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John Joseph Kain
American prelate From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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John Joseph Kain (May 31, 1841 – October 13, 1903) was an American Catholic prelate who served as bishop of Wheeling in Wheeling from 1875 to 1893 and as the first American-born archbishop of Saint Louis in Missouri from 1896 to 1903.
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Early life
Kain was born in Martinsburg in what was then Virginia on May 31, 1841, to Jeremiah and Ellen Kain.[1][2] After graduating from St. Charles College in Catonsville, Maryland, in 1862, he enrolled at St. Mary's College in Baltimore, Maryland.[citation needed]
Kain was ordained to the priesthood in Baltimore by Archbishop Martin John Spalding on July 7, 1866, for the Diocese of Wheeling.[2] After his ordination, Kain was stationed in Harper's Ferry, West Virginia, where he served parishioners in eight West Virginia counties and four Virginia counties. During his time there, he restored churches in Harper's Ferry and Martinsburg, and rebuilt churches in Winchester, Virginia and Berkeley Springs, West Virginia that had been destroyed during the American Civil War.[3][4][5]
Kain's sister, Mary Josephine Kain, served as a Catholic sister in Wheeling, West Virginia. Another sister, Margaret Kain, worked as his housekeeper for most of his career.[6]
Bishop of Wheeling
Pope Pius IX appointed Kain as bishop of Wheeling on February 12, 1875. He was consecrated at the Cathedral of Saint Joseph in Wheeling by Archbishop James Bayley on May 23, 1875.[2] During this period, Kain had about 36 priests under his jurisdiction who were ministering to approximately 20,000 Catholics.
Coadjutor Archbishop and Archbishop of St. Louis
In May, 1893, Pope Leo XIII appointed Kain as coadjutor archbishop of St. Louis to assist Archbishop Peter Kenrick, and created him as a titular archbishop the next month. When Kenrick died on June 8, 1895, Kain automatically succeeded him as archbishop.[2]
John Kain died on October 13, 1903, in St. Agnes' Sanitarium in Baltimore after a long illness. He was 62 years old.[3][2] He was interred in Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis, Missouri.[5][7] Kain is the namesake for Rosati-Kain High School in St. Louis.[8]
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