Francis Xavier Gartland (January 13, 1805 – September 20, 1854) was an Irish-born American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as the first bishop of the Diocese of Savannah, covering Georgia and Eastern Florida, from 1850 until his death in 1854.
Biography
Early life
One of ten children, Francis Gartland was born on January 13, 1805, in Dublin, Ireland, to James and Mary (née Conroy) Gartland.[1] His family immigrated to the United States when he was a small child, settling in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[2] Gartland studied the classics and theology at Mount St. Mary's College in Emmitsburg, Maryland,[2]
Gartland was ordained to the priesthood for what was then the Diocese of Philadelphia by Bishop Henry Conwell on August 5, 1832.[3] After his ordination, Garland served as curate under Reverend John Hughes at St. John's Parish in Philadelphia, becoming its pastor in 1838.[2] Appointed vicar general of the diocese in 1845,[4] Gartland was seen as Bishop Francis Kenrick's "chief lieutenant"[1] in the latter's attempts to restore peace and order in Philadelphia following the Know Nothing riots. Garland became known as "the most popular priest in the city among all classes."[5]
As a bishop in the American South, Ryan considered "the freedom of the slave population" to be "untimely," saying, "All we have to do is mite their souls [so that] whether bond of free they may be saved."[7]
In 1854, during a yellow fever epidemic, Gartland travelled around Savannah visiting the sick.[2] On September 8, a hurricane ripped the roof off of Gartland's residence. A few weeks later, Francis Gartland died from yellow fever in Savannah on September 20, 1854, at age 49.[2]