Father John
Augustine Tolton (Augustus Tolton)
John Augustine Tolton started life born
into slavery on April 1, 1854 in Brush Creek, Ralls County,
Missouri. In 1862 while his father, an escaped
slave, had joined the Union Army, his mother, a slave
also, told John and his two siblings, "We must
escape too." One night they fled to the Mississippi
River. Three days later they reached the river finding a leaky
old row boat. They boarded and started paddling. Three
confederate soldiers witnessed the escape. A shot was
fired but mother kept paddling towards freedom on the Illinois
shore. Upon landing on the Illinois side she looked
at her son with streaming eyes, "John, boy, you're
free. Never forget the goodness of the Lord."
Father Peter McGirr, pastor of St
Peter's Catholic Church of Quincy, IL noticed a poorly dressed
African-American boy standing across from his church for the third
day. He spoke to the boy. John Augustine told him he was
hungry and willing to work. Father McGirr fed him and
asked if he was interested in attending school.
John Augustine entered St. Peter's
Catholic School. After the first month Father McGirr asked
John who had already progressed to second reader, if he wanted to
become Catholic. Father McGirr baptized him
and instructed him for his first Holy Communion. John
served as Alter Boy for the 5 a.m. Mass during the following
summer. After which Father McGirr asked him if he would
like to become a priest. John Augustine was
incredulous. Father McGirr explained, "You would be the
first Negro Catholic Priest of the United States. It will take
you about twelve years of hard study." Excited and delighted all at once he
turned to Father McGirr and said, "Let us go to church and pray for
my success."
John progressed quickly in school.
He finished high school, then attended and graduated from Quincy
College. As an African-American in the United States
during the nineteenth century Father McGirr and the Franciscan
Fathers had to arrange for him to complete his ecclesiastical
studies in Rome. He was an exemplary student. For the
rest of his life John loved to speak of his wonderful experiences in
the eternal City.
At the age of 32, John Augustine Tolton,
who was born a slave in Missouri, was ordained a Catholic Priest in
Rome by Cardinal Parochi on April 24, 1886. Newspapers
throughout the United States carried the story and announced
the date and arrival time of Father Tolton to Quincy,
Illinois.
Upon arriving back to Quincy on July
17, 1886, Father Tolton was greeted at the train station like a
conquering hero. Thousands were there to greet him led by
Father McGirr. A brass band played church songs and Negro
Spirituals. Thousands of blacks and whites lined the
streets to catch a glimpse of the new priest wearing a black Prince
Albert and a silk hat. People marched and cheered his
flower draped four horse carriage. Children, priests and
sisters left the school joining the procession heading towards the
church.
Father Tolton arrived at the church where
hundreds were waiting inside. People of all races were
kneeling at the communion rail awaiting his sacerdotal
blessings. The first blessing went to Father McGirr, his
friend and benefactor. For this momentous occasion
racial prejudices were momentarily replaced with religious
fervor as all races kissed the new Father's hand.
The next day at 9 a.m. Father Tolton gave
his first solemn High Mass. The church was packed as thousands
stood outside unable to attend. There were many priests within
the sanctuary. The Church was beautifully decorated for
this special occasion. Father John Augustine Tolton sang his
first Mass. Father McGirr preached the sermon sketching Father
Tolton's story and gave purpose of the Holy Mass. Afterwards
all knelt and asked the sacerdotal blessing of the priest. Later in life Father
Tolton would explain that he was given the name of Augustine,
the great African theologian, because that was his maternal
grandfather's name, and he was given the name of John because that
was the patron saint of the priest who baptized him.
For five years Father
Tolton led St. Boniface Mission in Quincy
before Archbishop Feehan requested the only African-American
priest to come to Chicago.
Chicago's Black Catholics
Mrs. Eliza Armstrong was Chicago's first
Black Catholic in 1863 along with her daughter Rosa. Her
husband, James, joined her in Chicago in 1865. In 1870, James
McNeal arrived. Chicago Catholics were building Holy
Name Cathedral, but it was burned down before completion by the
Chicago fire of 1871. Bishop Foley bought Old St. Mary's
Church on 9th and Wabash from Protestant as a temporary
Cathedral.
In 1882 Father Joseph Roles, pastor of Old St.
Mary's, gathered the Black Catholics of Chicago and
formed a club named the St. Augustine Society. They
visited the sick, fed the hungry and buried the dead.
There good deeds attracted many new members. Permission was
granted for them to have church services of there own. Their
Mass was held in the basement of Old St. Mary's Church
and first led by Father McMullan.
The St. Augustine Society requested Bishop Foley to obtain the services of Father
Tolton as their spiritual director. Sometime between late
1899 and early 1890 Father Tolton came to Chicago. He
continued to hold services in the church basement for several years
dreaming of the day when his congregation would have a large
beautiful church.
St. Monica
In 1891 permission was granted to build
their church, St. Monica. Black contractors and
workmen followed the designs of their Black architect to build
the church on the northwest corner of 36th and Dearborn.
Whites donated liberally including Mrs. O'Neill, who donated
$10,000. The St. Augustine Society raised a considerable
amount of money through numerous fund raisers. However it was
not enough, and a temporary roof had to be used so that services
could begin. The new church began holding services
in 1893, and was dedicated to St. Monica, the mother of the great
African bishop and doctor of the Church, St. Augustine, on January
14, by Rev. M. Neumann, OSF. Father Riordan of St. Elizabeth
also took part in the dedication..
Father Tolton's basement congregation of
30 grew quickly once they moved into their new church. He
moved to a small home behind the church where his mother and sister
kept house for him. The surrounding community was
interracial. Father Tolton was a charming man with a beautiful
singing voice. Rome had forever touched him. He
dreamed and planned for completing St. Monica. He wanted his
congregation to point at their church with great pride.
Returning from the annual retreat of
Chicago priests at St. Viator's College in Bourbonnais, Illinois on
a hot July day Father Tolton was overwhelmed by the 105
degree. He collapsed somewhere near Calumet Avenue as he was
walking from the train near Lake Michigan and 35th Street to his
rectory at 36th and Dearborn. He was taken to the hospital,
but four hours later on July 9, 1897 Father Tolton was dead from a
sunstroke. The community was shocked as they had lost their
beloved pastor seemingly in the prime of his life. Father
Tolton rests at St. Mary's Cemetery just outside of Quincy,
Illinois.

Click on websites below for additional
information on Father Tolton.
http://www.holyangels.com/FATHER-AUGUSTUS-TOLTON.HTM http://websites.quincy.edu/tolton/tolton2.html http://www.quincy.edu/information/history/tolton.html http://www.rootsweb.com/~momonroe/tolton.htm http://www.dio.org/catholictimes/archive.php?file=archive/2002/11_17_2002/feature4 http://websites.quincy.edu/tolton/bio.html http://www.showmenews.com/2004/Aug/20040822Feat006.asp http://history.alliancelibrarysystem.com/IllinoisAlive/files/qu/htm2/qutxt064.cfm http://www.quincy-cvb.org/thingstodo.htm go
to #9 http://www.africanamericans.com/BlackCatholics.htm http://shamino.quincy.edu/tolton/bio.html |