Alexander Macdonell (bishop)

See Alexander Macdonell (1833-1905) for another Canadian bishop with the same name.
Alexander Macdonell

The Most Reverend Alexander MacDonell, 1823-24, by Martin Archer Shee
Born (1762-07-17)17 July 1762
Glen Urquhart
Died 14 January 1840(1840-01-14) (aged 77)
Dumfries, Scotland
Nationality Scottish

Bishop Alexander Macdonell (born 17 July 1762, Glen Urquhart, Inchlaggan, Scotland - died 14 January 1840) was the first Roman Catholic bishop of Kingston, Upper Canada.

Early years

His early education was at Bourblach, Loch Morar. He attended the Scots Colleges at Paris and Valladolid. He was ordained a priest on 16 February 1787 at Valladolid. After that his life was spent in Lochaber and Canada. After the eviction of his kinsmen, Father Macdonell led them to Glasgow and later formed them into the Glengarry Fencibles, a regiment of which he served as chaplain, the first Roman Catholic chaplain in the British Army since the Reformation.

When the regiment was disbanded, Rev. Macdonell appealed to the government to grant its members a tract of land in Canada, and, in 1804, 160,000 acres (650 km²) were provided in what is now Glengarry County, Ontario, Canada.[1]

Ruins of St. Raphael Church, South Glengarry, his headquarters for 25 years

In 1812, he raised another regiment, the Glengarry Light Infantry Fencibles, which came to the defence of Upper Canada in the War of 1812.[1] Three years later, he began his service as the first Roman Catholic Bishop at St Raphael's Church in the Highlands of Ontario. This parish established the foothold of Catholicism in the region.[2]

In 1819 he was appointed Vicar Apostolic of Upper Canada, which in 1826 was erected into a bishopric. In 1826, he was appointed to the legislative council.[3] He founded churches and schools and organised the settlement. In 1846 he established Regiopolis College, which offered academic and theological training to Roman Catholic youth. The original building has been part of the Hotel Dieu Hospital (Kingston, Ontario) on Sydenham Street, Kingston, Ontario since 1892.[4]

Clerical appointments

[5]

Death

Bishop Macdonell died from pneumonia in Dumfries, Scotland on 14 January 1840, aged 77.

Legacies

Macdonell's house in Toronto

The town of Alexandria in North Glengarry, Ontario is named after him.[6]

In Guelph, Ontario, Canada, a Catholic secondary school was renamed to Bishop Macdonell Catholic High School in 1962 and Macdonell Street at the foot of Church of Our Lady Immaculate is named in his honour.

Macdonell Street in Kingston, Ontario is named after him.

When MacDonell resided in Toronto after returning from Europe he resided in a house on the south-east corner of Nelson (today's Jarvis) and Duchess (today's Richmond) Streets.[7] The house, built in 1832, still stands, although it has been remade into a restaurant. It is a designated heritage building.[8]

See also

Notes

  1. 1 2 MacDonald 1913.
  2. "Ontario's Historical Plaques". Ontarioplaques.com. Retrieved 16 April 2012.
  3. "Bishop Alexander MacDonell". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  4. http://web.archive.org/web/20120320230827/http://www.heritagefdn.on.ca/userfiles/HTML/nts_1_5590_1.html. Archived from the original on 20 March 2012. Retrieved 11 March 2011. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  5. "Bishop Alexander MacDonell". Catholic-Hierarchy.org. David M. Cheney. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  6. Lucille H. Campey, The Scottish Pioneers of Upper Canada: Glengarry and Beyond (Dundurn Press, 2005), 32.
  7. Macdonell, W. J. (1888). Reminiscences of the Late Honourable and Right Reverend Alexander MacDonell. Toronto: Williamson & Co. p. 26.
  8. "113 Jarvis Street". App.toronto.ca. Retrieved 2016-02-24.

References

External links

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