Home / Full timeline / Pope John Paul II appointed Eugene Antonio Marino, a Black Josephite priest, as the archbishop of Atlanta, Georgia, making it was the first time that a Black American was named an archbishop in the American Roman Catholic Church.
Pope John Paul II appointed Eugene Antonio Marino, a Black Josephite priest, as the archbishop of Atlanta, Georgia, making it was the first time that a Black American was named an archbishop in the American Roman Catholic Church.
1988 (Mar 15)
Pope John Paul II appointed Eugene Antonio Marino, a Black Josephite priest, as the archbishop of Atlanta, Georgia. It was the first time that a Black American was named an archbishop in the American Roman Catholic Church. Marino, age fifty-three and a native of Biloxi, Mississippi, studied at St. Joseph's Seminary in Washington, D.C., from 1956 to 1962 and earned a master's degree in religious education from Fordham University. From 1962 to 1968, he taught in and directed training activities in the archdiocese of Washington, D.C. On July 13, 1971, Marino was elected to a four year term as vicar general of the Josephite Fathers. Prior to being named archbishop of Atlanta, Marino was the auxiliary bishop of Washington, D.C., and secretary of the National Conference of Catholic Bishops. He was one of only twelve Black bishops in the United States at the time of his appointment as archbishop In 1985, Marino was one of the ten Black bishops who called on the National Conference of Catholic Bishops to create "a preferential option for Black Americans" to help forestall “potential explosive racial strife in our country" which was "as immediate a threat as a nuclear holocaust." Marino's appointment made him the spiritual leader of 156,000 Roman Catholics in sixty-nine counties in north Georgia, comprising the Archdiocese of Atlanta, of which ten thousand are Blacks (most of whom were members of seven churches, including three predominantly Black ones, in the city of Atlanta). In the United States, 1.3 million of the Church's 52 million members were Black in 1988.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.