 17 26 OCLC 1266588 Archived from the original on June 26 2020 Retrieved June 26 2020 via Google Books Marlin George J Miner Brad 2017 Sons of Saint Patrick A History of the Archbishops of New York from Dagger John to Timmytown San Francisco Ignatius ISBN 978 1 62164 113 1 Archived from the original on July 5 2020 Retrieved July 5 2020 via Google Books Mayer Louise 1935 The History of the Society of the Sacred Heart in Switzerland from the Foundation in 1830 to the Expulsion in 1847 PDF Master s thesis Loyola University Chicago Paper 290 Archived PDF from the original on June 27 2020 Retrieved June 27 2020 via Loyola eCommons McGucken William J 2008 1st pub 1932 The Jesuits and Education Eugene Oregon Wipf amp Stock ISBN 978 1 60608 183 9 Archived from the original on June 1 2020 Retrieved June 1 2020 via Google Books McKevitt Gerald L 2017 Transatlantic Reinvention 1773 1848 An Old World Accommodates the New In Roberts Kyle B Schloesser Stephen R eds Crossings and Dwellings Restored Jesuits Women Religious American Experience 1814 2014 Leiden Brill pp 51 98 ISBN 978 90 04 34028 2 Archived from the original on June 27 2020 Retrieved June 27 2020 via Google Books Meehan Thomas Francis 1910 Anthony Kohlmann In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 8 New York Robert Appleton Company Miller Kerby A Schrier Arnold Boling Bruce D Doyle David N eds 2003 Irish Immigrants in the Land of Canaan Letters and Memoirs from Colonial and Revolutionary America 1675 1815 New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504513 0 Archived from the original on June 27 2020 Retrieved June 27 2020 via Google Books Parsons J Wilfrid April 1918 Rev Anthony Kohlmann S J 1771 1824 The Catholic Historical Review 4 1 38 51 JSTOR 25011548 Ramspacher Joseph H July 1962 Major Superiors in the Northern United States PDF Woodstock Letters XCI 3 300 303 Archived PDF from the original on February 11 2020 Retrieved July 4 2020 via Jesuit Archives Sampson William 1813 The Catholic Question in America Whether a Roman Catholic Clergyman be in any case compellable to disclose the secrets of Auricular Confession New York Edward Gillespy Archived from the original on July 4 2020 Retrieved July 4 2020 via Google Books Schultz Nancy Lusignan 2011 Mrs Mattingly s Miracle The Prince the Widow and the Cure that Shocked Washington City New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 11846 9 Retrieved July 5 2020 via Internet Archive Shea John Gilmary 1891 Chapter X Father Anthony Kohlmann S J Memorial of the First Century of Georgetown College D C New York P F Collier pp 54 57 OCLC 612832863 Archived from the original on July 4 2020 Retrieved July 4 2020 via Google Books The Catholic Church in the United States of America Undertaken to Celebrate the Golden Jubilee of His Holiness Pope Pius X Vol 3 New York Catholic Editing Company 1914 OCLC 972339830 Retrieved June 1 2020 via Internet Archive Further reading EditGarrity Jim June 27 2012 Religious Freedom at Heart of New York Case Two Centuries Ago Catholic New York Archdiocese of New York Archived from the original on June 26 2020 Retrieved June 26 2020 Joachim Jules 1937 Au berceau de la Compagnie de Jesus renaissante le Pere Antoine Kohlmann S J pere de la foi missionnaire aux Etats Unis professeur au College Romain 1771 1836 in French Paris Editions Alsatia OCLC 64830784 O Toole James M September 1994 From Advent to Easter Catholic Preaching in New York City 1808 1809 Church History 63 3 365 377 doi 10 2307 3167534 JSTOR 3167534 S2CID 162197523 Bibliography Edit Kohlmann Anthony 1821 Unitarianism Philosophically and Theologically Examined 1st ed Washington D C Henry Guegan OCLC 4668988 Archived from the original on July 5 2020 Retrieved July 5 2020 via Google Books Kohlmann Anthony May 1875 Unpublished Letters of Fr Anthony Kohlmann S J with a Short Account of His Life PDF Woodstock Letters 4 2 137 150 Archived PDF from the original on March 9 2020 Retrieved June 26 2020 via Jesuit Archives Kohlmann Anthony April 1906 Exemplar Litterarum P Antonii Kohlmann ad A R P N Datarum Ex Amereica Fœderata A Copy of the Letters of Fr Anthony Kohlmann to the A R P N from the American Federation PDF Woodstock Letters in Latin 35 1 1 10 Archived PDF from the original on June 26 2020 Retrieved June 26 2020 via Jesuit Archives Catholic Church titlesPreceded byMatthew Byrne Pastor of St Peter s Church1808 1815 Succeeded byBenedict Joseph FenwickFirst Vicar General of the Diocese of New York1809 1815 Succeeded byBenedict Joseph FenwickFirst Pastor of St Patrick s Old Cathedral1809 1815with Benedict Joseph Fenwick VacantTitle next held byJohn PowerPreceded byR Luke Concanenas Bishop of New York Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of New York1810 1815 Succeeded byBenedict Joseph FenwickPreceded byGiovanni Antonio Grassi 24th Superior of the Jesuit Maryland Mission1817 1819 Succeeded byPeter KenneyAcademic officesPreceded byBenedict Joseph Fenwick 11th President of Georgetown College1817 1820 Succeeded byEnoch FenwickNew office 1st President of the Washington Seminary1820 1824 Succeeded byAdam Marshall Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Catholicism nbsp Education nbsp Italy nbsp Maryland nbsp New York City nbsp United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anthony Kohlmann amp oldid 1170842269, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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