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This period encompasses the administrations of Sebastian
Messmer (1903-1930), Samuel Alphonsus Stritch (1930-1940) and
part of the administration of Moses Elias Kiley (1940-1953).
This was a period of centralization, consolidation, and the
imposition of disciplinary uniformity on the diocese, aided by
the promulgation of the new Code of Canon Law in 1917-1918.
This code gave the diocesan bishop new powers and authority of
his clergy and laity. As a result the central administration of
the diocese became more in evidence, and the bureaucracy
surrounding the bishop began to grow. Moreover, during the
period, ethnicity as a factor in Milwaukee Catholic life began
to wane. German immigration had already peaked in the 1880s. In
the 1920s, the Congress closed the doors to further immigration
from southern and eastern Europe. As a result, the ethnic
vitality of neighborhoods and cities began to decline as
intermarriage and Americanization took place. By the end of the
period there were still many "ethnic" Catholics, but clearly
the diocese was becoming more ethnically homogeneous.
The bishops of this era were very different in terms of
personality and temperament, but they shared a unified vision
of their authority and prerogatives. All were well schooled in
canon law, which gave wide latitude to the diocesan bishop over
the lives of priests and lay people. Messmer was the last
European-born bishop, hailing from Goldach, Switzerland.
Although initially pre-disposed to support the preservation of
German ethnicity, Messmer had a change of heart and became a
great proponent of smoothing over ethnic differences in favor
of diocesan uniformity. His efforts to centralize the diocese
were first reflected in the issuance of a parishioner's
handbook in 1907 that stipulated rather clear and precise rules
and regulations for Catholic life.
However, the continued strength of ethnic diversity was
reflected in the swelling Polish community that poured into
every industrial town in the archdiocese. Like the Germans
before them, the Poles insisted on maintaining their
distinctive church life and demanded a fuller representation in
diocesan affairs. Messmer and Polish priest Wenceslaus Kruszka
and his brother Michael quarreled violently over the treatment
of the Poles and demanded the appointment of a Polish auxiliary
bishop. The feud, which raged in the early years of the
century, nearly created a serious schism in the Milwaukee
church. Under Messmer, the archdiocese did receive its first
two auxiliary bishops. Joseph Koudelka, a Bohemian-born
prelate, was transferred to Milwaukee from Cleveland in 1911
and served until his transfer to Superior in 1913. He was
succeeded by Polish-born Edward Kozlowski, who was consecrated
in 1914 and served a little more than a year when he died
suddenly.
After the Kruszka difficulties, Messmer tended to leave the
Poles alone, but proceeded ahead with his centralizing
policies. The appearance of the Code of Canon Law in 1918
greatly strengthened his hand in diocesan policy. He
reorganized the seminary, expanded the chancery and gave
extensive powers to his vicar general Monsignor Bernard Traudt.
He also created centralized offices for social welfare
operations and education.
Messmer also dealt with new immigrants to northern cities,
African Americans. He approved the first ministry to African
Americans (St. Benedict the Moor Parish) in 1908, organized by
a lay Catholic couple, Lincoln C. and Julia Valle. Later the
work was assumed by the Capuchin community.
Although opposed to women's suffrage, Messmer favored the
formation of Catholic women's organizations, such as the
Marquette's Women League and a Milwaukee branch of the National
Association of Catholic Women (Milwaukee Archdiocesan Council
of Catholic Women-- MACCW). He also managed to create a fairly
successful diocesan paper, the Catholic Herald, which would
eventually merge with the Catholic Citizen in the 1930s.
Messmer unified the branches of the Holy Name Society into a
Holy Name Union. This highly popular movement sponsored a
variety of Catholic programs from sports to a speakers' bureau,
and at its peak attracted thousands of Milwaukee Catholics to
its various programs.
Messmer's health declined seriously after 1925, and Monsignor
Bernard Traudt pretty much ran the diocese. After a 27-year
reign, Messmer died in his native Goldach, Switzerland, in
August, 1930.
Messmer was succeeded by Nashville-born Samuel A. Stritch.
Formerly bishop of Toledo, Stritch was young, kindly, and
idealistic. Most of his years were spent coping with the
Depression and the accompanying financial woes that were
visited on Catholic institutions and parishes. A low point for
the diocese came in 1935 when a fire destroyed the interior of
St. John's Cathedral. Stritch undertook major initiatives in
Catholic higher education, urging local sisterhoods to form
their own teacher training institutions. He also mobilized
support behind the Catholic Action movement sanctioned by Pope
Pius XI. The emphasis on Catholic Action signaled a new era for
the Catholic laity as they were "invited" to participate "in
the apostolate of the hierarchy." This new thrust was reflected
in Stritch's inner circle. At his right hand were, of course,
important clerics like Msgr. Joseph Barbian, his secretary,
Msgr. Roman Atkielski and young Father Paul Tanner. But he also
consulted prominent laity such as attorney Katherine Williams
who headed the local MACCW, Philip Grau and Leo Dohn, both
associated with Catholic Youth and Catholic Action. Publisher
and public citizen William George Bruce was also an occasional
confidant. Stritch also sponsored national conferences held at
Milwaukee's Schroeder Hotel to discuss social and economic
problems. Stritch departed to become Archbishop of Chicago in
1940.
Moses E. Kiley, was born in Nova Scotia in 1876. He determined
later in life that he wished to become a priest, and he was
trained in Rome and soon "adopted" by the Archdiocese of
Chicago. He returned to Rome and served as the Spiritual
Director of the North American College until he was appointed
bishop of Trenton, New Jersey. In March, 1940 he replaced
Archbishop Stritch. Kiley was a tall, austere, prelate,
sepulchral of voice and ponderous of manner. He was also a
thorough-going autocrat who kept rigid control over the clergy.
Conservative by nature, he was reluctant to borrow money and
spend too freely. He gathered huge sums for the building of a
new St. Aemillian's orphanage to replace a building destroyed
by fire in the 1930s. He also rebuilt the Cathedral, celebrated
the diocesan centenary, and effected a major transformation in
the seminary by separating the high school and junior college
programs from the major seminary building and installing them
in the old Pio Nono College. Kiley represented the high water
mark of the Catholic emphasis on order, discipline and
uniformity that had begun at the turn of the century. Kiley
served until his death in April, 1953.
In this epoch, the archdiocese became more ethnically
homogeneous. There was a proliferation of Catholic
organizations, especially for women. With the onset of the
Depression, the "Social Question" loomed large among many
Catholics, especially after the issuance of papal encyclical
Quadragesimo Anno (1931). Milwaukee was one of many industrial
dioceses that held national meetings which discussed the root
economic causes of depression from the perspective of Catholic
social teaching. Figuring prominently in this was the work of
Fathers Aloisius Muench and Francis Haas, both social thinkers
and members of the seminary faculty. Both men had national
reputations as social thinkers and moved to national and
international prominence. Haas would become a close advisor to
President Franklin Roosevelt's administration and Muench would
have a distinguished career as Apostolic Nuncio to post-war
Germany. He would also become a cardinal. Parochial growth in
most cities continued after World War I until the great Crash
of 1929. The archdiocese faced serious financial problems when
its major bonding house collapsed.
There was an important surge in devotional Catholicism,
especially in "novena Catholicism." Milwaukee Catholics were
great devotees of the Novena to the Sorrowful Mother propagated
by the Servite Fathers of Chicago. One Milwaukee priest, Father
Raymond Punda, wrote a popular novena pamphlet during the war
to Our Lady of Victory. Punda, a military chaplain, had
countless requests for the book. Novena Catholicism in part
stimulated the first stirrings of interest in liturgical
reform, especially in encouraging popular participation in the
Mass. Father Joseph Holleran would assume a great deal of
responsibility for bringing the Liturgical Revival from
Collegeville, Minnesota, to the attention of Milwaukee
Catholics. Important lay persons include Catholic book
publisher William George Bruce, his sons, Frank and William C.,
brewer Val Blatz, and church goods dealer, Frank Gross. Gross
would also be instrumental in establishing one of the first
stable ministries to the growing number of Hispanic Catholics
who began settling in Milwaukee in the 1920s. There were
schools in virtually every parish, served by religious
communities of women. These same communities often ran
academies in their respective mother houses which would be the
nuclei for later Catholic high schools. Such an example would
be St. Catherine's Academy in Racine, run by the Racine
Dominican Sisters, which would evolve into a coeducational high
school in the 1920s. Already by 1929, the archdiocese had built
its first central Catholic high school, named after Archbishop
Messmer and located on the north side of the city. |