St Stanislaus College (Florissant)

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St Stanislaus College (Florissant)

St Stanislaus College (Florissant)

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St Stanislaus College (Florissant)

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St Stanislaus College (Florissant)

7 Name results for St Stanislaus College (Florissant)

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Cox, William I, b.1869-, former Jesuit priest

  • IE IJA ADMN/7/238
  • Person
  • 28 April 1869-

Born: 28 April 1869, Athlone, County Westmeath
Entered: 24 September 1889, St Stanislaus College, Tullabeg, County Offaly
Ordained: 28 June 1902

Transcribed HIB to Neo-Aurelianensis Province (NOR) 1890

Left Society of Jesus: 02 February 1909

Educated at St Mary’s, Athlone, Diocesan Seminary in Sligo and Mungret College SJ

1889-1891: St Stanislaus College, Tullabeg, , Novitiate
1891-1892: St Stanislaus College, Macon GA, USA, studying Rhetoric
1892-1895: St Charles College, Grand Coteau LA, USA, studying Philosophy
1895-1897: Spring Hill College, AL, USA, Regency
1897-1899: College of the Immaculate Conception, New Orleans, LA, USA, Regency
1899-1900: Georgetown University, Washington DC, USA
1900-1902: St Stanislaus College, Macon GA, USA, studying Theology privately
1902-1907: College of the Immaculate Conception, New Orleans, LA, USA, teaching
1907-1908: St Stanuslaus College, Florissant MO, USA, Tertianship
1908-1909: College of the Immaculate Conception, New Orleans, LA, USA, teaching

Letter on file from Father General FX Wernz to Vice Provincial Fr W Delany regarding Fr Cox now living with his family in Athlone (02/02/1909). Enclosed in the letter with his dismissal papers. On receiving his papers he would then be incardinated into the Elphin Diocese.

Faricy, Robert L, 1926-2022, Jesuit Priest

  • IE IJA J/2374
  • Person
  • 29 August, 1926-4 March 2022

Born: 29 August, 1926, St Paul, Minnesota, MN, USA
Entered: 08 August 1950, St. Stanislaus, Florissant, Missouri, MO, USA - Missourianae Province (MIS)
Ordained: 01 September 1962, Saint-Jean-Baptiste Cathedral, Pl. Saint-Jean, 69005 Lyon, France
Final Vows: 15 August 1967
Died: 4 March 2022, St Camillus, Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, USA, United States Midwest Province (UMI)

by 2009 came to Milltown (HIB) teaching

https://www.jesuitsmidwest.org/memoriam/faricy-robert-l-father/

Let us pray in thanksgiving for the life of Fr. Robert L. Faricy, SJ, who died on March 4, 2022, at St. Camillus Jesuit Community in Wauwatosa, Wisconsin. He was 95 years old. May he rest in peace.

Bob was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on August 29, 1926. He was very proud of growing up in St. Paul and spending his summers at Steamboat Lake where his family operated a resort. He attended St. Mark’s Catholic grade school and St. Thomas Military Academy in St. Paul before graduating from the United States Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland, in 1949 with a bachelor’s degree in engineering. He was a proud graduate of the United States Naval Academy, and he was honored to serve his country in the navy (1949–1950). He entered the former Missouri Province of the Society of Jesus at St. Stanislaus Seminary in Florissant, Missouri, on August 8, 1950, and became part of the former Wisconsin Province when it was created in 1955. He had the usual course of Jesuit studies at St. Stanislaus Seminary and Saint Louis University. During regency, Bob taught math at Marquette University High School in Milwaukee (1956–1959). He studied theology in Fourvière, Lyon, France. He was ordained at St. John’s Cathedral in Lyon on September 1, 1962. After tertianship in Flanders, Bob completed a doctoral program in theology at The Catholic University in Washington, D.C. His dissertation topic was “Teilhard de Chardin and Christian Effort.” He professed his final vows on August 15, 1967.

Bob began his long career as a professional theologian by teaching for five years at The Catholic University of America (1966–1971). In 1971, he moved to the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, where he taught until he was named Professor Emeritus of Spiritual Theology in 2000. Bob combined teaching and writing in Rome with an extensive, in practice, worldwide ministry of lectures and workshops in spirituality and charismatic renewal. He continued his spirituality ministry when he returned from Rome to reside in the Marquette University Jesuit Community as a writer and researcher in 2000. Bob was able to return to Rome often when he taught courses at Regina Mundi Institute (2002–2005). In 2012, declining health led to his being missioned to St. Camillus to pray for the Church and the Society.

He was a smart, talented, and complex man who did not avoid important, controversial matters. He was fluent in Italian and French. During his almost 30 years in Rome, Bob was known as a demanding and effective professor. Although Bob’s doctoral dissertation was on the theology of Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, he later turned his focus to spirituality and Catholic charismatic renewal. He coauthored more than 40 books about prayer with authors such as Sr. Lucy Rooney, SND; Luciana Pecoraio; and Fr. Francis Sullivan, SJ. Throughout his Jesuit life, Bob was a strong promoter of spirituality—including during his time spent as director of tv programming at EWTN (1987–1988).

Bob helped establish the Heart of Jesus Community in Rome. Hearing of his death, some members wrote the following tributes:

Thank you for being an exemplary instrument of the Lord, exercising the charisms of the Holy Spirit in your priesthood and teaching us to use them for the common good.

You have been a father different from all the others. You knew how to give love, laughing and joking.

Bob lived his life with passion and a certain exuberance. He was a man of strong convictions, and he was action-oriented and always on the move. He found the diminishments of old age very challenging. But he turned peacefully towards the good and gracious Lord whom he loved.

McKean, William J, 1871-, former Jesuit Novice of the Missourianae Province

  • Person
  • 10 December 1871-

Born: 10 December 1871, Killenaule, County Tipperary
Entered: 07 September 1893, St Stanislaus, Florissant MO, USA - Missourianae Province (MIS)

Left Society of Jesus: 1896

Educated Mungret College SJ 1889-1893

1893-1895: St Stanislaus, Florissant MO, USA (MIS), Novitiate
1895-1896: St Stanislaus, Florissant MO, USA, Rhetoric (in CAT still Novice)

Moynihan, John, 1843-1872, Jesuit scholastic of the Missourianae Province

  • Person
  • 15 August 1643-29 October 1872

Born: 15 August 1843, Millstreet, County Cork
Entered: 2 June 1861, St Stanislaus College, Florissant MO, USA - Missourianae Province (MIS)
Died: 29 October 1872, St Louis College, St Louis, MO, USA

1861-1865: St Stanislaus College, Florissant MO, USA (MIS), Novitiate then Rhetoric
1865-1868: Xavier College, Cincinnati OH, USA, Regency
1868-1869: St Gall’s Church, Milwaukee WI, USA, Regency in local school
1869-1870: Woodstock College, Woodstock MD, USA, Philosophy

◆ Woodstock Letters SJ : Vol 2, Number 1

“Death of Mr John Moynihan SJ” p 80-81

The allusion contained in the closing lines of the foregoing letter is to the sudden death of one of our Scholastics, Mr John Moynihan, who died at St Louis University, on the 19th of October last.

We do not hope to add to the affectionate regard in which Mr Moynihan was held by all who knew him. We mean simply to lay our own humble tribute upon our brother's grave, for the years which he spent with us are so lately gone, and the memory of them is so fresh and green, that it is a pleasant and a beautiful task to weave the offering. A short time ago he bade us farewell with high hope and holy resolution, and we felt sure that he was going forth only to enter upon a career in which virtue and talent would win for him the crown of success. A few weeks later, and we received the news that he was on the point of death; but galloping consumption bore him away so rapidly that the grave had closed over him before his brethren at Woodstock had thus learned that he was even ill. He was confined to his room only three days; and the calm, holy, and beautiful death which he died, was but a reflex of his lifetime. One of his companions writes to us: “I was with him the evening before he died, when he made me read the points of meditation for him, and asked me to come again in the morning. When I went to him on the following day, I found him exceedingly low, yet hoping to recover. Still he then talked to me of the good chance he had of dying in the Society. I visited him frequently during the day, and found him at all times very fervent, eager to suffer and pray. He remained this way till about an hour before his death, an:d breathed his last, sitting in his chair with his habit on, while his brethren were reciting the prayers for his departing soul”. What a beautiful close to his innocent, peaceful life! What a mild, sweet twilight after the day of sunshine!

Mr Moynihan had taught four years before commencing the study of philosophy, and after finishing the first course of this science in Woodstock, had just returned to his province for college duty again, when he was called away to the better life. During the three years which he spent with us he was remarkable for his religious observance and for his close application to study. His course of philosophy was successful in the extreme. He found in it full play for the natural bent of his mind, and the pleasure which he took in it, together with the encouragement which marked success must necessarily bring about, served to strengthen the more his prime and principal motive for diligence-sense of duty. Nor did the efforts which he made after the acquisition of learning fail him in the end. His brilliant examination “De Universa” was the admiration of the Faculty, and the praises heaped upon it, though an unsought, were yet a merited reward.

But if our brother was persevering in the pursuit of knowledge, he was equally so in the observance of our religious duties. Nature had given him a simple, unobtrusive manner, and his good, warm heart was full of affection. Sensitive and timid himself, he could not easily fail in due regard for the feelings of his companions. He would not hear them blamed even in jest, and if the accused happened to be of his own delicate sensitiveness, and most of all, if he made no retort, the sympathy of mutual feeling was immdiately awakened, and Mr Moynihan ready to take his part. This was so noticeable in him that his companions, in their. various games, sought opportunities of censure, simply to admire his readiness to shield the imaginary victim. Moreover he was so humble and so ready to yield to others the better part. Only a short time before he left us,

O'Meara, James J, 1845-1933, Jesuit priest of the Missourianae Province

  • Person
  • 29 September 1845-03 January 1933

Born: 29 September 1845, County Tipperary
Entered: 08 September 1863, Manresa, Roehampton, London, England - Angliae Province (ANG)
Ordained: 21 April 1876,
Final Vows: 15 August 1879,
Died: 03 January 1933, St Stanislaus, Florissant MO, USA - Missourianae Province (MIS)

Was in English Novitiate and responded to call by Fr De Smet to join his Mission in the US. Fr O’Meara joined him and a number of others travelling to New York and then on to Florissant MO, where he finished his Novitiate and began his Juniorate in September 1865.

1863-1864: Manresa, Roehampton, England (ANG), Novitiate
1864-1865: St Stanislaus, Florissant MO, USA (MIS), Novitiate
1865-1867: Xavier College, Sycamore Street, Cincinnati OH, USA, Regency
1867-1870: St Louis University, St Louis Mo, USA, Philosophy
1870-1873: Xavier College, Sycamore Street, Cincinnati OH, USA, Regency
1874-1876: Woodstock College, Woodstock MD, USA, Theology
1876-1879: Xavier College, Sycamore Street, Cincinnati OH, USA, Teaching
1879-1880: St Ignatius College SJ, West 12th Street, Chicago IL, USA, Teaching
1880-1884: Xavier College, Sycamore Street, Cincinnati OH, USA, Teaching
1884-1888: Creighton College, Omaha NE, USA, Teaching, Spiritual Father
1888-1892: St Mary’s College SJ, St Mary’s KS, USA, Teaching
1892-1894: St Louis University, Grand Avenue and Pine Street, St Louis MO, US, Teaching
1894-1895: Creighton College, Omaha NE, USA, Teaching
1895-1897: St Ignatius College SJ, West 12th Street, Chicago IL, USA, Teaching
1897-1901: Sacred Heart Church, West 19th Street, Chicago IL, USA, Curate and Spieitual Father
1901-1902: Detroit College, Jefferson Acenue, Detroit MI, USA, Minister, Teaching
1902-1908: St Ignatius College SJ, Pilsen Station, Chicago IL, USA, Curate, Librarian and Teaching
1908-1909:St Charles Borromeo Church, St Charles MO, USA, Curate and Spiritual Father
1909-1914: Xavier College, Seventh and Sycamore Street, Cincinnati OH, USA, Curate
1914-1933: St Stanislaus, Florissant MO, USA (MIS), Prefect of Church then Curate and Librarian

◆ Woodstock Letters SJ : Vol 42, Number 3

Obituary

“Varia: St Louis - Golden Jubilee” p389

.......
Father James O'Meara, now at St Xavier's, Cincinnati, was equally honored with jubilee entertainments and festivities on September 8th. Father O'Meara is a native of Tipperary, Ireland, and entered the Society at Roehampton, England, while Father Alfred Weld was master of novices. He came to this country in I865 with Father DeSmet to labor as he thought among the Indians and frontiersmen.

◆ Woodstock Letters SJ : Vol 51, Number 3 p 413

Florissant: Golden Jubilee of Father James J O’Meara

On September 8th Father James J O'Meara celebrated his Diamond Jubilee in the Society. At the community Mass, which he celebrated twenty young Jesuits pronounced their first vows and thus gave promise of continuing the work which he had so long performed in the Province.

Father O’Meara belongs to that sturdy old race of Jesuits who are still active in England and in the United States. Though born in Ireland, he was educated in Stonyhurst with the two Fathers Rickaby, Father Thurston, and Father Chandlery. He spent the first year of his novitiate with them at Roehampton; then he came to the United States and had a long career as professor in the various colleges of the Missouri Province. He had come at the invitation of Father DeSmet with the expectation of working for the Indians, but his zeal had to be directed to the young Indian in the classroom. For the past eight years Father O'Meara has been at Florissant acting as spiritual father. He is still in sturdy health, and expects to celebrate the Golden Jubilee of his priesthood in 1926.

◆ Woodstock Letters SJ : Vol 54, Number 3 p 313

Father O’Meara Honored at Historical Commemoration

One of the features of the commemorative program carried out by the Fourth Degree Knights of Columbus, on Sunday, June 14th, at Saint Ferdinand's Church, Florissant, was the unveiling by Father O'Meara of a bronze tablet commemorating the names and deeds of the pioneer missionaries who set out from this locality to the Faith from this first western shrine of the Sacred Heart to the Rocky Mountains. The honor was conferred on Father O’Meara because of his close identification with the great history which tho marker commemorates. The program of the day included a special Mass for the Knights, celebrated by Rt Rev Joseph A Murphy SJ. The usual K of C breakfast and meeting followed. In the afternoon the presentation speech was made by Mr John J Griffin. This was followed by an historical address by Father Laurence Kenny SJ. Hon Judge O'Neill Ryan followed with the laymen's address. After this a life-size Crucifixion Group, erected in Saint Ferdinand's Cemetery, by Arthur Donnelly, was blessed. Solemn Benediction in Saint Ferdinand's Church closed the very successful and impressive program.

Father·O'Meara Honored at Home

A double holiday was celebrated at Charbonniere on July 4, 1925, by the Juniors. The day was the sixtieth anniversary of the arrival of Father James J O'Meara SJ, at Florissant.

The entries in the Diarium Domus Probationis relating to this memorable event are interesting. June 21st, 1865, “Mr Chambers came from St Louis bringing word that Father De Smet had landed at New York with ten companions.

July 1st, In the morning, after spiritual reading, the Juniors and Novices went to the fields and after a few hours returned home to get ready to greet Father De Smet and his companions. A short while later they arrived, ten in number, viz, Mr Walshe, CC Murphy, Lagae, Aerts, Van Loco, Van Luyten, Van Krevel, Van Acht, De Jong and Oldenhoff. Cr O'Meara remained in St Louis for a few days, because he was slightly unwell. Mr Walshe and Cr O'Meara, a second year novice, and Cr Murphy of the first year had been obtained from the English Province. At dinner “Deo Gratias”. In the afternoon the new novices went walking with the few other novices and Mr Hogan.

July 4th, In the morning Fathers Boudreaux and Stuntebeck, Messrs Ward and Walshe, and Mr O'Meara arrive.

Father O'Meara fills in the details as follows:

After landing at New York, we proceeded to Fordham College, where, in the old theologate, we rested for a week, while Father De Smet telegraphed our arrival to headquarters,   asking for a business man to guide his troop of innocents over the railroads. With four theologians of the Missouri Province we enjoyed the scenes around the city, and along the   Harlem River and the big aqueduct.

On Monday, the 26th, we crossed on the ferry to New Jersey, and took train to St Louis. Father James Converse had come from Chicago to guide us, and Father Buysschaert (Bushart) joined us, making a troop of fifteen. The merry songs and laughter of the foreigners attracted attention and we were taken for an opera troop. Our giant De Jong was hugging a giant bow intended for a gift to an Indian chief. The trip seemed long. We arrived at Cincinnati on Wednesday morning, and we stopped over at St Xavier College for dinner and recreation. On leaving in the afternoon it was a sight for edification to see the whole community out on the steps of the Athenaeum embracing us all.

It was Commencement Day when we arrived at St Louis University. All were invited to the hall in the evening. I enjoyed the graduating speech of the now Hon John O'Meara, after listening for an hour to a poem read by the Rev Father Fitzpatrick for the degree of Master of Arts. The greatest treat was to watch the meeting of Father De Smet and General Sherman, and to see them chatting together like old chums.

After a few days rest Father De Smet led his crowd out to the novitiate, all except me. I had been taken sick suddenly. The fatigue and excitement of so much traveling added to the summer heat of St Louis had made me feverish. The jovial Doctor Linton, who was a special friend of Father De Smet, cheered me up with his way of joking, and assured me that I would be well in a day or so. Mr Walshe came back from Florissant to visit me. We had been fellow novices for a year at Roehampton. He found me in good spirits.

So on July 4th, we took train to Ferguson. And on the way I was astonished at the crowds of people in holiday dress; I was ignorant of the feast. From Ferguson we rode in a light wagon over a dilapidated plank road to Florissant, and thence to the novitiate. Father Isidore Boudreaux received me cordially, and after a little talk in the parlor said, Now let us visit the Master of the House' and as he led the way to the chapel, my wonder ceased and I understood. That lesson of piety I never forgot.

After the visit to the chapel Father Boudreaux introduced me to the novices in their ascetory. The old novices were CC Bosche, Tracy, Calmer and Charroppin of the second year, and of the first year CC Weinman, Real, Perkin and Hugh Mageveny, the manuductor. The first four became Juniors by September, joining Joseph Rigge and Patrick McDermott of the second year. I became the seventh Junior.

At Florissant sixty years ago, the community of about fifty lived in the stone house which is still the central building in front. The stone residence had a hall at each end on every floor; in the middle were private rooms. The present type- writing room was kept for Father Provincial; it stood opposite to Father Rector's room. The ascetory of the Novices was the hall on the west end of this building on the second floor. The hall at the other end of this floor was a dormitory for the Juniors.

During the month of August the newcomer from Roehampton served his probation in the refectory. As refectorian he attended to the whole basement, except the kitchen, which was adjacent on the yard-side and now serves as wash room for the Brothers.

Father Charles Coppens had just returned from Fordham, where he had been ordained, and was beginning his long and distinguished career as professor of the Juniors. He began to collect a library of the English classics. Those seven Juniors had the honor of being his first pupils.

Father Bushart, also recently ordained, acted as Socius to the Master of Novices over fifteen scholastic and seven brother novices. Father Buschots, as pastor, attended to the Creole farmers and neighboring colored folks. Two other Fathers in the community were studying English, viz, Father Shulak from Poland and Father Gretens from Belgium.

In October the seven Juniors spent a Thursday at the Charbonniere. There was no building there; and the ground was rough and covered with a woody growth. On a hillock in one corner was a small opening like a cave. Here we built a fire and cooked our dinner.

On other days we took “recreation” in the corn-field, and sometimes in the orchard we enjoyed “dentalia”. The orchards on each side of the avenue were in prime condition; and the peaches were numerous, large and luscious. The Novices were fond of walking through the woods and over the fields, striking a piece of road now and then. The Juniors played handball against the end of the stone building, and against the window-shutters of the present clothes-room and Brothers' ascetery. That generation was in blissful ignorance of baseball, tennis or football.

◆ Woodstock Letters SJ : Vol 55, Number 2 p 305

Missouri: A Golden Jubilee

On April 21, 1926, Fr. O’Meara celebrated at Florissant the Golden Jubilee of his Priesthood. That is a rare event in the Society for obvious reasons, and it was observed with unusual joy and festivities. The Juniors offered greetings in prose and verse, letters were read from Father General and Archbishop Glennon, Father P Burke spoke in behalf of the Jubilarian’s old pupils, and the Provincial voiced the sentiments of the entire Province. Of Fr O’Meara’s many pupils, 150 have become priests, including the late ArchbishopMoeller of Cincinnati. Fifty entered the Society, and over forty have persevered.

FatherO’Meara was born Sep 29,1845, inTipperary, Ireland. He was the youngest of ten children, and lost his father at an early age. After the father’s death the family moved to Lancashire, England. Here James attended school for five years. Fr Morron SJ, took an interest in him and gave him private lessons in Latin. Later he sent him to Stonyhurst College. Here the boy developed such violent headaches that he was obliged to give up studies and return to his home. Naturally, the priest was much disappointed. The holy man was inspired to take the lad to St Winefred’s Well in Wales. There he was completely cured, and the headaches departed never to return.

On Sept. 8, 1863, he entered the Novitiate at Roehampton. He had and still has a great esteem for his Master of Novices, Fr Alfred Weld. Before the end of his Noviceship he responded to the appealof Fr Dc Smet for laborers in the American vineyard. A little group of future apostles reached Florissant in July, 1865, and James O’Meara was among the number. The following September Mr O’Meara pronounced his first vows. In November he went to Cincinnati to teach. He remained there for two years, and then he returned to St Louis for Philosophy. In 1870 he went back to Cincinnati and taught there for three years. In 1873 he went to Woodstock for Theology. He had as professors Fr Romano in Dogma and Fr Sabetti in Moral. He was ordained April 21, 1876, and hence is now fifty years a priest. Verily hath he received the length of days promised to the just.

Pinné, Christopher P, 1952-2023, Jesuit priest

  • IE IJA J/2381
  • Person
  • 27 May 1952-14 April 2023

Born: 27 May 1952, Easton PA, USA
Entered: 27 August 1981, St Stanislaus, Denver CO, USA, Missourianae Province (MIS)
Ordained: 12 June 1987, St Francis Xavier Church, St Louis MO, USA
Final Vows: 02 October 1994
Died: 14 April 2023, St Stanislaus, Florissant, Missouri, MO, USA, USA Central and Southern Province (UCS)

In 2000-2001 came to Gonzaga College, Dublin (HIB) on a sabbatical year studying and assisting in school

https://www.jesuitscentralsouthern.org/memoriam/pinne-christopher-p-father/

April 19, 2023 – Father Christopher P. Pinné, SJ, died April 14, 2023, in St. Louis. He was 70 years old, a Jesuit for 41 years and a priest for 35 years.

Remembered by his Jesuit brothers for his kindness and fortitude, Fr. Pinné will be remembered in a Mass of Christian Burial at 9:00 a.m. on Saturday, April 22, in St. Francis Xavier College Church in St Louis. A visitation will be in the same location, beginning at 8:00 a.m. before the Mass. The Mass will be livestreamed on YouTube. Search for “Mass of Christian Burial for Fr. Christopher Pinné, SJ.” Download the worship aid. Burial will follow immediately after the Mass at Calvary Cemetery in St. Louis.

Christopher Pinné was born in Easton, Pennsylvania, on May 27, 1952. His parents, Frederick J. Pinne and Alice T. Pinné, preceded him in death. He is survived by his brothers and sisters-in-law: Allan (Nancy) M. Pinne; Frederick “Rick” (Wendy) Pinne, III; and Terence (Susan) G. Pinné, as well as his brothers in the Society of Jesus.

A graduate of Rockhurst University, he entered the Society of Jesus on Aug. 27, 1981, in Denver, after acquiring both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in theology. He pronounced first vows on Aug. 21, 1983, and was ordained a priest on June 12, 1987, at St. Francis Xavier College Church. He pronounced final vows on Oct. 3, 1994.

He began his Jesuit ministry in 1983 at De Smet Jesuit High School in St. Louis, where he taught religion. Following his theology studies and ordination, he returned to De Smet Jesuit in 1988 as dean of students, religion teacher and counselor.

In 1993, he was assigned to Rockhurst High School in Kansas City, Mo., where he taught theology and served as superior of the Jesuit community. He served as interim president there for part of the 1999-2000 school year.

Following a sabbatical, Fr. Pinné returned to St. Louis, where for six years he was the provincial assistant for vocations, associate director of the advancement office and coordinator of the Alum Service Corps program.

Father Pinné’s life took a dramatic turn in the spring of 2007, when he was struck by a car. Some months later, his back began giving him serious trouble, resulting in the first of three painful surgeries, the last of which left him paralyzed from the waist down. Throughout the ordeal of multiple recoveries and then adjustment to life in a wheelchair, Fr. Pinné inspired many with his cheerful, hopeful and determined spirit.

During this time, from 2007 to 2011, Fr. Pinné taught theology and served as chaplain at Regis Jesuit High School in Aurora, Colo. In 2011, health needs necessitated a return to St. Louis, but always wanting to be of service, he served as chaplain of the Saint Louis University Law School.

Father Pinné returned to the classroom at St. Louis University High School in 2014 and moved to De Smet Jesuit in 2016 to serve as campus minister.

He returned to pastoral ministry at Jesuit Hall in 2017 and moved with his community to St. Ignatius Hall in St. Louis County in January 2023.

He never ceased being the compassionate, encouraging, prayerful priest that so many students and colleagues had come to know.

Father Pinné earned a bachelor’s degree in philosophy and theology at Rockhurst University, a master’s degree at Saint Louis University, and both Bachelor of Sacred Theology and a Master of Divinity at Regis College in Toronto, Ontario.

We remember with gratitude all that God has done through Fr. Pinné’s life of service to God and God’s people.

Roche, John, 1832-, former Jesuit Priest of the Lugdunensis Province

  • Person
  • 01 July 1832-

Born: 01 July 1832,
Entered: 20 June 1856, Notre-Dame-de-I'Ermitage, Lons-le-Saunier, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, France - Lugdunensis Province (LUGD)
Ordained: 1869,
Final Vows: 30 October 1864

Left Society of Jesus: 1876

1856-1857: Notre-Dame-de-I'Ermitage, Lons-le-Saunier, Bourgogne-Franche-Comté, France (LUGD), Novitiate
1857-1858: St Stanislaus, Florissant MO, USA (MIS), Novitiate
1858-1867: Spring Hill College, Mobile AL, USA, Regency
1867-1869: Fourvière, Lyon, France, Theology
1869-1870: Milltown Park, Dublin (HIB), Tertianship
1870-1871: St Stanislaus College SJ, Tullabe, County Offaly (HIB), Teaching
1871-1872: St Beuno’s, St Asaph, Flintshire, Wales (ANG), Missioner
1872-1874: St Ignatius, Preston, Lancashire, England (ANG), Curate
1874-1875: St Joseph’s Church, North Woodside Road, Glasgow, Scotland (ANG), Curate
1875-1876: Holy Cross Parish, Liverpool Road, Eccles, Lancashire, England (ANG), Curate