Lee County IL Biography
JAMES TREACY
Rev. James Treacy, Pastor of St Patrick's Church at Dixon, is one of the most
learned, zealous and worthy upholders of
the Catholic faith in the State of Illinois.
His birthplace is in County Cork,-Ireland, and be
is a son of John and Bridget (Noonan) Treacy,
who were also born in County Cork. His paternal
grandmother died in the city of Cork at the remarkably advanced age of one hundred and three
years. His father was prosperously engaged in the
mercantile business in his native county until 1853,
when he came to America, and spent the remainder
of his days in Pittsburg, Pa., where he died at the
venerable age of ninety-four years. The parents
of our subject reared ten children, who were given
liberal educational advantages, and two of the sons
are doctors and one is an attorney.
Father Treacy early became a pupil in the schools
of his native place, and subsequently his education
was advanced under the supervision of the Lazarist
Fathers in the city of Cork. He came to the
United States in 1849 and entered St Michael's
Seminary at Pittsburg, in which institution of
learning he remained two or three years, preparing himself for the sacred office of the priesthood,
and he then finished his studies in St Mary's Seminary at Baltimore, where he was under the instruction of the
Rev. Father Varot, later Bishop
of Florida, and of Father Freddot, the distinguished moral theologian and author. Thus well
prepared for the duties that lay before him in the
life that he had chosen, our subject was ordained
by the late Archbishop Kendrick, of Baltimore,
and was appointed assistant pastor of St Patrick's
Church and Chapel, and of Mercy Hospital at Pittsburg. Ho occupied that position one year, and
then was placed in charge of the building of St
Bridget's Church.
He remained a resident of Pittsburg until 1878,
and the church there found in him a noble and
earnest worker, who-threw his whole soul into his
labors, and was an ardent champion of whatsoever
tended to elevate the community and the status of
its citizens, making the cause of the unfortunate
and the suffering his own. It was while he was at
Pittsburg that the Bishops and Archbishops of the
church in council at Baltimore received a dispatch
from Cardinal Bamabo, of Rome, representing the
will of the Pope, instructing the assembled council
in the most emphatic terms to espouse the cause
of the colored man in the most practical manner.
This order, promulgated from the bead of the
Church of Rome, found ready response in the
heart of our subject, and he was one of the first to
move in the good work of helping the negro to an
education and to the benefits of the Roman Catholic religion. He built a church and school for
the colored people of Pittsburg at a cost of 110,000, the school being taught by the Sisters o
Mercy. He officiated in the pulpit, and had colored choir and colored attar boys. He was even
successful in his work in other directions, especially
among the poorer and more abandoned class, the
outcasts of a great manufacturing city. This world
was performed by Father Treacy under adverse
circumstances it not being popular at that time
but owing to the vast amount of good resulting
from it, it has become popular.
While in Pittsburg Father Treacy was a member
of the Bishops* Council, and held the offices of
Chancellor and Secretary. He was also a member
of the Orphan Seminary and Cemetery Boards. In
the midst of his many arduous duties he found
some time to devote to literary work as an author
and as editor of a Catholic journal, first called the
Hibernian, and later the Catholic Journal, in which
he had a half interest. He prepared two works for
publication, which are of great merit, but owing
to ill health, brought on by a too close application
to his duties, and to the change of scene necessitated thereby, he has not yet given them to the
world. One of them is a poem, containing upwards of fifteen thousand lines, illustrative of the
glories of the Roman Catholic Church.
In 1878 our subject was obliged to abandon his
labors in Pittsburg, as his failing health and flagging energies warned him that he must seek to restore his physical powers elsewhere. He removed
to Chicago, where he joined his old-time friend,
Bishop Foley. He was appointed to attend to the
missions at New Dublin, Lena, Apple River and
Elizabeth town, and after a short time was sent to
look after the church at Rochelle. He remained
there six years, and was then appointed to take
charge of St. Patrick's Church at Dixon, one of
the leading churches of the Catholic faith in
Northern Illinois. By his good works and by the
example of a pure life guided by lofty principles
of right, he has gained the sincere respect and
esteem even of the members of other Christian denominations, and has been an influence for much
good in the community.
Father Treacy looks after the spiritual welfare
of three hundred families, including the Catholic
societies at Harmon and Ashton. His church at
Dixon was founded more than thirty years ago by
Father McDermott. In 1887 the original structure
in which services were held was partially burned,
the walls remaining intact, and the present house
of worship is composed of the walls of the original
edifice. It is a handsome brick building, of an appropriate style of architecture, and cost, with its
rich furnishings, $18,000.
Transcribed by Christine Walters - Portraits and Biographical Lee Co. 1892
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