Cataldo, Joseph Mary, 1837-1928

Variant names
Dates:
Birth 1837-03-17
Death 1928-04-09
German, English, Latin, Italian, North American Indian languages,

Biographical notes:

Joseph M. Cataldo was born March 17, 1837 in Terrasini, Sicily. His youth was marked by frail health and multiple family relocations particularly in response to the 1848 pan-European political turbulence, felt in Sicily as well. In 1852, at the ripe age of 15, he petitioned to join the Sicily Province of the Society of Jesus (Jesuits), based in nearby Palermo. His early training was interrupted by more bad health and removal to Rome in 1860 due to the success of Garibaldi's Sicilian campaign. In 1862, while studying for the priesthood in Louvain, Belgium, Cataldo requested a post-ordination assignment to the Jesuits' Rocky Mountain Mission already established in the Pacific Northwest. Prevailing over the impediments of more weak health, Fr. Cataldo finally arrived at the Jesuits' Sacred Heart Mission in north Idaho in October, 1865.

From the description of Joseph Cataldo, S.J. papers, 1862-2006. (Graham Public Library). WorldCat record id: 476910906

Fr. Cataldo's appointment as Superior of the Jesuit Rocky Mountain Mission came in 1877, while concluding his efforts to mediate hostilities in the Nez Perce uprising of that same year. The organization he now led had been engaged in missionary activity in the Pacific Northwest for 36 years, and consisted of 38 men, of whom 20 were ordained priests and the remaining 18 were non-ordained assistants, or "coadjutor brothers." Chronically underfunded and understaffed, the Mission faced a bleak future, with many hardship-worn, aging members and no potential new recruits. By 1893, sixteen years later, his replacement inherited an organization totalling 136 men, of whom 54 were priests, 36 were brothers and no less than 46 young Jesuit aspirants in training. This remarkable growth reflects both Cataldo's forceful leadership and the fact that his tenure paralled a transformative phase of settlement in the American West.

From the description of Mission Superior Cataldo records, 1877-1893. (Graham Public Library). WorldCat record id: 539624849

Rev. Joseph Cataldo, S.J., was born near Palermo, Italy in 1837, and entered the Society of Jesus in 1852. After his ordination in 1862 he was sent to Boston, MA to continue his studies and to prepare himself for service in the Indian missions of the Rocky Mountains. His first assignment was in California, and in 1865 he came to the Pacific Norhtwest, traveling via the Mullan Road to the Coeur d'Alene Mission, ID. Throughout the next sixty years Rev. Cataldo established or served at missions and churches in Idaho, Eastern Washington, Montana, northeastern Oregon, Alaska, and California. He started the first Catholic Church in Spokane, 1881, and founded Gonzaga University, 1887, also in Spokane.

From the description of Correspondence, 1911, 1918. (Eastern Washington State Historical Society). WorldCat record id: 42686988

Rev. Joseph Cataldo, S.J., was born near Palermo, Italy in 1837, and entered the Society of Jesus in 1852. After his ordination in 1862 he was sent to Boston, MA to continue his studies and to prepare himself for service in the Indian missions of the Rocky Mountains. His first assignment was in California, and in 1865, he came to the Pacific Northwest, traveling via the Mullan Road to the Coeur d’Alene Mission, ID. Throughout the next sixty years Rev. Cataldo established or served at missions and churches in Idaho, Eastern Washington, Montana, northeastern Oregon, Alaska, and California. He started the first Catholic Church in Spokane, 1881, and founded Gonzaga University, 1887, also in Spokane.

From the guide to the Joseph Benjamin Mary Cataldo, S. J. Correspondence, 1911, 1918, (Eastern Washington State Historical Society/Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture Joel E. Ferris Research Library and Archives)

Jesuit missionary and administrator in the Pacific Northwest.

From the description of Father Joseph Cataldo letter, 1913 February 16. (Washington State University). WorldCat record id: 68486400

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Subjects:

  • Coeur d'Alene Indians
  • Names, Geographical
  • Idaho
  • Indians
  • Indians of North America
  • Indians of North America
  • Indians of North America
  • Indians of North America
  • Indians of North America
  • Indians of North America
  • Indians of North America
  • Indians of North America
  • Jesuits
  • Language and languages
  • Missionaries
  • Missionaries
  • Missions
  • Native Americans
  • Nez Percé Indians
  • Nez Percé language
  • Spokane Indians
  • Washington (State)

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

  • Idaho (as recorded)
  • Cataldo (Idaho) (as recorded)
  • Idaho--Latah County (as recorded)
  • Idaho--Saint Maries (as recorded)
  • Northwest, Pacific (as recorded)
  • Washington (State) (as recorded)
  • Northwest, Pacific (as recorded)
  • Cataldo (Idaho) (as recorded)
  • Northwest, Pacific (as recorded)
  • Northwest, Pacific (as recorded)