James Roosevelt Bayley

James Roosevelt Bayley (August 23, 1814 – October 3, 1877) was an American prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as the first Bishop of Newark (1853–1872) and the eighth Archbishop of Baltimore (1872–1877).

The Most Reverend

James Roosevelt Bayley
Archbishop of Baltimore
SeeBaltimore
AppointedJune 30, 1872
InstalledOctober 13, 1872
Term endedOctober 3, 1877
PredecessorMartin John Spalding
SuccessorJames Gibbons
Orders
OrdinationMarch 2, 1844
by John Hughes
ConsecrationOctober 30, 1853
by Gaetano Bedini
Personal details
Born(1814-08-23)August 23, 1814
New York, New York
DiedOctober 3, 1877(1877-10-03) (aged 63)
Newark, New Jersey
BuriedNational Shrine of St. Elizabeth Ann Seton
DenominationRoman Catholic Church
Previous postBishop of Newark (1853–72)

Early life and education

Bayley was born in New York City, to Guy Carlton Bayley and Grace Roosevelt. His father was the son of Dr. Richard Bayley, a professor at Columbia College who created New York's quarantine system; and the brother of Elizabeth Ann Seton, who was canonized in 1975 as the first American-born Roman Catholic saint.[1] His mother was the daughter of Jacobus Roosevelt and Maria Eliza Walton. The eldest of four children, he had two brothers, Carlton and William, and a sister, Maria Eliza.[2] He was a first cousin to James Roosevelt I, the father of future President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and distantly related to future President Theodore Roosevelt via his mother's family.[3]

Bayley received his early education at the Mount Pleasant Classical Institute in Amherst, Massachusetts. He once considered a career on the sea, hoping to become a midshipman in the U.S. Navy, but later abandoned these plans.[1] He attended Washington College in Hartford, Connecticut, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in 1835.[4] Raised as a Protestant, he decided to enter the Episcopal ministry and studied under the Rev. Samuel Farmar Jarvis in Middletown.[5]

Bayley was ordained a priest in the Episcopal Church on February 14, 1840.[6] He then served as rector of St. Andrew's Church in the Harlem neighborhood of New York City.[2]

Conversion

Bayley was influenced by the Oxford Movement and his reading of the Early Church Fathers.[7] While serving at St. Andrew's, Bayley became acquainted with a Catholic priest named John McCloskey, who would later become Archbishop of New York and the first American cardinal, and became increasingly drawn to Catholicism.[4] He briefly served as rector of St. John's Church in Hagerstown, Maryland, before traveling to Rome, where he was received into the Catholic Church at the Church of the Gesù.[6] He received a conditional baptism on April 19, 1842, and received Confirmation and First Communion on the following April 28.[2]

Bayley traveled throughout Europe for over a year following his conversion and entered the Seminary of Saint-Sulpice in Paris in August 1843.[5] He returned to New York and there completed his studies at St. John's College (Fordham University after 1907) in Fordham.[8]

Catholic priesthood

On March 2, 1844, Bayley was ordained a Catholic priest by Bishop John Hughes at St. Patrick's Cathedral.[9] His maternal grandfather, who had made Bayley heir of his large fortune, removed him from his will after his ordination.[3][10] He was appointed vice-president of St. John's College, where he also served as professor of rhetoric and belles-lettres.[2] He was acting president in 1846 and later served as a pastor in New Brighton, Staten Island. From 1848 to 1853, he was private secretary to Bishop Hughes.[6] He published "A Brief Sketch of the Early History of the Catholic Church on the Island of New York" in 1853.[1]

First Bishop of Newark

Archbishop Bayley portrait (circa 1876)

When the Diocese of Newark was established he was named its first bishop and consecrated October 30, 1853,[9] in St. Patrick's Cathedral, New York, by Archbishop Gaetano Bedini, the Apostolic Nuncio to Brazil, who was then en route to Rome. The Bishops of Brooklyn and Burlington—whose dioceses were likewise erected in 1853—were consecrated at the same time, the first occurrence of such an elaborate ceremony in the United States.

The new diocese comprised the entire state of New Jersey. Bayley's work of organizing the diocese was not easy. He had more than 40,000 Catholics, mainly of Irish and German extraction, with only twenty-five priests to minister to them. There was not a single diocesan institution, no funds, and poverty on all sides. He, therefore, applied for help to the Association of the Propagation of the Faith of Lyons, France, and to the Leopoldine Association of Vienna and from both received material assistance.

Bayley's mission for the fledgling Diocese was to establish Catholic education, as he said: "In our present position, the schoolhouse has become second in importance to the House of God itself. ... [Our ambition is to have] every Catholic child in the state in a Catholic school." Bayley realized that in order to be effective in his mission he needed the help of a Diocesan community; as he put it, "no one can fill that most important office so effectually as religious women." In 1857 a group of Benedictine Sisters arrived from Pennsylvania and in the following year, Bayley sent five women to train with the Sisters of Charity. Many other communities of religious men and women joined the Diocese in the next decades.

Bayley saw need for a Catholic college, and on September 1, 1856, the need was filled by the opening of Chegary Academy (Old Seton Hall) in Madison.[11] In 1860 the school moved to its present location in South Orange and was incorporated into a college by the state of New Jersey in 1861. The College also had a seminary which was necessary for educating new priests. Despite the original need, the number of new recruits exceeded the abilities of the seminary. Bayley was instrumental in the founding of the North American College in Rome at the request of Pope Pius IX, where he sent a young seminarian by the name of Michael Corrigan.

In a letter Bayley wrote on April 10, 1865, reviewing the condition of the diocese after his first ten years there he says:

I find that while the Catholic population has increased a third, the churches and priests have doubled in number. In 1854 there was no religious community. Now we have a monastery of Benedictines, another of Passionists, a mother-house of Sisters of Charity, conducting seventeen different establishments; two convents of Benedictine nuns, two others of German Sisters of Notre Dame and two others of the Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis. In 1854 there was no institution of learning; to-day we have a flourishing college and a diocesan seminary, an academy for young ladies, a boarding school for boys, and parish schools attached to almost all the parishes.

In addition to these he introduced the Jesuits and the Sisters of St. Joseph and of St. Dominic into the diocese.

Bayley was one of the strongest upholders of the temperance movement of the seventies. He made several journeys to Rome and the Holy Land, attending the canonization of the Japanese martyrs at Rome in 1862; the centenary of the Apostles in 1867; and the ecumenical Council in 1869.

Bishop Bayley served the developing Diocese for 19 years until he was appointed Archbishop of Baltimore on July 30, 1872.

Archbishop of Baltimore

Archbishop Bayley

At the death of Archbishop Spalding of Baltimore, Bayley was promoted, on July 30, 1872, to succeed that prelate. He left Newark with much reluctance. In 1875 as Apostolic Delegate he imposed the cardinal's biretta on Archbishop John McCloskey of New York. In May, 1876, he consecrated the Baltimore cathedral, having freed it from debt.

Convening the Eighth Provincial Synod of the clergy in August 1875, Bayley enacted many salutary regulations, particularly with regard to clerical dress, mixed marriages, and church music. Illness obliged him to ask for a coadjutor and Bishop James Gibbons of Richmond was appointed to that position on May 29, 1877. The archbishop then went abroad to seek for relief but in vain. He returned to his former home in Newark in August 1877 and after lingering for two months died in his old room, where he had labored for so long, on October 3, 1877.[9]

Shortly before Bayley died he spoke of himself by saying, "I am Archbishop; I have been Bishop; but I like Father Bayley best of all." At his own request he was buried beside his aunt, Mother Seton, at the convent at Emmitsburg, Maryland.

In conversation, Bayley once told the ultramontane Bishop Michael Corrigan that before his conversion he thought of becoming a Jesuit, and before his consecration a Redemptorist, but from both intentions his director dissuaded him. In addition to the volume on the Church on New York he wrote the Memoirs of Simon Gabriel Brute, First Bishop of Vincennes (New York, 1855), about Simon Bruté.

Episcopal Lineage and Apostolic Succession

References

  1. "James Roosevelt Bayley". Catholic Encyclopedia.
  2. Clarke, Richard Henry (1888). Lives of the Deceased Bishops of the Catholic Church in the United States. III. New York.
  3. McNamara, Pat (2011-06-20). "The Setons, the Bayleys, and the Roosevelts". Patheos. Archived from the original on 2012-10-13. Retrieved 2011-08-03.
  4. "Most Rev. James Roosevelt Bayley". Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore. Archived from the original on 2010-12-12. Retrieved 2011-08-03.
  5. Shea, John Gilmary (1886). The Hierarchy of the Catholic Church in the United States. New York: Catholic Publications.
  6. "Shepherds of the Seminary". Seton Hall University.
  7. Yeager, M. Hildegarde. The Life of James Roosevelt Bayley, Catholic University Press, 1947
  8. "Bishop James Roosevelt Bayley, D.D." Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Newark.
  9. "Shepherds of the Seminary", Seton Hall University
  10. "James Roosevelt Bayley, 1849", Newspapers
  11. Kupke, Raymond. "James Roosevelt Bayley", The Encyclopedia of American Catholic History
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
erected
Bishop of Newark
1853–1872
Succeeded by
Michael A. Corrigan
Preceded by
Martin John Spalding
Archbishop of Baltimore
1872–1877
Succeeded by
James Gibbons
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