
Francis Haas

Bonaventure Frey
Capuchins in
the United States
Capuchins were present in North
America from the earliest days of European colonization. In the
seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, they journeyed to this continent
as missionaries or military chaplains. They ministered to Catholic
settlers and soldiers and worked among Native Americans. Some, like many
other American settlers, were fleeing religious persecution in Europe.
The Capuchin Order was not formally
established in the United States until the second half of the nineteenth
century. In 1856, two Swiss priests, Francis Haas and Bonaventure Frey,
were granted permission to establish the order at Mt. Calvary, a hilltop
site in Wisconsin. Despite financial difficulties, the community of St.
Joseph prospered and grew.
In 1873, German Capuchins established
the community of St. Augustine in Pennsylvania to minister to the large
German immigrant population in the United States. This community also
prospered and grew.
In 1882 the Capuchin General Curia in
Rome recognized St. Joseph’s and St. Augustine’s as the first American
Provinces.
Upon their arrival in 1856, John Frey
and Gregory Haas rode onto a hill called Mt. Calvary in central
Wisconsin. It was the end of a perilous journey that began in
Switzerland, including a forty-nine day sea voyage, an eight-day train
trip from New York and a horse back ride from Milwaukee. When they
finally arrived, all the rigors and uncertainties of pioneer life faced
them. It took twenty-six years of determined building, and in 1882 they
achieved their goal: becoming the first Capuchin province in America,
the St. Joseph Province.
Following upon its founding in 1882,
the Province of St. Joseph grew rapidly, experiencing a large increase
in the number of its members and an ever-widening geographic presence
across its vast territory reaching from the Midwest to the East Coast.
In 1950, the Provincial Minister sent questionnaires to all friars in
the province regarding the possibility of dividing the large geographic
jurisdiction of St. Joseph Province. The great majority favored the
division.
On February 2, 1952, this desire was
accomplished and the Province of St. Joseph and the Province of St. Mary
were established as separate jurisdictions. While the Province of St.
Joseph stretched from Detroit to Montana, the newly formed Province of
St. Mary included New York and New England and the mission territories
of the Mariana Islands and Ryukyu Islands. Friars were given the choice
as to which Province they would belong and there was an almost even
split between the two. Quickly each province grew to nearly the size of
their original single province.
Capuchin Franciscan friars in North
America are now organized into eight provinces and number about a
thousand.
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Copyright © 2005 The Province of St. Mary of the Capuchin Order
Last modified:
Thursday, 02 November 2006 11:37:37