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American prelate From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jules Benjamin Jeanmard (August 15, 1879 – February 23, 1957), was an American prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as the first Bishop of Lafayette in Louisiana from 1918 to 1956.
Jules Jeanmard | |
---|---|
Bishop of Lafayette in Louisiana titular bishop of Bareta | |
See | Diocese of Lafayette in Louisiana |
In office | 1918–1956 |
Successor | Maurice Schexnayder |
Orders | |
Ordination | June 10, 1903 |
Consecration | December 8, 1919 by Giovanni Bonzano |
Personal details | |
Born | |
Died | February 23, 1957 77) Lake Charles, Louisiana, US | (aged
Buried | St. John Cathedral |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Parents | Jules and Frances Maria (née Brown) Jeanmard |
Education | St. Joseph Seminary Our Lady of Holy Cross College |
Coat of arms |
Jules Jeanmard was born in Breaux Bridge, Louisiana, to Jules and Frances Maria (née Brown) Jeanmard.[1] He received his early education at the parochial school of St. Bernard Parish in Breaux Bridge.[2] He then attended St. Joseph Seminary in Gessen, Louisiana and Our Lady of Holy Cross College in New Orleans.[2] He studied for the priesthood at St. Louis Diocesan Seminary in New Orleans and at Kenrick Seminary in St. Louis, Missouri.[1]
Jeanmard was ordained a priest for the Archdiocese of New Orleans on June 10, 1903.[3] His first assignment was as a curate at St. Louis Cathedral, where he served through the yellow fever epidemic of 1905.[2] He served as secretary to Archbishop James Blenk from 1906 to 1914, and chancellor of the archdiocese from 1914 to 1917.[1] He also served as vicar general for spiritual affairs of the archdiocese.[2] Following the death of Archbishop Blenk, he served as apostolic administrator of New Orleans from 1917 to 1918.[4] He then served as apostolic administrator of the newly erected Diocese of Lafayette.[4]
On July 18, 1918, Jeanmard was appointed the first bishop of the Diocese of Lafayette by Pope Benedict XV.[3] He received his episcopal consecration on December 8, 1918, from Archbishop Giovanni Bonzano, with Bishops Theophile Meerschaert and John Laval serving as co-consecrators.[3] He was the first native Louisianan to become a Catholic bishop.[5]
During his 38-year tenure, Jeanmard established Immaculata Seminary, St. Mary's Orphan Home, Our Lady of the Oaks Retreat House, the Catholic Student Center at the University of Southwestern Louisiana, a retreat wing of the Most Holy Sacrament Convent, a Carmelite monastery, and numerous schools and churches.[6] He encouraged diocesan-sponsored television programs, religious radio programs in both English and French, and a diocesan newspaper The Southwest Louisiana Register.[6] Jeanmard also issued pastoral letters in support of the rights of labor to organize.[6] In 1943, he was named an assistant at the pontifical throne by Pope Pius XII.[2]
In March 1923, when the citizens of Lafayette were on the verge of rioting following a public reading of members of the Ku Klux Klan, Jeanmard encouraged the people to return to their homes.[4][7] In 1934, he welcomed the first African-American priests into the diocese, a group of men educated and ordained at St. Augustine Seminary (Bay St. Louis).[2] Jeanmard also established a number of separate parishes for African-Americans, whom he did not want intimidated or infringed upon by whites.[6] With financial assistance from Katharine Drexel, he helped establish a number of rural parochial schools for African-Americans.[6] In 1952, he became the first bishop in the Deep South to ordain an African-American man to diocesan priesthood when he conferred holy orders upon Louis Ledoux, also a graduate of St. Augustine's. In November 1955, Jeanmard excommunicated two women in Erath, Louisiana, after they beat another woman who taught an integrated catechism class.[4][5]
On March 13, 1956, Jeanmard retired as Bishop of Lafayette; he was appointed titular bishop of Bareta by Pope Pius XII on the same date.[3] He later died at a hospital in Lake Charles, at age 77.[4] He is interred at St. John Cathedral in Lafayette.[2]
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