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Edward Thaddeus Lawton

Most Reverend
Edward T. Lawton, OP
Bishop of Sokoto
Church Catholic Church
Appointed June 16, 1964
In office August 15, 1964 - December 19, 1966
Successor Michael James Dempsey, OP
Orders
Ordination June 6, 1943
Consecration August 15, 1964
by John McCarthy, S.M.A.
Personal details
Born October 12, 1913
Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Died December 19, 1966(1966-12-19) (aged 53)
Sokoto State, Nigeria

Edward T. Lawton, OP (October 12, 1913 – December 19, 1966) was an American-born bishop of the Catholic Church. He served as the bishop of the Diocese of Sokoto in Nigeria from 1964-1966.

Born in South Boston in Massachusetts, Lawton was educated at St. Francis de Sales School, Boston College High School, and Boston College. He entered the Dominican novitiate at St. Rose Priory in Springfield, Kentucky and he made his first profession of vows on August 16, 1937. His philosophical and theological studies were taken at the Dominican House of Studies in River Forest, Illinois and he was ordained a priest there on June 6, 1943.

Lawton's first assignment as a priest was teaching at Fenwick High School in Oak Park, Illinois where he remained until 1951. That year he entered the missionary field in Nigeria. He became the director of the Thomistic Institute where he lectured at both Yaba and Lagos. Lawton gave retreats to priests and religious during breaks in the academic year. He also served as the archdiocesan director for Catholic radio programs. The Prefecture of Sokoto was established on January 15, 1954 and he was appointed its first Prefect Apostolic. He was invested on November 13, 1954 at St. Pius V Church in Chicago. He initially established himself at Gusau. The prefecture had 1,200 Catholics among five million people, most of whom were Muslim. He served there with one other priest until 1956 when fellow Dominicans from the St. Albert the Great Province in the United States arrived as well as Dominican Sisters from Great Bend, Kansas. He moved from Gusau to Sokoto in 1961. He suffered several health problems, including a heart attack. The prefecture grew to more than 10,000 people and it was elevated to a diocese on June 16, 1964.


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