Edmund Gleeson
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Edmund Gleeson CSsR | |
|---|---|
| Bishop of Diocese of Maitland | |
| Diocese | Maitland |
| Installed | 28 March 1931 |
| Term ended | 4 March 1956 |
| Predecessor | Patrick Vincent Dwyer |
| Successor | John Thomas Toohey |
| Other post | Titular Bishop of Vatarba (1929–1931) |
| Orders | |
| Ordination | 1 December 1918 at St Carthage's Cathedral, Lismore by John Joseph Carroll |
| Consecration | 30 August 1931 at St Carthage's Cathedral, Lismore by Bartolomeo Cattaneo |
| Personal details | |
| Born | Edmund John Aloysius Gleeson 15 January 1869 Dualla, County Tipperary, Ireland |
| Died | 4 March 1956 (aged 87) Mayfield, New South Wales, Australia |
| Nationality | Irish |
| Denomination | Catholic Church |
| Occupation | Catholic bishop |
| Motto | Passio Christi Conforta me (Passion of Christ strengthen me) |
Edmund John Aloysius Gleeson CSsR (15 January 1869 – 4 March 1956) was an Australian bishop of the Catholic Church. He was Bishop of Maitland for 25 years and also served as the head of the Redemptorists in Australia 17 years.
Gleeson was born in Dualla, Ireland in 1869. He came from a highly religious family. While his father was a farmer and blacksmith, three of his uncles were lay brothers of the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer. Gleeson was the eldest of five children born to Timothy Gleeson and all four pursued a religious vocation. Two of his sisters became nuns in Australia (one with the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart and the other with the Sisters of Mercy) and one brother became a lay brother at the Redemptorist Monastery, Mayfield. Another brother died while pursuing studies for the priesthood.[1]
While in secondary school at Rockwell College, Cashel being taught by the Holy Ghost Fathers, Gleeson's mother passed away. His father moved the family to Australia but left Gleeson in Ireland to continue his stories. He then proceeded to St Patrick's Ecclesiastical College, Thurles to study for the priesthood. Upon graduating from seminary, the President predicted of him: "There goes a future Bishop".[2][3] Gleeson's father, Timothy, following the death of his wife, joined the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer in Waratah, New South Wales as a brother. He died in 1914.[4]
Priesthood
Gleeson was ordained to the priesthood on 18 June 1893 at Cathedral of the Assumption, Thurles by Archbishop Thomas William Croke.[5] He left immediately for Australia and arrived in the Diocese of Maitland on 21 November 1893.[6]
His first appointment was as assistant priest at St Mary's Church, Newcastle. In 1896, he was assistant at St John's Pro-Cathedral, Maitland and served there for five years. In 1900, he returned to St Mary's Church, Newcastle as administrator.[7]
In 1904, Gleeson was given leave to return to Ireland to join the Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer, the order to which three of his uncles and one of his brother's belonged.[8]
Gleeson was professed as a Redemptorist on 8 September 1905. He began an active missionary life, working in both Ireland and English for several years.
In 1912, he returned to Australia and was appointed Higher Superior of all the Redemptorists in Australia, New Zealand and the Philippines. As Superior, he erected the juniorate at St Clement's, Galong, a house of studies in Pennant Hills, and a mission house in Oxford Park, Brisbane.[9]
When Gleeson took over as Superior, any Redemptorist student for the priesthood had to travel to Ireland or Belgium to complete their studies. He bulked up the teaching staff and at the time of his episcopal appointment, there were 40 students preparing for priestly ordination in the order.[10] He is largely credited with the rise in the presence of the Redemptorists in Australia during the early 20th century.[11]