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Frederick Katzer

Frederick Xavier Katzer
Archbishop of Milwaukee
Friedrich Xaver Katzer2.jpg
Installed January 30, 1891
Term ended July 23, 1903
Predecessor Michael Heiss
Successor Sebastian Gebhard Messmer
Other posts Bishop of Green Bay (1886–1891)
Orders
Ordination December 21, 1886
Personal details
Birth name Frederick Xavier Katzer
Born (1844-02-07)February 7, 1844
Ebensee, Austria
Died July 23, 1903(1903-07-23) (aged 59)
Fond du Lac, Wisconsin
Buried St. Francis Seminary
Alma mater St. Francis Seminary

Frederick Xavier Katzer (February 7, 1844 – July 23, 1903) was an Austrian-born prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who served as the third bishop of the Diocese of Green Bay (1886-1891) and the third Archbishop of the Archdiocese of Milwaukee in Wisconsin (1891–1903).

Born in Ebensee in Upper Austria (then part of the Austrian Empire), Katzer immigrated to Minnesota in 1864. He soon moved to Milwaukee where he studied at St. Francis Seminary and was ordained to the priesthood on December 21, 1866. He joined the seminary faculty and taught a variety of subjects, until transferring to Green Bay in 1875.

Katzer was appointed Bishop of Green Bay on July 13, 1886 after Bishop Francis Krautbauer's death and served as Bishop until January 30, 1891.

Katzer was appointed the third archbishop of Milwaukee. His nomination was opposed by some Irish Catholics, who felt a policy of "Germanization" of the archdiocese set in place by his predecessors should not be continued. This is reflected in the architecture of many of the city's early churches, including the historic Old St. Mary's Church and the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist.

During his tenure, Katzer was a strong supporter of Catholic schools. He successfully lobbied for the repeal of the Bennett Law in 1890, which would have required all schools to teach in English and was perceived as an attack on immigrants and parochial schools. The Sisters of the Divine Savior also made their home in Milwaukee at the urging of Katzer, during a visit to Pope Leo XIII in 1895.


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