The Right Reverend Benedict Joseph Flaget SS |
|
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Bishop of Louisville | |
Church | Latin Church |
See | Louisville |
In office | February 13, 1841 – February 11, 1850 |
Successor | Martin John Spalding |
Orders | |
Ordination | June 1, 1788 |
Consecration | November 4, 1810 by John Carroll |
Personal details | |
Born |
Contournat, Saint-Julien-de-Coppel, Auvergne, Kingdom of France |
November 7, 1763
Died | February 11, 1850 Louisville, Kentucky, United States |
(aged 86)
Previous post | Bishop of Bardstown (1808–1832; 1833–1841) |
Benedict Joseph Flaget SS (November 7, 1763 – February 11, 1850) was a French-born Catholic bishop in the United States. He served as the Bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Bardstown between 1808 and 1839. When the see was transferred to Louisville in 1839, he became Bishop of the Diocese of Louisville where he served from 1839 to 1850.
Flaget was born on November 7, 1763 in Contournat, now part of the commune of Saint-Julien-de-Coppel, in the ancient Province of Auvergne in the center of the Kingdom of France. Orphaned at an early age, he and his siblings were raised by his maternal aunt, assisted by his paternal uncle, a canon at the collegiate church of Billom. At the age of 17 he entered the Society of Saint-Sulpice at Clermont-Ferrand. He was ordained a priest on June 1, 1788. Flaget then taught theology for two years at the University of Nantes, and soon held the same post at the seminary at Angers, until those institutions were closed by the French Revolution.
In January 1792 Flaget sailed from Bordeaux, accompanied by fellow Sulpician John Baptist Mary David, and the then secular deacon Stephen Badin whose studies for the priesthood had been interrupted by the Revolution. They reached Philadelphia on March 26 and proceeded to Baltimore, arriving on March 29. After only two months in America, the Bishop of Baltimore, John Carroll, sent him to Fort Vincennes in the Indiana Territory to staff the Church of St. Francis Xavier, founded by Jesuit missionaries in 1748, before their Suppression and expulsion by British forces in 1763. There was a considerable number of French settlers and the mission which had gone without the presence of a resident priest for decades.