Vital-Justin Grandin
The Most Reverend Vital-Justin Grandin OMI | |
---|---|
Bishop of St. Albert | |
Vital-Justin Grandin, c. 1900 | |
Diocese | Diocese of St. Albert |
In office | 1871–1902 |
Successor | Émile-Joseph Legal |
Other posts | Bishop of Satala (titular) |
Orders | |
Ordination | 1854 (priest) |
Consecration | 1859 |
Personal details | |
Born |
Saint-Pierre-sur-Orthe, France | 8 February 1829
Died |
3 June 1902 73) St. Albert, Alberta, Canada | (aged
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Vital-Justin Grandin (8 February 1829 – 3 June 1902) was a Roman Catholic priest and bishop who served the Church in the western parts of what is now Canada both before and after Confederation.
Early life
Grandin was born in Saint-Pierre-sur-Orthe, France, on 8 February 1829. He was the ninth son in a family of fourteen children of Jean Grandin and Marie Veillard. He was ordained as a priest in 1854; one month later he was sent by the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate to Canada to perform missionary work in what was then Rupert's Land. Upon arrival he was sent to Saint-Boniface, where Bishop Alexandre-Antonin Taché was in charge. Grandin was subsequently assigned to a mission at Fort Chipewyan (now in Alberta). He next served at Île-à-la-Crosse (now in Saskatchewan) for a number of years.[1]
Life as bishop
In 1867, Taché proposed that the vicariate of Saskatchewan be formed with Grandin as vicar of missions. This took place in 1868; in the same year, Grandin attended the council of Quebec bishops in 1868 to discuss new religious boundaries in the Canadian northwest. As a result of these discussions, St. Boniface was elevated and the suffragan diocese of St Albert was created. In 1871, Vital-Justin Grandin was appointed bishop.
Grandin was never completely healthy; he had been a sickly child and also had a speech impediment, and his health deteriorated during his later years. He did however preside over the development and expansion of the Diocese of St. Albert, including the founding of new missions and churches throughout Alberta and the construction of hospitals and schools which, unusually for the time, were administered by members of female religious orders and lay clergy. Grandin's efforts to increase Francophone settlement in Alberta were less successful, but many francophone communities founded at the behest of Grandin (such as Beaumont, Lacombe, and Morinville) still exist in central and Northern Alberta.
Bishop Grandin died in office on 3 June 1902. He was declared venerable by the Roman Catholic Church in 1966.
Upon his death, Grandin was succeeded by Bishop Émile-Joseph Legal in the St. Albert diocese.
Legacy
- St. Vital, a neighbourhood and a provincial electoral riding in Winnipeg, Manitoba
- Grandin, a neighbourhood in St. Albert, Alberta
- Vital Grandin Catholic Elementary School in St. Albert, Alberta
- Grandin LRT station plus adjacent Grandin neighborhood in Edmonton, Alberta
- Bishop Grandin Boulevard, also known as Winnipeg Route 165
- Bishop Grandin Greenway, a major redevelopment area in Winnipeg[2]
- Bishop Grandin High School, a secondary school in Calgary, Alberta under the Calgary Catholic School District
- Numerous Catholic elementary schools in Alberta and Manitoba
- In Australia the Grandin sporting house at Iona College in Brisbane is named after Bishop Grandin
- In Australia the Grandin sporting house at Mazenod College in Western Australia is named after Bishop Grandin. Grandin house in Western Australia won the house trophy in 2015, hopefully they will again this year
See also
Notes
- ↑ Jonquet, Émile (1903). Mgr. Grandin oblat de MArie Immaculée premier évêque de Saint-Albert (in French) (first ed.). Montréal: s. n. p. 1.
- ↑ Home - Bishop Grandin Greenway at www.bishopgrandingreenway.com
External links
- Biography at the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online
- Catholic Missions of Canada
- Biography from the Manitoba Historical Society
- Biography from the Alberta Online Encyclopedia
- Portrait Photo