His Eminence Richard James Cushing |
|
---|---|
Cardinal, Archbishop emeritus of Boston | |
See | Boston |
Installed | September 25, 1944 |
Term ended | September 8, 1970 |
Predecessor | William Henry O'Connell |
Successor | Humberto Sousa Medeiros |
Other posts | Cardinal-Priest of Santa Susanna |
Orders | |
Ordination | May 26, 1921 by William Henry O'Connell |
Consecration | June 29, 1939 by William Henry O'Connell |
Created Cardinal | December 15, 1958 by John XXIII |
Rank | Cardinal-Priest |
Personal details | |
Birth name | Richard James Cushing |
Born |
Boston, Massachusetts |
August 24, 1895
Died | November 2, 1970 Boston, Massachusetts |
(aged 75)
Previous post |
|
Motto | UT COGNOSCANT TE (THAT THEY MAY KNOW THEE) |
Coat of arms |
Ordination history of Richard Cushing | |
---|---|
Episcopal consecration
|
|
Principal consecrator | William Henry O'Connell (Boston) |
Date of consecration | June 29, 1939 |
Bishops consecrated by Richard Cushing as principal consecrator
|
|
Edward Francis Ryan | January 3, 1945 |
Louis Francis Kelleher | June 8, 1945 |
John Joseph Wright | June 30, 1947 |
Eric Francis MacKenzie | September 14, 1950 |
Thomas Francis Markham | September 14, 1950 |
Jeremiah Francis Minihan | September 8, 1954 |
George Hamilton Pearce | June 29, 1956 |
Harold William Henry | May 11, 1957 |
Jaime Antônio Schuck | February 24, 1959 |
Thomas Joseph Riley | December 21, 1959 |
William John McNaughton | August 21, 1961 |
Samuel Emmanuel Carter | April 25, 1966 |
James Burke, O.P. | May 25, 1967 |
Daniel Anthony Cronin | September 12, 1968 |
Richard James Cushing (August 24, 1895 – November 2, 1970) was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as Archbishop of Boston from 1944 to 1970, and was created a cardinal in 1958. Cushing's main role was as fundraiser and builder of new churches, schools, and institutions. He was on good terms with practically the entire Boston elite, as he softened the traditional confrontation between the Catholic Irish and the Protestant upper-class. Cushing built useful relationships with Jews, Protestants, and institutions outside the usual Catholic community. He helped presidential candidate John F. Kennedy deflect fears of papal interference in American government if a Catholic became president. Cushing's high energy level allowed him to meet with many people all day, often giving lengthy speeches at night. Cushing was not efficient at business affairs, and when expenses built up he counted on his fund-raising skills instead of cost-cutting. Cushing, says Nasaw, was “fun-loving, informal, and outgoing. He looked rather like a tough, handsome, Irish cop and behaved more like a ward politician than a high church cleric.” His major weakness in retrospect was overexpansion, adding new institutions that could not be sustained in the long run and had to be cut back by his successors.
Cushing was born in South Boston on August 24, 1895. The third of five children, he was the son of Patrick and Mary (née Dahill) Cushing. His parents were both Irish immigrants; his father was originally from Glanworth, County Cork, and his mother from Touraneena, County Waterford. His father, who came to the United States in 1880, worked as a blacksmith and earned $18 per week in the trolley repair pits of the Boston Elevated Railway.
Cushing received his early education at Perry Public Grammar School in the City Point section of South Boston, since there was then no parochial school for boys in Gate of Heaven Parish. Cushing dropped out of high school in his freshman year because of his compulsive truancy. He subsequently entered Boston College High School, a Jesuit college preparatory school. His tuition there was paid by his cousin, who was a priest of the Archdiocese of New York. He graduated from high school in 1913, receiving honors for Latin and Greek. Cushing was torn for a time between religion and politics. He originally wanted to be a politician, even earning money by speaking for politicians from the back of wagons. He twice considered joining the Jesuits, but came to the conclusion he "was cut out more for the active life and not the teaching apostolate."