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Ignatius Tomazin was a controversial Catholic priest who served as a missionary among the Ojibwe in Minnesota and later as a parish priest who founded several churches in central Minnesota. Tomazin was born in Carniola, an area in the Austro-Hungarian Empire that is now part of Slovenia. While at seminary in Laibach (now known as Ljubljana), Tomazin was recruited to the North American mission field by Fr. Francis Pierz[1], a fellow Slovenian and well-known missionary priest among the Ojibwe people in what is now Minnesota.
After sailing across the Atlantic and traveling from New York, Tomazin completed his studies at a makeshift seminary in the home of Bishop Thomas Grace. Tomazin was ordained in 1865 and held his first mass at St. Joseph.[2] The following year he traveled to Crow Wing, a thriving settlement on the Mississippi to serve as an Indian missionary under the tutelage of Fr. Pierz.[3] The young priest began accompanying his seasoned mentor on visits to outlying missions and worked hard to master the Ojibwe language.
Some personality conflicts developed between Pierz and Tomazin[3] and the young priest was reassigned to St. Mary's parish in St. Paul in 1868.[4]The following year he served at the Cathedral of St. Paul under Bishop John Ireland.[5]
Fr. Tomazin returned to the the mission field in late 1869, working more independently.[3] After Ojibwe leader Bagone-ghiizig (Hole-in-the-Day) was assassinated, Tomazin attempted to obtain guardianship of the chief's children.[6] Whether he actually obtained legal guardianship is unclear; however, other sources indicate Fr. Tomazin was involved in the education and religious training of Bagone-giizhig’s children for many years. In 1870, he baptized the chief’s son Ignatius at St. John’s University, where he was a student.[7] Tomazin’s efforts to get a Catholic education for two daughters of Bagone-giizhig played a role in the conflict he became embroiled in a few years later on the White Earth Indian Reservation.
As the aged Fr. Pierz's health declined, Tomazin took an additional duties, splitting the work with [Joseph Buh]. At the request of the bishop, Fr. Tomazin relocated to the White Earth reservation.[3] In January 1873, he planted a cross on a hill two miles south of the Indian agency where he intended to build his church. Later that year, Fr. Tomazin took leave of his duties to accompany Fr. Pierz, who was physically frail and showing signs of dementia, in his return to their homeland.[2] When Tomazin returned from Europe the following spring, he commenced building. The church, named Most Holy Redeemer by Tomazin, was dedicated on 30 June 1874.[3]
White Earth Mission
[edit]At that time, the White Earth reservation was under the control of the Episcopal Church, as assigned under President U.S. Grant's Peace Policy. Only seven reservations, none of which were in Minnesota, were assigned to the Catholic Church.[8] The Catholic Church protested the move, asserting that it had a previous presence on almost half the Indian reservations in the U.S. In a letter to a European aid society, Fr. Tomazin asserted that Episcopal Bishop Henry Whipple "gave false information" in reporting the numbers of Episcopalians on the reservation.[9]
Bishop Whipple nominated a Waseca farmer named Lewis Stowe and President Grant appointed him as agent to White Earth in 1874.[10] The bishop appointed practicing Episcopalians to other agency jobs as well. Mixed-blood Catholics, who previously served in these roles before the Ojibwe were relocated to White Earth, loudly protested and worked to get Agent Stowe fired. Fr. Tomazin supported their efforts, writing numerous letters to newspapers alleging corruption in the agency.[11]
In turn, Agent Stowe worked to get Fr. Tomazin removed from the reservation. He charged the priest with meeting surreptitiously with Ojibwe leaders and working to undermine the government school, which was also run by the Episcopal Church.[12] The agent also reported that Tomazin had fathered a child by his housekeeper and tried to send the child and its mother away from the reservation.[13] For his part, Fr. Tomazin wrote a letter to the New York Sun claiming that Stowe had broken into the mission and carried away religious articles belonging to the church.[14]
Agent Stowe found new grounds to charge Tomazin of breaking the law.[14] Tomazin transported the late Bagone-giizhig’s daughters to attend school at St. Joseph’s Convent and Academy, which was operated by the Benedictine Sisters near St. Cloud. This violated regulations requiring permission from the Indian Agent for Indians to leave the reservation. In September 1877 U.S. Indian Inspector Eber Kemble visited White Earth accompanied by a company of U.S. Army infantry. After a standoff lasting several hours, Fr. Tomazin agreed to leave the reservation.[15] The entire episode was captured in the newspapers, which embarrassed the Office of Indian Affairs. Eventually, Agent Stowe was replaced in early 1878.[10] Fr. Tomazin returned to his duties at White Earth shortly thereafter.[3]
Later in 1878, Fr. Tomazin led a delegation of Ojibwe leaders to Washington, D.C. to request support for the reservation and to solicit funds along the East Coast from private donors.[16] The priest and an Ojibwe leader named Manidoowab met with President Rutherford B. Hayes at the White House and generated much favorable publicity.[17]
While Fr. Tomazin was away, Bishop Rupert Seidenbusch quietly began to look for his replacement. Because he lacked priests to take over at White Earth, the bishop approached Abbot Alexius Edelbrock, the leader of the Benedictines of St. John’s Abbey for support. The abbot sent Fr. Aloysius Hermaneutz and two Benedictine nuns, Lioba Braun and Philomene Ketten to White Earth in November. Fr. Tomazin was unaware he had been replaced until he returned to White Earth in January 1879. He learned then that he was being assigned to the Red Lake reservation, located north of White Earth.[3]
Red Lake Mission
[edit]Fr. Tomazin arrived at Red Lake in the Spring of 1879 and offered the first mass there on 9 May. As at White Earth, Fr. Tomazin set about constructing a new church. The first mass was offered at St. Ignatius church on Christmas Day, 1879. Fr. Tomazin also established a day school and temperance society.[18] Although he made some progress in converting the Red Lake Ojibwe, he angered many of them when he railed against their use of sacred objects, such as rosaries and crucifixes in "prayer dances" organized by his catechist, Abiagegek.[19]
Meanwhile, tribal leaders at Red Lake grew frustrated with logging operations that were impacting their resources. It is not clear whether the chiefs requested that Fr. Tomazin get involved or he simply reacted to what he saw as an injustice. In January 1883, Tomazin organized a delegation to travel from Red Lake to Washington, D.C. to seek redress. Two sons of Red Lake chiefs, Little Thunder and Leading Feather, accompanied Tomazin.[20] While in Washington, the Red Lake delegation met with the Commissioner of Indian Affairs Hiram Price who promised to send an investigator in the spring. In spite of the delegation’s success in getting their concerns heard, Tomazin was not satisfied that the government was listening to the Indians and criticized members of Congress and the Commissioner of Indian Affairs in the newspapers. At one point, Tomazin reportedly stood in the doorway of a Congressional hearing and shouted for all to hear, accusing the Commissioner of Indian Affairs of “robbing the Indians and favoring the whites.”[19]
Inspectors sent by the Office of Indian Affairs the following Spring reported finding no illegal logging but included anecdotes about Fr. Tomazin in their report that reflected poorly on the priest. The Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions, which administered federal funds on behalf of Catholic missions, became concerned about Fr. Tomazin's public attacks against the government. The BCIM compiled several reports and affadavits about Fr. Tomazin in "Memoranda Relative to Rev. Ignatius Tomazin". Included was an affadavit from Allen R. Jourdain, a mixed-blood Ojibwe from Red Lake, in which Jourdain made several claims about Fr. Tomazin's liaisons with Ojibwe women.[20]These stories were similar to the claims made by Agent Stowe at White Earth.
The charges of immorality gave the Office of Indian Affairs reason to act. In June 1883, Colonel Robert S. Gardener, who was performing an investigation at White Earth, traveled to Red Lake with tribal policemen to arrest Fr. Tomazin. The priest attempted to avoid them by not answering the door, then escaping out the back door and running into the forest. He was quickly apprehended and shouted he was being "crucified like Christ" as the policemen carried him bodily to his home. The next morning the policemen transported him by wagon to White Earth. On 3 July, Tomazin was set across the reservation boundary and told not to return.[3]
Parish Priest
[edit]Bishop Siedenbusch reassigned Fr. Tomazin to Long Prairie in 1884. After getting into a conflict with parishioners about burying a suicide victim in the cemetery[21], the priest was reassigned to St. Ann's parish in Wadena, which he had founded in 1874.[22] While serving in Wadena, Fr. Tomazin built churches at Park Rapids (1886) and Staples (1891). He became embroiled in another conflict in 1893 when he preached against saloons remaining open on Sundays. Wadena residents surrounded his house and stoned it.[3] Similar conflicts arose at other parishes where he was assigned.
Last Parish
[edit]Fr. Tomazin's final assignment was at St. Anthony parish in Krain Township, near Albany. The parishioners there were descendants of Slovenian and German immigrants, many of which were recruited by Fr. Pierz. According to a former altar boy, “four years went by harmoniously. Then trouble started…stupid malicious pranks.” A prankster sawed off the part of his buggy that stuck out from his shed. Tomazin responded with a fiery homily the next Sunday. A month later, someone stole his horse, painted it red, white and blue and left it in his neighbor’s pasture. The old priest responded with another vengeful lecture from the pulpit and started keeping his horse in his house, becoming the subject of much derision.[23]
Bishop Joseph Busch visited Tomazin, discussed the complaints he had received and offered to find Tomazin another assignment.[24] With the bishop’s approval, Tomazin went to St. Paul to visit friends and relatives the next day. Ms. McCloskey, his housekeeper, was considering a trip to Shelbyville, Indiana to visit her brother and his family. Tomazin agreed to accompany her at least as far as Chicago. Fr. Tomazin and Ms. McCloskey arrived in Chicago on the 22nd of August and checked in to the Hotel Sherman in downtown Chicago.
Death
[edit]Sometime in the early hours of the 26th, Fr. Tomazin jumped or fell from his window on the 6th floor.[25] The story made headlines in over 40 newspapers throughout the U.S. Most of the stories speculated that Tomazin was despondent causing him temporary insanity and leading him to suicide. But those closest to him, the priests who knew him, did not believe Tomazin’s death was suicide.[2][19]Officially, the Catholic Church maintained that he fell asleep on the windowsill while praying the rosary.[26]
Fr. Tomazin’s body was claimed by Fr. John Tizak, the pastor of St. Joseph’s church in nearby Joliet, which had been established by Slovenian immigrants. Tomazin received a Catholic funeral and was buried in the church’s cemetery. [3]
References
[edit]- ^ McDonald, Sr. Grace (1929). "Father Francis Pierz, missionary". Minnesota History. 10 (2).
- ^ a b c Coleman, Sr. Bernard, OSB and Sr. Leona LBud, OSB (1972). Masinaigans: The Little Book. St. Paul: North Central Publishing Co.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c d e f g h i j Watrin, Fr. Benno. Unpublished manuscript. Collegeville, MN: St. John's Abbey Archives.
- ^ Registers of Baptisms, Marriages and Interments at St. Mary’s Church. St. Paul: St. Paul Archdiocese Archives. 1868.
- ^ Registers of Baptisms and Marriages, Cathedral of St. Paul. St. Paul: St. Paul Archdiocese Archives. 1869.
- ^ Fisher, Harold (1972). The Land Called Morrison. Little Falls, MN: Privately published.
- ^ "St. John's University, A Sketch of its History, Chapter II (continued)". The Record. St. John's University, Collegeville MN. 1 May 1906.
- ^ Prucha, Francis Paul (2000). Documents of United States Indian Policy. Lincoln, NE: University of Nebraska Press.
- ^ Tomazin, Ignaz (1879). "Report of P. Ignaz Tomazin, Indian Missionary in Red Lake, Minnesota". Berichte der Leopoldinen-Stiftung im Kaiserthume Oesterreich, zur Unterstützung der katholischen Missionen in Amerika. XLIX.
- ^ a b "Obituary of Lewis I. Stowe". Waterville Advance. 6 September 1911.
- ^ "Letter from Clement H. Beaulieu, Jr. to H. Whipple". Bishop Whipple Papers. 23 March 1877.
- ^ "Letter from L. Stowe to H. Whipple". Bishop Whipple Papers. 26 January 1875.
- ^ "Letter from L. Stowe to L.Q. Smith, dated 10 April 1877". St. Paul Pioneer Press. 5 October 1877.
- ^ a b "Tomazin's Troubles". St. Paul Pioneer Press. 5 October 1877.
- ^ "Report of the Indian Inspector Kemble". Department of Interior, Office of Indian Affairs. 24 September 1877.
- ^ "Indian Delegation to Washington". St. Paul Globe. 8 February 1878.
- ^ "Chief of the Chippewas in Washington". Belvidere (IL) Standard. 8 February 1878.
- ^ Fruth, Rev. Alban (1958). A Century of Missionary Work Among the Red Lake Indians. St. Mary's Mission, Redlake, MN.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ^ a b c Borgerding, Fr. Thomas. Reminiscences. Collegeville, MN: St. John's Abbey Archives.
- ^ a b "Statement of U.S. Indian Inspector Chapman," in Memoranda Relative to Rev. Ignatius Tomazin". Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions. 1883.
- ^ "Untitled". Little Falls Transcript. 15 August 1884.
- ^ "Parish History". Saint Anns Parish. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
- ^ Untitled manuscript. St. Paul: St. Paul Archdiocese Archives.
- ^ Yzerman, Steven (1989). The Spirit in Central Minnesota, vol. 1. St. Cloud, MN: Diocese of St. Cloud.
- ^ "Priest Suicide; Jumps to Death". Chicago Tribune. 27 August 1916.
- ^ ""Obituary Notices"". Acta et Dicta (Vol. 5, no. 1 ed.). St. Paul: Catholic Historical Society.