Juneteenth and the life of the first Black American Catholic priest

 

Venerable Augustus Tolton. / Credit: Public domain

CNA Staff, Jun 19, 2024 / 07:00 am (CNA).

On June 19, the United States commemorates the anniversary of the 1865 order that gave freedom to enslaved African Americans in Texas, issued two months after the Civil War ended. More commonly known as “Juneteenth,” it became a federal holiday in 2021 and serves as a fitting day to remember the first Black Catholic priest in the U.S. whose cause has been opened for canonization — Venerable Augustus Tolton.

Tolton was born into slavery in Brush Creek, Ralls County, Missouri, on April 1, 1854, to Catholic parents Peter Paul Tolton and Martha Jane Chisley.

Peter Paul escaped shortly after the beginning of the Civil War and joined the Union Army, dying shortly thereafter. In 1862, Augustus Tolton, along with his mother and two siblings, escaped by crossing the Mississippi River into Illinois.

“John, boy, you’re free. Never forget the goodness of the Lord,” Tolton’s mother reportedly told him after the crossing.

Tolton began to attend St. Peter’s Catholic School, an all-white parish school in Quincy, Illinois, thanks to the help of Father Peter McGirr. The priest went on to baptize Tolton, instruct him for his first holy Communion, and encouraged his vocation to the priesthood.

No American seminary would accept Tolton because of his race, so he studied for the priesthood in Rome and was ordained in 1886 at the age of 31, becoming the first African American ordained as a priest.

Tolton returned to the U.S. where he served for three years at a parish in Quincy. From there he went to Chicago and started a parish for Black Catholics — St. Monica Parish. He remained there until he died unexpectedly while on a retreat in 1897. He was just 43 years old.

During his short but impactful life, Tolton learned to speak fluent English, German, Italian, Latin, Greek, and African dialects. He was also a talented musician with a beautiful voice. He helped the poor and sick, fed the hungry, and helped many discover the faith. He was lovingly known as “Good Father Gus.”

Tolton’s cause was opened by the Archdiocese of Chicago on Feb. 24, 2011, making him a Servant of God, and then on June 12, 2019, Pope France declared him Venerable, which is the second step toward canonization.

Cardinal Giovanni Simeoni, announcing to the committee deciding where Tolton would be sent after his ordination in 1886 and who overruled the previous decision to send him to Africa, reportedly said the following:

“America has been called the most enlightened nation in the world. We shall see whether it deserves that honor. If the United States has never before seen a Black priest, it must see one now.”

Despite President Abraham Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation going into effect on Jan. 1, 1863, it could not be implemented in states still under Confederate control, and enforcement of the Proclamation relied upon the advance of Union troops. It wasn’t until Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger and some 2,000 Union troops arrived in Galveston Bay, Texas, on June 19, 1865, that more than 250,000 enslaved African Americans were freed by executive decree.


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6 Comments

  1. There is no such thing as Juneteenth it is a made up holiday that does not exist !
    July 4th will never be replaced !

    • Thomas, lay off the crackpipe, my dude. Nobody is replacing July 4th, you dingus.

      Why are you so against people having another paid summer holiday? Do you hate it when families have an extra day off to be together?

    • Of course it is made up. The entire Calendar is made up by humans to mark time. Holy Days and Holidays mark special times to celebrate or memorialize a people or events of significance. In USA July 4th marks the celebration of this the country’s fought for freedom from the tyranny of the British Throne, hence; our Independence and new found Freedom. However, that was only for some people in this country. Blacks were still enslaved and one can easily understand why they might find celebrating freedom difficult. They remained slaves for nearly another 100 years when the first group of slaves were officially free. There was though a glitch that there was a space of time between the signing of the decree and the final declaration in all states and implementation of that new freedom occurred leading to a question of which date really mattered. So June ? teenth became Juneteenth as the Holiday. It was never intended to replace July 4th but to supplement for the rather substantial population of African Americans who rightfully wanted to celebrate their own freedom from slavery. It sad”dens me when anyone, but especially those identifying as Catholics, choose not to recognize their/our own involvement in social injustices past or present. We are each both victims and perpetrators at the same time. Don’re misread my words to mean the misplaced CRT that is poisoning society. Read Justice Thomas’ autobiography “My Grandfather’s Son”. I wept for our Church when I read his experience in Seminary. I praise God for his deliverance and reversion to the Catholic Church. Praise the Lord!

  2. “Juneteenth”: another scam perpetrated on Amerika. Put it in the same category as: Clinton/Obama/Biden; Covid “vaccines”, Obamacare, the Iraq/Afghanistan war; the “Justice” Department and Deep State Washington.

    Juneteenth will be celebrated just like Martin Luther King, Jr Day…it won’t be.

  3. It seems to me that the proper time to celebrate the end of slavery is on Memorial Day, by thanking the 360,000 Union soldiers [there are also higher estimates] who died during the war that freed the slaves.

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