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Topic: Cardinal Vaughan


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In the News (Tue 14 Feb 12)

  
  CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Herbert Vaughan
Wiseman was the friend and protector of Manning, and Vaughan was regarded as the representative of a man suspected of a wish to bring all the ecclesiastical education of Southern England under the control of the Oblates.
Vaughan was consecrated Bishop of Salford on 22 October, 1872.
Cardinal Vaughan was a man of strong vitality, and his energies were devoted, with rare singleness of purpose, to one end—the salvation of souls.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/15311b.htm   (3847 words)

  
  Vaughan, Herbert. Papers. MSS 284
Herbert Alfred Vaughan, Cardinal and Archbishop of Westminster was born in Gloucester in 1832.
Vaughan was ordained in 1854 at the young age of 22.
As Cardinal, Vaughan was instrumental in the construction of a cathedral at Westminster.
www.pitts.emory.edu /Archives/text/mss284.html   (295 words)

  
 Herbert Cardinal Vaughan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Herbert Cardinal Vaughan (April 15, 1832 – June 19, 1903) was a British churchman, cardinal and Archbishop of Westminster.
He was born at Gloucester, the eldest son of lieutenant-colonel John Francis Vaughan, head of an old recusant Roman Catholic family, the Vaughans of Courtfield, Herefordshire.
Vaughan was a man of very different type from his predecessor; he had none of the ultramontane Manning's intellectual finesse or his ardour for social reform, but he was an ecclesiastic of remarkably fine presence and aristocratic leanings, intransigent in theological policy, and in personal character simply devout.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Herbert_Vaughan   (380 words)

  
 herbert cardinal vaughan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
Herbert Cardinal Vaughan (April 15, 1832 - June 19, 1903) was a British churchman, cardinal and Archbishop of Westminster.
He was born at Gloucester, the eldest son of lieutenant-colonel John Francis Vaughan, head of an old Roman Catholic family, the Vaughans of Courtfield, Herefordshire.
Vaughan was a man of very different type from his predecessor; he had none of Manning's intellectual finesse or his ardour in social reform, but he was an ecclesiastic of remarkably fine presence and aristocratic leanings, intransigeant in theological policy, and in personal character simply devout.
www.yourencyclopedia.net /herbert_cardinal_vaughan.html   (427 words)

  
 Telegraph | Opinion | Sacred mysteries
After Vaughan had been ordained priest at the unusually early age of 22 (since an early death was wrongly expected for him because of a supposedly weak constitution), the godly, flamboyant, clever Cardinal Wiseman appointed him vice-president of the main seminary in England, St Edmund's College, Ware.
Vaughan himself was not unsympathetic to the poor.
Vaughan's own requiem was to be one of the new cathedral's first public functions after his death on June 19 1903.
www.telegraph.co.uk /opinion/main.jhtml?xml=%2Fopinion%2F2005%2F04%2F30%2Fdo3007.xml   (620 words)

  
 Herbert Cardinal Vaughan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
He was born at Gloucester the eldest son of lieutenant-colonel John Vaughan head of an old Roman Catholic family the Vaughans of Courtfield Herefordshire.
His mother a daughter of John of The Hendre Monmouthshire was intensely religious; and all the of the family entered convents while six the eight sons took priest's orders three them rising to the episcopate Roger becoming of Sydney and John Bishop of Sebastopolis.
Cardinal Herbert Vaughan: Archbishop of Westminster, Bishop of Salford, Founder of the Mill Hill Missionaries
www.freeglossary.com /Herbert_Vaughan   (319 words)

  
 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY - HERBERT CARDINAL VAUGHAN COLLECTION: COLLECTION DESCRIPTION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
Herbert Cardinal Vaughan, third Archbishop of Westminster, was born in Gloucester, England, on April 15, 1832.
Vaughan was the eldest of eight sons and five daughters of Colonel John F. Vaughan and Eliza Rolls.
One of Cardinal Vaughan's last great achievements was to raise enough of a building fund for the Westminster Cathedral to lay the first stone on June 29, 1895.
gulib.lausun.georgetown.edu /dept/speccoll/cl156.htm   (1809 words)

  
 GEORGETOWN UNIVERSITY - HERBERT CARDINAL VAUGHAN COLLECTION: COLLECTION DESCRIPTION
Herbert Cardinal Vaughan, third Archbishop of Westminster, was born in Gloucester, England, on April 15, 1832.
Vaughan was the eldest of eight sons and five daughters of Colonel John F. Vaughan and Eliza Rolls.
One of Cardinal Vaughan's last great achievements was to raise enough of a building fund for the Westminster Cathedral to lay the first stone on June 29, 1895.
www.library.georgetown.edu /dept/speccoll/cl156.htm   (1809 words)

  
 T. VAUGHAN - LoveToKnow Article on T. VAUGHAN   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
VAUGHAN - LoveToKnow Article on T. vice-president of St Edmund's College, Ware, at that time the chief seminary for candidates for the priesthood in the south of England.
Since childhood he had been filled with zeal for foreign missions, and he conceived the determination to found a great English missionary college to fit young priests for the work of evangelizing the heathen.
See the Life of Cardinal Vaughan, by J. Snead Cox (2 vols., London, 1910).
www.1911encyclopedia.org /V/VA/VAUGHAN_T_.htm   (202 words)

  
 Independent Catholic News
Cardinal Vaughan founded the Mill Hill missionaries as a young priest in 1866.
The memorial to Cardinal Vaughan was designed by J A Marshall and carved by Henry McCarthy, a sculptor who had worked for Bentley, the architect of the Cathedral.
Following the death of Cardinal Vaughan, the Cathedral's then publication, the Chronicle, noted that there were "three Cardinal Vaughans" ­ "the stately and dignified prelate; the man known to his household and friends, full of charming kindness; the man of prayer, of solid tender piety."
www.indcatholicnews.com /vaughn.html   (419 words)

  
 HERBERT CARDINAL VAUGHAN   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
With the blessing of Cardinal Wiseman, Herbert Vaughan travelled throughout North and South America to raise funds for a new missionary college, which was opened at Mill Hill in 1871.
There was the Cardinal Vaughan known to his household and personal friends, never for a moment less dignified, but full of a charming kindliness and heart and wonderful simplicity, which seemed like the radiation of interior peace and joyousness.
There was Cardinal Vaughan known to his confessors and the intimate few - the man of prayer, of solid and tender piety, of penitential life and saintly humility.
www.scholacantorum.co.uk /herbert_cardinal_vaughan.htm   (440 words)

  
 Briefing
Vaughan was ordained Bishop of Salford on 28 October 1872.
Vaughan however was not typical of the ‘old English Catholics’ in his friendship with some of the outstanding converts from the Oxford Movement.
Vaughan never became as deeply involved in the social concerns of the poor as did his predecessor Manning, but when he saw a need he responded to it.
www.catholic-ew.org.uk /briefing/0308/030810.htm   (4157 words)

  
 AIM25: Mill Hill Missionaries: Cardinal Herbert Vaughan papers
Vaughan was educated at the Jesuit colleges of Stoneyhurst (1841-1846), and Brugelette, Belgium (1846-1848), and thence at the Benedictine Downside Abbey (1849-1951).
To this end, Vaughan embarked on a fundraising tour in the Caribbean and South America, with the result that a year after his return to England in 1865, he was able to rent a house in Mill Hill in north London.
Vaughan's other endeavours included the establishment of the Rescue and Protection Society, a philanthropic organization working with Catholic children in the north of England, the purchase and editorship of the Catholic paper The Tablet, and, following his ordination as Cardinal Archbishop of Westminster in 1892, the foundation of Westminster Cathedral.
www.aim25.ac.uk /cats/74/7237.htm   (1235 words)

  
 The Tablet - The International Catholic Weekly   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
Cardinal Cullen and the hierarchy remained opposed and Lucas determined to plead the case of the clergy in Rome.
Vaughan was in favour of the definition of papal primacy and infallibility, shortly to be proclaimed at the First Council of the Vatican.
Vaughan sometimes used The Tablet as a notice-board: he announced, for example, on 25 April 1893 that Catholics were to be allowed to go to Oxford and Cambridge.
www.thetablet.co.uk /history.shtml   (7231 words)

  
 Fr Bernard Vaughan
Bernard Vaughan was a prominent Jesuit preacher of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
Bernard Vaughan chose to join the Jesuits and developed a reputation as an outspoken preacher who did not fail to let his mind be known.
Vaughan travelled throughout Britain and indeed the world, but in 1910 he found time to visit Wakefield on the occasion of the re-opening of St. Austin's following some redecorations.
www.staustins.co.uk /frbernardvaughan.html   (328 words)

  
 Vaughan, Herbert on Encyclopedia.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
Educated at Stonyhurst College and on the Continent, Vaughan was ordained in 1854 and joined the Oblate Fathers.
On his return Vaughan was made bishop of Salford, E Lancashire.
When Cardinal Manning died, Vaughan succeeded him as archbishop of Westminster, the Catholic primate of England; in 1893 he was created cardinal.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/V/VaughanH1r.asp   (425 words)

  
 Herbert Vaughan   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
Herbert Cardinal Vaughan (April 15, 1832 - June 19, 1903) was a Britishchurchman, cardinal and Archbishop of Westminster.
He was born at Gloucester, the eldest son of lieutenant-colonel John FrancisVaughan, head of an old Roman Catholic family, the Vaughans ofCourtfield, Herefordshire.
His mother, a daughter of John Rolls of TheHendre, Monmouthshire, was intensely religious; and all the daughters ofthe family entered convents, while six of the eight sons took priest's orders, three of them rising to the episcopate, Rogerbecoming Archbishopof Sydney, and John Bishop of Sebastopolis.
www.therfcc.org /herbert-vaughan-136357.html   (297 words)

  
 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographical Dictionary - Consistory of January 16, 1893   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
Exposed and buried in the chapel of Sainte-Marguerite, southern nave of the metropolitan cathedral of Rouen.
Cardinal Vaughan: the life of the third Archbishop of Westminster, founder of St. Joseph's Missionary Society, Mill Hill.
Created cardinal and reserved in pectore in the consistory of January 16, 1893; published in the consistory of November 29, 1895; received the red hat and the title of S. Pietro in Vincoli in the consistory of June 25, 1896.
www.fiu.edu /~mirandas/bios1893.htm   (3381 words)

  
 Westminster Cathedral, Victoria Street, London SW1 : tourist information from TourUK
Cardinal Vaughan wanted the cathedral to be built as quickly as possible and to be free of debt.
By this time Cardinal Vaughan had died and the first great service in the new building was his funeral.
Cardinal Vaughan had originally wanted the church to be built in the Italianate style but Bentley persuaded him that it should be Byzantine.
www.touruk.co.uk /london_churches/westminstercathedral_church1.htm   (561 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Westminster Cathedral   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
In the late 19th century, the Catholic Church hierarchy had only recently been restored in the United Kingdom, and it was in memory of Cardinal Wiseman (who died in 1865, and was the first Archbishop of Westminster from 1850) that the first substantial sum of money was raised for the new Cathedral.
Here are monuments covering the remains of Cardinals Wiseman and Manning, transferred from their original place of interment and Kensal Green.
In 1995, at the invitation of Cardinal Basil Hume, it was visited by the Queen, this being the first visit of a reigning monarch of the United Kingdom to a Catholic liturgy for several hundred years.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Westminster-Cathedral   (1776 words)

  
 Centre for First World War Studies
Although Louis Vaughan (1875-1942) appears in the famous photograph of Haig, his Army commanders and their chiefs of staff, taken on the steps of the Mairie in Cambrai on 11 November 1918, his name is not well known.
But in Vaughan’s case the priestly meaning of the word comes closer to capturing the essence of the man. He was professorial in manner, softly spoken and gentle in demeanour (not necessarily traits associated with officers of the 7th Gurkha Rifles!).
Louis Vaughan was chief of staff to General Sir Julian Byng’s (underestimated) Third Army from May 1917 until the end of the war.
www.firstworldwar.bham.ac.uk /nicknames/vaughan.htm   (231 words)

  
 Lord Halifax: A Tribute--Chapter Four
And Cardinal Vaughan, on his side, made a speech in which he insisted that the Pope governed the Church by divine right and that there could be no question o the extent of his authority.
One of the cardinals is reported to have said that never since the days of Henry VIII was there a greater chance of the reunion of the Church of England with the great Church of the West.
The Cardinal was liberal, saintly, kindly, and courageous, and between him and Lord Halifax, almost from their first meeting, there began a touching and affectionate friendship.
justus.anglican.org /resources/pc/bios/halifax/halifax4.html   (3912 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Index for V
Vaughan, Herbert - Cardinal, and third Archbishop of Westminster (1832-1903)
Vaughan, Roger William - Second Archbishop of Sydney (1834-1883)
Victor IV - Cardinal Gregory Conti, elected in opposition to Innocent II Victor of Capua - A sixteenth-century bishop
www.newadvent.org /cathen/v.htm   (3762 words)

  
 HighBeam Research: Library Search: Results   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
and on the Continent, Vaughan was ordained in 1854...
Herbert Vaughan was the third Archbishop of Westminster...
VAUGHAN, HENRY [ Vaughan, Henry], 1622-95, one of the English...
www.highbeam.com /library/search.asp?FN=AO&refid=ency_refd&search_thesaurus=on&refid=ency%5Frefd&q=Vaughan%20AND%20Herbert   (1012 words)

  
 Vaughan - AskTheBrain.com
Vaughan Williams took 6 of the poems and moulded them into one of the finest English song cycles.
The climax is one that would stand proudly next to Elgar, Walton, Stanford, Vaughan Williams, and a long list of eminent contemporaries and predecessors.
Edwin Vaughan's book Social and Cultural Perspectives on Blindness, which contrasts socialization, educational opportunities, and expectations for the blind in a number of cultures.
www.askthebrain.com /vaughan-.html   (393 words)

  
 CTS History
It was against such a backdrop that Herbert Vaughan, later to become Cardinal Vaughan, had the idea of printing cheap, accessible pamphlets about the Catholic faith.
But when Vaughan was appointed Bishop of Salford in 1872, the activities of the society were temporarily interrupted.
Britten contacted Vaughan and it was decided to re-establish the Catholic Truth Society in 1884.
www.cts-online.org.uk /CTS_history.htm   (626 words)

  
 One Step Enough
Throughout Cardinal Newman’s pilgrimage of faith he did not ask to see the distant scene, but prayed only for sufficient grace to take one step at a time.
Cardinal Vaughan believed that as a consequence a large number of Anglican clergy would ask to be received into the Catholic Church.
It was with this possibility in mind that on 23 August 1896, just prior to the publication of the bull, Pope Leo XIII sent a letter to Cardinal Vaughan expressing his concern at the plight of Anglican clergy who might want to be received.
www.chnetwork.org /journals/eucharist/eucharist_10.htm   (998 words)

  
 Mill Hill Missionaries - Cardinal Vaughan / Cardinal Vaughan. The Founder of the Mill Hill Missionaries.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
Cardinal Vaughan The Founder of the Mill Hill Missionaries Father Herbert Vaughan came from a family that had preserved its Catholic faith through centuries of persecution.
Herbert Vaughan wanted his missionaries to be people of quiet service; they were to be people who could work hard at whatever task was assigned them.
Fr Vaughan would dearly have loved to join his missionaries on their 'Gospel travelling'.
www.millhill-missionaries.net /sections.php?sectionId=33   (601 words)

  
 Radio Program #390 : Catholic Salvation?   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-27)
Cardinal O’Conner had strongly defended Bishop Vaughan, who had stated that Governor Cuomo was "in serious risk of going to hell" because of his position on abortion.
The article concluded with the New York Times quoting Cardinal O’Conner’s position that it was the Bishop’s right to warn the Catholic governor of the danger he faced in going to hell.
Apparently Cardinal O’Conner is not only confused about salvation, he also has a problem with Adam and Eve.
www.calvarychapel.com /understandthetimes/radio/radio390.html   (475 words)

  
 David Benjamin Keldani - A bishop converts to Islam?
In 1892 he was sent by > Cardinal Vaughan to Rome, where he underwent a course of > philosophical and theological studies at the Propaganda Fide > College, and in 1895 was ordained Priest.
Early in his career Vaughan was appointed to head a seminary, and eventually dedicated his life to building up a college that would send out missionaries all over the world.
Prior to his becoming a cardinal in 1893, the only people on earth Vaughan had authority to "send" abroad would have been the priests and employees of his diocese (Salford until 1892, then Westminster) and the students of the College at Mill Hill.
answering-islam.org /Hoaxes/keldani.html   (9512 words)

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