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Cardinal Herbert Vaughan

His Eminence
Herbert Alfred Henry Vaughan
Cardinal, Archbishop of Westminster
Herbert Vaughan NPG.jpg
Cardinal Vaughan
Province Westminster
Diocese Westminster
Appointed 8 April 1892
Term ended 19 June 1903
Predecessor Henry Edward Manning
Successor Francis Bourne
Other posts Cardinal-Priest of Santi Andrea e Gregorio al Monte Celio
Orders
Ordination 28 October 1854
by Giulio Arrigoni
Consecration 28 October 1872
by Henry Edward Manning
Created Cardinal 16 January 1893
Rank Cardinal-Priest
Personal details
Birth name Herbert Alfred Vaughan
Born (1832-04-15)15 April 1832
Gloucester, Glos., England
Died 19 June 1903(1903-06-19) (aged 71)
Mill Hill, Middlesex, England
Buried Westminster Cathedral
Nationality British
Denomination Roman Catholic Church
Parents John F. and Eliza (née Rolls) Vaughan
Previous post Bishop of Salford 1872-1892

Herbert Alfred Henry Vaughan (1832–1903) was an English prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Archbishop of Westminster from 1892 until his death, and was elevated to the cardinalate in 1893. He was the founder in 1866 of St Joseph's Foreign Missionary College, known as Mill Hill Missionaries. He also founded the Catholic Truth Society. In 1871 Vaughan led a group of priests to the United States to form a mission society whose purpose was to minister to freedmen. In 1893 the society reorganized to form the US-based St. Joseph Society of the Sacred Heart, known as the Josephite Fathers. Vaughan also founded St. Bede's College, Manchester. As Archbishop of Westminster, he led the capital campaign and construction of Westminster Cathedral.

Herbert Vaughan was born at Gloucester, the eldest son of Lieutenant-Colonel John Francis Vaughan, of an old recusant (Roman Catholic) family, the Vaughans of Courtfield, Herefordshire. His mother, Eliza Rolls from The Hendre, Monmouthshire, was a Catholic convert and intensely religious. All five of the Vaughan daughters became nuns, while six of the eight sons received Holy Orders and became priests. Three were later called as bishops in addition to Herbert: Roger became Archbishop of Sydney, Australia; Francis became Bishop of Menevia, Wales; John became titular bishop of Sebastopolis and auxiliary bishop in Salford, England.


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