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Coat of arms of the former Diocese of Natchez (1873–1956, coat of arms first used 1911). The Diocese of Jackson is a Latin Church diocese in Mississippi in the United States. Its ecclesiastical jurisdiction includes the northern and central parts of the state, an area of 97,458 square kilometers (37,629 sq mi).
Mississippi: Biloxi: Gulf Pine Catholic: Biweekly Jackson: Mississippi Catholic: Biweekly 1954 Montana: Great Falls–Billings: The Harvest: Bimonthly 1985 North Carolina: Charlotte: Catholic News Herald: 58,000 [11] Biweekly 1991 Raleigh: NC Catholics: Monthly 2005 North Dakota: Bismarck: Dakota Catholic Action: 23,000 [12] Monthly 1941 Fargo ...
The Diocese of Natchez (Latin: Dioecesis Natchesium) was a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church; it was the predecessor of the Diocese of Jackson. It served all of Mississippi until the state was split into two dioceses, Jackson and Biloxi. The former cathedral for the Diocese of Natchez in Natchez, Mississippi is now a minor basilica ...
St. Richard Catholic School in Jackson will be relocating to the longtime Meadowbrook Church of Christ on I-55 with classes expected to start there in January 2025.
Sep. 17—Boys from Joplin and Carthage and a boy and a girl from Neosho are among 11 alleged victims of past sexual abuse by Catholic Church officials cited in a lawsuit filed last week against ...
The Diocese of Natchez was created July 28, 1837, and included all of Mississippi. [2] In 1841, Bishop John J. Chanche arrived in Natchez and set out to construct parishes. . The Mississippi legislature granted land to several congregations in Jackson and Bishop Chanche dedicated the new Catholic church at Court and President Streets to Saint Peter the Apostle on August 23, 1
Latino was appointed by Pope John Paul II to be the 10th bishop of the Diocese of Jackson on January 3, 2003. He was consecrated by Archbishop Oscar Lipscomb on March 7, 2003. Pope Francis accepted the resignation of Latino as bishop of Jackson on December 12, 2013. [1] Joseph Latino died on May 28, 2021, in Jackson, Mississippi. [2]
He then returned to Mississippi and was named a curate at St. Mary's Cathedral in Natchez, where he became rector in 1943. [1] He was raised to the rank of privy chamberlain in 1944, and served as chancellor (1941-1951) and vicar general (1951-1957) of the diocese. [1] He was made a domestic prelate in 1948 and pastor of St. Peter's Cathedral ...