[Congressional Record Volume 162, Number 144 (Thursday, September 22, 2016)]
[House]
[Page H5807]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FATHER PATRICK RYAN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
Tennessee (Mr. Fleischmann) for 5 minutes.
Mr. FLEISCHMANN. Mr. Speaker, I rise today to remember the life and
work of Father Patrick Ryan.
Father Ryan, the pastor of Saints Peter and Paul's parish in
Chattanooga from 1872 to 1878, was a shepherd who gave his life in
ministering to his flock. He died a martyr's death in the yellow fever
epidemic of 1878 when he was only 33 years old.
Perhaps his most notable accomplishment in the Chattanooga community
was the opening of Notre Dame Academy, under the direction of the
Dominican Sisters, which is the oldest private school in the city. The
school had been in operation for little more than 2 years when it had
to be converted into a hospital and orphanage because of the terrible
yellow fever scourge in the city.
Although many people left the city as the disease spread, Father Ryan
and Jonathan W. Bachman, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, were
among the 1,800 people remaining in the city. They were good friends,
and when Father Ryan was stricken, he was visited by Dr. Bachman.
Father Ryan is described by an eyewitness as ``going from house to
house in the worst infected section of the city to find what he could
do for the sick and needy.'' He continued ministering to his flock,
after he himself had contracted the dreaded disease, to within 48 hours
of his death.
In 1901, when the Chattanooga Council of the Knights of Columbus was
organized, it was named the Father Patrick Ryan Council in honor of the
priest who, by his high ideals, his devotion to duty, his spirit of
sacrifice for his congregation and his city, seemed to exemplify the
aims and purposes of the new order.
Several letters have been written in support of the cause of
beatification and canonization of Father Patrick Ryan, including the
Notarial Act of the Bishop of Knoxville, the Most Reverend Richard
Stika; the letter naming Reverend J. David Carter as Episcopal Delegate
and Promoter of Justice for the Cause of Beatification and
Canonization; and a letter naming Deacon Gaspar DeGaetano as Vice
Postulator for the Cause of Beatification and Canonization.
I believe it is most appropriate to honor a man who sacrificed
himself to provide comfort to the people in Chattanooga who were
afflicted with yellow fever so long ago.
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