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Edward Aloysius McGurkin

The Most Reverend
Edward A. McGurkin, M.M.
Bishop of Shinyanga
Church Catholic Church
Appointed July 4, 1956
In office October 3, 1956 - January 30, 1975
Orders
Ordination September 14, 1930
by John Dunne
Consecration October 3, 1956
by Henry Joseph O'Brien
Personal details
Born June 22, 1905
Hartford, Connecticut
Died August 28, 1983(1983-08-28) (aged 78)
Ossining, New York
Motto Primum Regnum Dei

Edward Aloysius McGurkin, M.M. (June 22, 1905 – August 28, 1983) was an American-born Catholic missionary and bishop. As a member of the Catholic Foreign Mission Society of America (Maryknoll), he was assigned to missions in Manchuria and Tanzania. He served as the Bishop of Shinyanga from 1956-1975.

Edward McGurkin was born in Hartford, Connecticut to Michael and Katherine (Gleason) McGurkin. He was educated in the Hartford public schools before enrolling at St. Thomas Preparatory Seminary. He was ordained a priest on September 14, 1930.

After his ordination McGurkin served as the English Editor of the Fides News Service and personal secretary to Cardinal Pietro Fumasoni Biondi, the Prefect of the Sacred Congregation of the Evangelization of Peoples. In 1935 he became the Procurator General. He was assigned as a missionary in Fushun, Manchuria in 1938. During World War II he was interned by the Japanese. He returned to the United States in 1946 and became a spiritual director at Maryknoll and two years later the local superior. He went to Bedford, Massachusetts as novice master before being sent to Shinyanga, Tanzania in 1954 as Group Superior to Maryknoll’s new mission there. On July 4, 1956 Pope Pius XII appointed McGurkin as the first bishop of Shinyanga.

Edward McGurkin was consecrated a bishop on October 3, 1956 in the Cathedral of St. Joseph in Hartford, Connecticut by Archbishop Henry O'Brien. The principal co-consecrators were Bishops Frederick Donaghy, M.M. of Wuchow and Lawrence Shehan of Bridgeport. McGurkin attended all four sessions of the Second Vatican Council. He served as the diocesan bishop until his resignation was accepted by Pope Paul VI on January 30, 1975.


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