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Diocese of Covington
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(COVINGTONENSIS)
Comprises that part of Kentucky, U. S. A., lying east of the Kentucky River, and of the western limits of Carroll, Owen, Franklin, Woodford, Jessamine, Garrard, Rockcastle, Laurel, and Whitley Counties, an area of 17,286 square miles. It was established 29 July, 1853, by the division of the Diocese of Louisville , then embracing the whole State of Kentucky. This portion of the State had been ministered to by a body of clergy conspicuous for ability, learning, and devotion to duty. White Sulphur, the first organized congregation in this jurisdiction, rejoiced in the zealous administration of a Kenrick, who in later years graced the metropolitan See of Baltimore, and of a Reynolds, destined to become successor of the great Bishop England of Charleston. Lexington was growing into an important parish under the watchful guidance of Rev. John McGill, afterwards Bishop of Richmond, Virginia. All of the clergy manifested in their lives the glorious traditions of Flaget, Badin, David, and Nerinckx, whose successors they were. Catholic immigration has been almost exclusively confined to two nationalities: German and Irish. The former compose a large majority of the Catholic population of the cities and towns along the Ohio River, while the latter have sought the interior of the diocese. In Covington and Newport German Catholics predominate, while in Lexington, Frankfort, and Paris, the Irish are in the majority. Lying south of Mason and Dixon's Line, although rich in raw material, the diocese has been handicapped by a lack of industrial and mineral development. Within its confines there is a total population of about 900,000, of whom 54,423 are Catholic. The attitude of non-Catholics is uniformly respectful, considerate, and kind.
 BISHOPS
-  (1) The choice of the  Holy See  for the first  bishop  of the new diocese  fell upon the  Rev. GEORGE ALOYSIUS CARRELL, S.J.,  rector  of  St.  Francis Xavier'sChurch,  Cincinnati. He was born in Philadelphia, 13  June, 1803,  ordained priest  20 December, 1827, and entered the Society of Jesus  19 August, 1835.  He was  consecrated  1 November,  1853, at  Cincinnati. The  burden resting on the shoulders of the new  bishop  of a  diocese  sparsely settled by 8000  Catholics  without influence or material  resources, was a heavy one; but at his death (25 Sept., 1868),  after fourteen years of  zealous  labours, he left it thoroughly organized with a  Catholic  population three times as great as  he found there, a self-sacrificing  clergy, a devoted people, and many  educational  and eleemosynary  institutions. 
-  (2) The second  bishop, AUGUSTUS  MARIE TOEBBE, was born 15 January, 1829, at Meppen,  Hanover,  Germany, and  ordained priest  14 September, 1854, at Cincinnati. He was consecrated  9 January, 1870, and  died 2 May, 1884. He contributed largely to the increase of the parishes  of the  diocese  and the growth of  Catholicism. 
-  (3) CAMILLUS PAUL MAES, his successor, was born in  Belgium, 13 March, 1846, studied at the  American  College, Louvain, for the  Diocese of Detroit, where he was chancellor  when appointed to the See of Covington. He was  consecrated  25 January, 1885, and soon  cleared off a  diocesan debt  of $150,000. He next undertook to  replace the old  cathedral, rapidly  tottering to decay, with a magnificent Gothic pile in the most  prominent part of the city.  Bishop  Maes also found  time  to care for the remote population  dwelling in the mountainous parts of the  diocese. Few people of the diocese  were blessed  with an  abundance of  wealth.  James Walsh was a conspicuous benefactor, who made possible the  first  parochial school, and later enabled Bishop  Maes to begin the  erection of the  cathedral. His son,  Nicholas Walsh, followed generously in the footsteps of his father. Mrs. Mary Howard Preston, a zealous convert, gave the  necessary  funds to start the great work of  the missions to non-Catholics in Eastern  Kentucky. 
 STATISTICS 
The Catholic population (1908) is 54,423 (10,162 families ). The clergy number 77 (68 secular, 9 regular). There are 74 churches, 38 stations, and 9 chapels ; 3 orphan asylums (204 inmates); 2 hospitals (2962 patients); 2 homes for aged poor (351 inmates); 7 female academies (1491 pupils); 37 parochial schools (7782 pupils, of these 3744 are in Covington).
The religious communities in the diocese include: Men — Benedictine Fathers , five charges, and the Marist Brothers. Women — Sisters of St. Benedict, Sisters of Charity, Sisters of St. Francis, Sisters of the Poor, Sisters of the Good Shepherd, Sisters of Notre Dame, Sisters of xxyyyk.htm">Providence, Loretto Sisters, Visitation Nuns.
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