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St. Benedict's Abbey

St. Benedict's Abbey
St. Benedict's Abbey is located in Kansas
St. Benedict's Abbey
Location within Kansas
St. Benedict's Abbey is located in the US
St. Benedict's Abbey
Location within Kansas
Monastery information
Full name Abbey of St. Benedict
Order Benedictine
Established April 1857
Mother house Metten Abbey
Dedicated to St. Benedict of Nursia
Diocese Kansas City
People
Founder(s) Dom Augustus Wirth, O.S.B.
Abbot The Right Rev. James R. Albers, O.S.B.
Important associated figures Abbot Boniface Wimmer, O.S.B., Bishop Louis Mary Fink, O.S.B.
Architecture
Functional Status monastery
Completion date 1931
Site
Location 1020 N. Second St., Atchison, Kansas 66002 United States
Coordinates 39°34′30″N 95°06′40″W / 39.575059°N 95.111117°W / 39.575059; -95.111117Coordinates: 39°34′30″N 95°06′40″W / 39.575059°N 95.111117°W / 39.575059; -95.111117
Website www.kansasmonks.org

St. Benedict's Abbey is an American community of monks of the Order of St. Benedict located in Atchison, Kansas. It was founded in 1857 to provide education to the sons of German settlers in the Kansas Territory.

In the middle of the 19th century, Metten Abbey in Bavaria, founded in 766, decided to send a number of its monks to the United States as part of the abbey's American mission project. The German monks sought new locations where they could pursue their religious calling in peace as well as looking to provide spiritual guidance to the many German emigrants to America in that period. Their initial foundation was in Latrobe, Pennsylvania, where they established St. Vincent Archabbey in 1846. The founder, Abbot Boniface Wimmer, O.S.B., was the Superior of the mission.

After helping his confreres to establish that first monastery, in the mid-1850s, a member of the monastery, Heinrich (Henry) Lemke, O.S.B., left Pennsylvania and moved to Kansas, where there was a large number of German immigrants. He settled in the small town of Doniphan, Kansas, the first monk in the territory, where he established the Church of St. John the Baptist. He was joined in April 1857 by two more monks, Augustus Wirth, O.S.B., designated as prior of the new community, and Casimir Seitz, O.S.B. Although the small community was declared autonomous the following year by the American-Cassinese Congregation of which it was a part, by that time Wirth was alone, as the other two monks had returned to the United States.

Wirth and a companion were invited by John Baptist Miège, S.J., the Vicar Apostolic of the territory, to relocate to Atchison to operate a school for boys. They did so in 1858, and established St. Benedict's College, which today is known as Benedictine College. Originally, the mainly classical school curriculum was intended to prepare students for the priesthood. It was expanded to include commerce subjects to cater to the needs of the local population, which consisted primarily of farmers and miners. Under a new prior, Louis Mary Fink, O.S.B., the school was incorporated by the State of Kansas in 1868. The monastery was raised to the status of an independent abbey in 1877, with Innocent Wolf, O.S.B., being elected its first abbot.


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