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Placide Louis Chapelle

Placide Louis Chapelle (August 28, 1842 – August 9, 1905) was a French-born American prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as Archbishop of Santa Fe (1894-1897) and later Archbishop of New Orleans (1897-1905). Following the Spanish–American War, he also served as Apostolic Delegate to Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines.

The Most Reverend

Placide Louis Chapelle
Archbishop of New Orleans
Archbishop of Santa Fe
Chapelle, c. 1903
SeeArchdiocese of New Orleans
AppointedDecember 1, 1897
Term endedAugust 9, 1905 (his death)
PredecessorFrancis Janssens
SuccessorJames Blenk
Other post(s)Apostolic Delegate to Cuba (1898-1905)
Apostolic Delegate to Puerto Rico (1898-1905)
Apostolic Delegate to the Philippines (1899-1901)
Archbishop of Santa Fe (1894-1897)
Coadjutor Archbishop of Santa Fe (1891-1894)
Orders
OrdinationJune 28, 1865
by Martin John Spalding
ConsecrationNovember 1, 1891
by James Gibbons
Personal details
Born(1842-08-28)August 28, 1842
DiedAugust 9, 1905(1905-08-09) (aged 62)
New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.
Coat of arms

Early life and education Edit

Chapelle was born in Fraissinet-de-Lozère to Jean Pierre and Sophia (née Viala) Chapelle.[1] His mother died in childbirth in 1847, when Chapelle was five years old.[2] He received his early education in Mende and completed his classical studies at Collège Saint-Augustin in Enghien, Belgium.

At age 17, he was brought to the United States by his uncle Jean Chapelle, a missionary priest in Haiti who worked on the Vatican's concordat with the Haitian government and was on the eve of being appointed Archbishop of Port-au-Prince before his death in 1861.[3][4] He studied for the priesthood at St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore, graduating in 1863. At that point he was still too young to be ordained and therefore taught at St. Charles College for two years.[5]

Priesthood Edit

Chapelle was ordained a priest on June 28, 1865 by Archbishop Martin John Spalding.[6] His first assignment was as pastor of St. Mary's Church in Rockville, which included several missions throughout Montgomery County. One of his assistant pastors was Jeremiah O'Sullivan, later Bishop of Mobile (1885-1896).[7] While there he furthered his studies at St. Mary's Seminary and earned a doctorate in theology in 1868. His educational pursuits led his parishioners in Rockville to petition Archbishop Spalding for a new pastor, complaining that Chapelle was "invisible during the week and incomprehensible on Sundays."[8]

Archbishop Spalding took a great interest in Chapelle and brought him to the First Vatican Council (1869-1870) as a theological consultant.[5] After returning from Rome, he served as assistant pastor of St. John's Church in Baltimore before becoming pastor of St. Joseph's Church in the same city in 1871. The following year, in addition to his pastoral duties, he was appointed president of the theological conferences in Baltimore, which were held every three months.

Chapelle was sent to Washington, D.C. in 1882 to serve as pastor of St. Matthew's Church, where he remained until he became a bishop in 1891. St. Matthew's was considered a prestigious post, as it was the place of worship for many government officials and foreign diplomats.[3] He was instrumental in organizing the Catholic University of America, purchasing the land where it still stands and recruiting President Grover Cleveland to attend the laying of the cornerstone in 1888.[3] He also served as vice president of the Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions (1886-1891).[5]

In 1885, Cardinal Giovanni Simeoni, the head of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith, assigned Cardinal James Gibbons of Baltimore to investigate the administrative disorders of the Archdiocese of New Orleans, which had fallen into considerable debt.[9] Gibbons chose Chapelle as his secretary for the investigation, and Archbishop Francis Xavier Leray was so impressed with Chapelle that he requested to have him for a coadjutor bishop.[9] However, after Leray died in 1887, he was instead replaced by Francis Janssens.

Archbishop of Santa Fe Edit

On August 21, 1891, Chapelle was appointed by Pope Leo XIII to be Coadjutor Archbishop with the right of succession to Jean-Baptiste Salpointe, the aging Archbishop of Santa Fe.[6] He was also given the title of titular bishop of Arabissus. He received his episcopal consecration on the following November 1 from Cardinal James Gibbons, with Archbishop Salpointe and Bishop John Joseph Kain serving as co-consecrators, at the Cathedral of Baltimore.[6] A year later, in November 1892, Chapelle became a naturalized U.S. citizen.[10]

Upon Salpointe's retirement on January 7, 1894, Chapelle succeeded him as the third Archbishop of Santa Fe. That same year he persuaded Saint Katharine Drexel to reopen St. Catherine's Indian School, a boarding school for Native American children in Santa Fe, under the control of the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament.[11] He consecrated the then-unfinished Cathedral of St. Francis of Assisi in October 1895.[12] He confirmed approximately 40,000 people during his six years in New Mexico.[3]

In civic affairs, Chapelle was an early supporter of the cause for New Mexico's statehood (which would be accomplished in 1912), saying in 1894, "As it is, we have no voice in the election of governor, judges or any other officials of importance, and we think we have a right to this."[13]

Archbishop of New Orleans Edit

Francis Janssens, who had been chosen over Chapelle to lead the Archdiocese of New Orleans a decade earlier, died in June 1897. Fifteen days after Janssens' death, Chapelle had an audience with Pope Leo XIII, who made it clear that he intended to appoint Chapelle to the post.[14] The priests of New Orleans also put forward Chapelle's name as their top choice for a new archbishop.[14] However, the local bishops of the province instead suggested the Belgian-born Bishop Camillus Paul Maes or the Irish-born Bishops Thomas Heslin and John J. Keane. The New Orleans clergy were determined to have a French leader for the largely French-speaking archdiocese, and enlisted French President Félix Faure to lobby on Chapelle's behalf to Rome.[15] Chapelle was officially appointed the sixth Archbishop of New Orleans on December 1, 1897.[6]

Over the course of his tenure, he succeeded in finally paying off the debt that had long plagued the Archdiocese of New Orleans, which had fallen from $590,000 when he visited with Cardinal Gibbons in 1885[9] to $135,000 when he assumed charge in 1898.[16] The debt was erased by the end of 1903, but not without complaint from his priests about the new tax he imposed on them.[17] Chapelle also reopened the diocesan seminary, which had closed due to financial pressure in 1881.[16]

However, most of Chapelle's time as archbishop was focused on his diplomatic missions. Due to his prolonged absences from New Orleans, he received Gustave Augustin Rouxel as an auxiliary bishop in February 1899 to tend to the archdiocese's pastoral needs.

Vatican diplomat Edit

Cuba and Puerto Rico Edit

Following the American victory in the Spanish–American War, and less than a year after his appointment to New Orleans, Chapelle was named Apostolic Delegate to Cuba on September 16, 1898 and Apostolic Delegate to Puerto Rico on the following October 11.[6] In these roles, he was commissioned by the Vatican to participate in the negotiations of the 1898 Treaty of Paris.[18] Under the treaty, which was signed on December 10 that year, Spain ceded the heavily Catholic colonies of Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the Philippines to the United States. Chapelle was credited with the clause in Article 8 guaranteeing the Church's right to keep its properties in those territories.[18]

Chapelle visited Cuba and Puerto Rico in early 1899 to report on the Church's conditions there and suggest a plan for reorganization.[3] In July of that year, he consecrated the two bishops he had recommended to the Vatican: Francisco de Paula Barnada y Aguilar as Archbishop of Santiago and James Blenk (who would succeed him as Archbishop of New Orleans) as Bishop of Puerto Rico.[16]

Philippines Edit

Given Chapelle's success in Cuba and Puerto Rico, another former Spanish colony was soon added to his diplomatic portfolio. In addition to his duties in New Orleans, Cuba, and Puerto Rico, he was appointed Apostolic Delegate to Philippines on September 28, 1899.[6] His mission in the Philippines was particularly difficult due to the Philippine–American War, focusing primarily on the displacement of Spanish friars in the Philippines.

The Spanish friars had owned 400,000 acres of land that were leased to Filipino peasants under prohibitive rents.[19] When the Treaty of Paris rejected the Philippine Declaration of Independence and annexed the Philippines to the United States, it also protected the property rights of the Church (and therefore the friars) — thanks in part to Chapelle's contributions. This helped fuel the Philippine Revolution, during which the friars were driven from their churches and their property was confiscated by Emilio Aguinaldo and his fellow revolutionaries.[19]

Upon arriving in Manila in January 1900,[16] Chapelle sought to restore the friars to their former positions under American protection. However, he met resistance from General Elwell Stephen Otis, the military governor of the Philippines, who believed that reinstating the friars would get them killed and usually turned any recovered Church property over to local civil authorities.[20] Chapelle protested this policy, accusing General Otis' advisers of being "animated with a narrow-minded spirit of hostility to the Catholic Church, whilst they should look at the question presented to them from a disinterested and American point of view."[20]

Nor did Chapelle find an ally in the civilian governor (and future U.S. President), William Howard Taft, who wrote to Maria Longworth Storer to say, "Archbishop Chapelle has become absolutely identified with the Friars...I do not think it was necessary for him to get into this position, but that is where he is, and while, of course, his sacerdotal office compels respect, politically he has no force whatever."[20] Chapelle's refusal to compromise on the issue of the friars' land cost him a good deal of political influence. Writing to Cardinal Gibbons in August 1901, Archbishop John Ireland said, "From the general tone of Cardinal Rampolla's letters, I can see that Abp. Chapelle does not count for much. At any rate, the American government will be much displeased, as Mr. Root said to me, to see [Chapelle] return to Manila."[9] Before departing his post, Chapelle wrote to Taft to declare the commission "has taken, unconsciously perhaps, indirectly surely, a hostile attitude towards the Catholic Church and her interests."[21]

Chapelle's actions were seen as worsening relations between the Church and the Filipinos, and his mission was regarded by many as a failure.[9][19][20] However, he had support from figures like Cardinal Lucido Parocchi, who described Chapelle as "an angel of Providence to the Philippines."[3] Nevertheless, after Chapelle departed for Rome in April 1901 to report on his mission, he was relieved of his duties in the Philippines and was replaced by Donato Sbarretti.[20] Meanwhile, he retained his positions as Archbishop of New Orleans and Apostolic Delegate to Cuba and Puerto Rico.

Later life and death Edit

During the summer of 1905, Chapelle contracted yellow fever after completing his first confirmation tour around the archdiocese since his appointment to New Orleans.[16] He died on August 9, 1905, at age 62. He is buried at St. Louis Cathedral.

Following his death, President Theodore Roosevelt sent the following telegram to Cardinal Gibbons: "I am deeply shocked and grieved at the death of my beloved friend, Archbishop Chapelle. His death is one of the most lamentable losses in the course of the outbreak of fever in New Orleans, which is causing much sympathy and concern throughout the nation."[22]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Lozère Archives". Filae.com.(registration required)
  2. ^ "Lozère Archives". Filae.com.(registration required)
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Archbishop Chapelle". Messenger. New York. 44. 1905.
  4. ^ "Haïti, état civil, 1794-2012," database with images, FamilySearch (https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:ZGTH-QTMM : 31 May 2022), Jean Chapel, 9 Sep 1861; citing Death Registration, Port-au-Prince, Ouest, Haïti, Louis August Barthelemy, The National Archives of the Republic of Haiti, Port-au-Prince.
  5. ^ a b c The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography. Vol. VII. New York: James T. White & Company. 1897.
  6. ^ a b c d e f "Archbishop Placide Louis Chapelle". Catholic-Hierarchy.org.
  7. ^ Owen, Thomas McAdory (1921). History of Alabama and Dictionary of Alabama Biography. Vol. IV. Chicago: The S.J. Clarke Publishing Company.
  8. ^ "HISTORY OF ST. PATRICK'S". St. Patrick Catholic Church.
  9. ^ a b c d e Ellis, John Tracy (1952). The Life of James Cardinal Gibbons. Milwaukee, Wis.: Bruce Pub. Co.
  10. ^ "BISHOP CHAPELLE". The Santa Fe New Mexican. November 4, 1892.
  11. ^ "ST. CATHERINE SCHOOL". The Santa Fe New Mexican. May 7, 1894.
  12. ^ "CATHEDRAL BASILICA OF SAINT FRANCIS". SAH Archipedia. 17 July 2018.
  13. ^ "The Archbishop on Statehood". The Santa Fe New Mexican. June 4, 1894.
  14. ^ a b "CHAPELLE IS NAMED". The Assumption Pioneer. Napoleonville, LA. December 4, 1897.
  15. ^ "NEW FIELD OF LABOR: Archbishop Chapelle to Take Charge of the New Orleans Diocese". Las Vegas Daily Optic. November 29, 1897.
  16. ^ a b c d e "ARCHBISHOP CHAPELLE PASSES TO HIS REWARD". The Times-Democrat. New Orleans, LA. August 10, 1905.
  17. ^ "Chapelle, Placide Louis". Encyclopedia.com. New Catholic Encyclopedia.
  18. ^ a b Uria, Ignacio (2022). Crisis and Renewal in the Cuban Catholic Church during the First American Occupation: The Role of Apostolic Delegate Placide Chapelle, 1898-1905 (Thesis). Papers of the American Society of Church History.
  19. ^ a b c Stover, Earl F. (1977). Up from Handymen: The United States Army Chaplaincy, 1865-1920. Washington, D.C.: Office of the Chief of Chaplains, Department of the Army.
  20. ^ a b c d e Reuter, Frank T. (2014). Catholic Influence on American Colonial Policies, 1898-1904. University of Texas Press.
  21. ^ Pringle, Henry F. (1939). The Life & Times of William Howard Taft.
  22. ^ "Tribute From the President". The Washington Star. August 10, 1905.

External links Edit

  • Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Placide-Louis Chapelle" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by  
Archbishop of Santa Fe

1894–1897
Succeeded by
Preceded by  
Archbishop of New Orleans

1897–1905
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Creation of Delegation
Apostolic Delegate to the Philippines
1900–1901
Succeeded by

placide, louis, chapelle, august, 1842, august, 1905, french, born, american, prelate, catholic, church, served, archbishop, santa, 1894, 1897, later, archbishop, orleans, 1897, 1905, following, spanish, american, also, served, apostolic, delegate, cuba, puert. Placide Louis Chapelle August 28 1842 August 9 1905 was a French born American prelate of the Catholic Church He served as Archbishop of Santa Fe 1894 1897 and later Archbishop of New Orleans 1897 1905 Following the Spanish American War he also served as Apostolic Delegate to Cuba Puerto Rico and the Philippines The Most ReverendPlacide Louis ChapelleArchbishop of New Orleans Archbishop of Santa FeChapelle c 1903SeeArchdiocese of New OrleansAppointedDecember 1 1897Term endedAugust 9 1905 his death PredecessorFrancis JanssensSuccessorJames BlenkOther post s Apostolic Delegate to Cuba 1898 1905 Apostolic Delegate to Puerto Rico 1898 1905 Apostolic Delegate to the Philippines 1899 1901 Archbishop of Santa Fe 1894 1897 Coadjutor Archbishop of Santa Fe 1891 1894 OrdersOrdinationJune 28 1865by Martin John SpaldingConsecrationNovember 1 1891by James GibbonsPersonal detailsBorn 1842 08 28 August 28 1842Fraissinet de Lozere Lozere FranceDiedAugust 9 1905 1905 08 09 aged 62 New Orleans Louisiana U S Coat of arms Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Priesthood 3 Archbishop of Santa Fe 4 Archbishop of New Orleans 5 Vatican diplomat 5 1 Cuba and Puerto Rico 5 2 Philippines 6 Later life and death 7 References 8 External linksEarly life and education EditChapelle was born in Fraissinet de Lozere to Jean Pierre and Sophia nee Viala Chapelle 1 His mother died in childbirth in 1847 when Chapelle was five years old 2 He received his early education in Mende and completed his classical studies at College Saint Augustin in Enghien Belgium At age 17 he was brought to the United States by his uncle Jean Chapelle a missionary priest in Haiti who worked on the Vatican s concordat with the Haitian government and was on the eve of being appointed Archbishop of Port au Prince before his death in 1861 3 4 He studied for the priesthood at St Mary s Seminary in Baltimore graduating in 1863 At that point he was still too young to be ordained and therefore taught at St Charles College for two years 5 Priesthood EditChapelle was ordained a priest on June 28 1865 by Archbishop Martin John Spalding 6 His first assignment was as pastor of St Mary s Church in Rockville which included several missions throughout Montgomery County One of his assistant pastors was Jeremiah O Sullivan later Bishop of Mobile 1885 1896 7 While there he furthered his studies at St Mary s Seminary and earned a doctorate in theology in 1868 His educational pursuits led his parishioners in Rockville to petition Archbishop Spalding for a new pastor complaining that Chapelle was invisible during the week and incomprehensible on Sundays 8 Archbishop Spalding took a great interest in Chapelle and brought him to the First Vatican Council 1869 1870 as a theological consultant 5 After returning from Rome he served as assistant pastor of St John s Church in Baltimore before becoming pastor of St Joseph s Church in the same city in 1871 The following year in addition to his pastoral duties he was appointed president of the theological conferences in Baltimore which were held every three months Chapelle was sent to Washington D C in 1882 to serve as pastor of St Matthew s Church where he remained until he became a bishop in 1891 St Matthew s was considered a prestigious post as it was the place of worship for many government officials and foreign diplomats 3 He was instrumental in organizing the Catholic University of America purchasing the land where it still stands and recruiting President Grover Cleveland to attend the laying of the cornerstone in 1888 3 He also served as vice president of the Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions 1886 1891 5 In 1885 Cardinal Giovanni Simeoni the head of the Congregation for the Propagation of the Faith assigned Cardinal James Gibbons of Baltimore to investigate the administrative disorders of the Archdiocese of New Orleans which had fallen into considerable debt 9 Gibbons chose Chapelle as his secretary for the investigation and Archbishop Francis Xavier Leray was so impressed with Chapelle that he requested to have him for a coadjutor bishop 9 However after Leray died in 1887 he was instead replaced by Francis Janssens Archbishop of Santa Fe EditOn August 21 1891 Chapelle was appointed by Pope Leo XIII to be Coadjutor Archbishop with the right of succession to Jean Baptiste Salpointe the aging Archbishop of Santa Fe 6 He was also given the title of titular bishop of Arabissus He received his episcopal consecration on the following November 1 from Cardinal James Gibbons with Archbishop Salpointe and Bishop John Joseph Kain serving as co consecrators at the Cathedral of Baltimore 6 A year later in November 1892 Chapelle became a naturalized U S citizen 10 Upon Salpointe s retirement on January 7 1894 Chapelle succeeded him as the third Archbishop of Santa Fe That same year he persuaded Saint Katharine Drexel to reopen St Catherine s Indian School a boarding school for Native American children in Santa Fe under the control of the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament 11 He consecrated the then unfinished Cathedral of St Francis of Assisi in October 1895 12 He confirmed approximately 40 000 people during his six years in New Mexico 3 In civic affairs Chapelle was an early supporter of the cause for New Mexico s statehood which would be accomplished in 1912 saying in 1894 As it is we have no voice in the election of governor judges or any other officials of importance and we think we have a right to this 13 Archbishop of New Orleans EditFrancis Janssens who had been chosen over Chapelle to lead the Archdiocese of New Orleans a decade earlier died in June 1897 Fifteen days after Janssens death Chapelle had an audience with Pope Leo XIII who made it clear that he intended to appoint Chapelle to the post 14 The priests of New Orleans also put forward Chapelle s name as their top choice for a new archbishop 14 However the local bishops of the province instead suggested the Belgian born Bishop Camillus Paul Maes or the Irish born Bishops Thomas Heslin and John J Keane The New Orleans clergy were determined to have a French leader for the largely French speaking archdiocese and enlisted French President Felix Faure to lobby on Chapelle s behalf to Rome 15 Chapelle was officially appointed the sixth Archbishop of New Orleans on December 1 1897 6 Over the course of his tenure he succeeded in finally paying off the debt that had long plagued the Archdiocese of New Orleans which had fallen from 590 000 when he visited with Cardinal Gibbons in 1885 9 to 135 000 when he assumed charge in 1898 16 The debt was erased by the end of 1903 but not without complaint from his priests about the new tax he imposed on them 17 Chapelle also reopened the diocesan seminary which had closed due to financial pressure in 1881 16 However most of Chapelle s time as archbishop was focused on his diplomatic missions Due to his prolonged absences from New Orleans he received Gustave Augustin Rouxel as an auxiliary bishop in February 1899 to tend to the archdiocese s pastoral needs Vatican diplomat EditCuba and Puerto Rico Edit Following the American victory in the Spanish American War and less than a year after his appointment to New Orleans Chapelle was named Apostolic Delegate to Cuba on September 16 1898 and Apostolic Delegate to Puerto Rico on the following October 11 6 In these roles he was commissioned by the Vatican to participate in the negotiations of the 1898 Treaty of Paris 18 Under the treaty which was signed on December 10 that year Spain ceded the heavily Catholic colonies of Cuba Puerto Rico and the Philippines to the United States Chapelle was credited with the clause in Article 8 guaranteeing the Church s right to keep its properties in those territories 18 Chapelle visited Cuba and Puerto Rico in early 1899 to report on the Church s conditions there and suggest a plan for reorganization 3 In July of that year he consecrated the two bishops he had recommended to the Vatican Francisco de Paula Barnada y Aguilar as Archbishop of Santiago and James Blenk who would succeed him as Archbishop of New Orleans as Bishop of Puerto Rico 16 Philippines Edit Given Chapelle s success in Cuba and Puerto Rico another former Spanish colony was soon added to his diplomatic portfolio In addition to his duties in New Orleans Cuba and Puerto Rico he was appointed Apostolic Delegate to Philippines on September 28 1899 6 His mission in the Philippines was particularly difficult due to the Philippine American War focusing primarily on the displacement of Spanish friars in the Philippines The Spanish friars had owned 400 000 acres of land that were leased to Filipino peasants under prohibitive rents 19 When the Treaty of Paris rejected the Philippine Declaration of Independence and annexed the Philippines to the United States it also protected the property rights of the Church and therefore the friars thanks in part to Chapelle s contributions This helped fuel the Philippine Revolution during which the friars were driven from their churches and their property was confiscated by Emilio Aguinaldo and his fellow revolutionaries 19 Upon arriving in Manila in January 1900 16 Chapelle sought to restore the friars to their former positions under American protection However he met resistance from General Elwell Stephen Otis the military governor of the Philippines who believed that reinstating the friars would get them killed and usually turned any recovered Church property over to local civil authorities 20 Chapelle protested this policy accusing General Otis advisers of being animated with a narrow minded spirit of hostility to the Catholic Church whilst they should look at the question presented to them from a disinterested and American point of view 20 Nor did Chapelle find an ally in the civilian governor and future U S President William Howard Taft who wrote to Maria Longworth Storer to say Archbishop Chapelle has become absolutely identified with the Friars I do not think it was necessary for him to get into this position but that is where he is and while of course his sacerdotal office compels respect politically he has no force whatever 20 Chapelle s refusal to compromise on the issue of the friars land cost him a good deal of political influence Writing to Cardinal Gibbons in August 1901 Archbishop John Ireland said From the general tone of Cardinal Rampolla s letters I can see that Abp Chapelle does not count for much At any rate the American government will be much displeased as Mr Root said to me to see Chapelle return to Manila 9 Before departing his post Chapelle wrote to Taft to declare the commission has taken unconsciously perhaps indirectly surely a hostile attitude towards the Catholic Church and her interests 21 Chapelle s actions were seen as worsening relations between the Church and the Filipinos and his mission was regarded by many as a failure 9 19 20 However he had support from figures like Cardinal Lucido Parocchi who described Chapelle as an angel of Providence to the Philippines 3 Nevertheless after Chapelle departed for Rome in April 1901 to report on his mission he was relieved of his duties in the Philippines and was replaced by Donato Sbarretti 20 Meanwhile he retained his positions as Archbishop of New Orleans and Apostolic Delegate to Cuba and Puerto Rico Later life and death EditDuring the summer of 1905 Chapelle contracted yellow fever after completing his first confirmation tour around the archdiocese since his appointment to New Orleans 16 He died on August 9 1905 at age 62 He is buried at St Louis Cathedral Following his death President Theodore Roosevelt sent the following telegram to Cardinal Gibbons I am deeply shocked and grieved at the death of my beloved friend Archbishop Chapelle His death is one of the most lamentable losses in the course of the outbreak of fever in New Orleans which is causing much sympathy and concern throughout the nation 22 References Edit Lozere Archives Filae com registration required Lozere Archives Filae com registration required a b c d e f Archbishop Chapelle Messenger New York 44 1905 Haiti etat civil 1794 2012 database with images FamilySearch https www familysearch org ark 61903 1 1 ZGTH QTMM 31 May 2022 Jean Chapel 9 Sep 1861 citing Death Registration Port au Prince Ouest Haiti Louis August Barthelemy The National Archives of the Republic of Haiti Port au Prince a b c The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography Vol VII New York James T White amp Company 1897 a b c d e f Archbishop Placide Louis Chapelle Catholic Hierarchy org Owen Thomas McAdory 1921 History of Alabama and Dictionary of Alabama Biography Vol IV Chicago The S J Clarke Publishing Company HISTORY OF ST PATRICK S St Patrick Catholic Church a b c d e Ellis John Tracy 1952 The Life of James Cardinal Gibbons Milwaukee Wis Bruce Pub Co BISHOP CHAPELLE The Santa Fe New Mexican November 4 1892 ST CATHERINE SCHOOL The Santa Fe New Mexican May 7 1894 CATHEDRAL BASILICA OF SAINT FRANCIS SAH Archipedia 17 July 2018 The Archbishop on Statehood The Santa Fe New Mexican June 4 1894 a b CHAPELLE IS NAMED The Assumption Pioneer Napoleonville LA December 4 1897 NEW FIELD OF LABOR Archbishop Chapelle to Take Charge of the New Orleans Diocese Las Vegas Daily Optic November 29 1897 a b c d e ARCHBISHOP CHAPELLE PASSES TO HIS REWARD The Times Democrat New Orleans LA August 10 1905 Chapelle Placide Louis Encyclopedia com New Catholic Encyclopedia a b Uria Ignacio 2022 Crisis and Renewal in the Cuban Catholic Church during the First American Occupation The Role of Apostolic Delegate Placide Chapelle 1898 1905 Thesis Papers of the American Society of Church History a b c Stover Earl F 1977 Up from Handymen The United States Army Chaplaincy 1865 1920 Washington D C Office of the Chief of Chaplains Department of the Army a b c d e Reuter Frank T 2014 Catholic Influence on American Colonial Policies 1898 1904 University of Texas Press Pringle Henry F 1939 The Life amp Times of William Howard Taft Tribute From the President The Washington Star August 10 1905 External links EditHerbermann Charles ed 1913 Placide Louis Chapelle Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Catholic Church titlesPreceded byJean Baptiste Salpointe nbsp Archbishop of Santa Fe1894 1897 Succeeded byPeter BourgadePreceded byFrancis Janssens nbsp Archbishop of New Orleans1897 1905 Succeeded byJames Blenk S M Preceded byCreation of Delegation Apostolic Delegate to the Philippines1900 1901 Succeeded byDonato Sbarretti Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Placide Louis Chapelle amp oldid 1157098698, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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