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The Diocese of Sioux Falls (Latin: Dioecesis Siouxormensis) is a Latin Church diocese of the Catholic Church diocese in South Dakota in the United States. It is a suffragan see of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Saint Paul and Minneapolis. The Diocese of Sioux Falls covers South Dakota east of the Missouri River.
Two years later a larger brick church was built. It became the Pro-Cathedral when Bishop Martin Marty, who was Vicar Apostolic of the Dakota Territory, arrived in Sioux Falls in 1889. On November 12, of the same year Pope Leo XIII established the Diocese of Sioux Falls, [5] and St. Michael's become the cathedral for the new diocese.
St. Agnes Church (Utica, South Dakota) St. Ann's Catholic Church of Badus; St. Anthony of Padua Catholic Church (Hoven, South Dakota) Cathedral of Saint Joseph (Sioux Falls, South Dakota) St. Mary's Catholic Church (Salem, South Dakota) St. Peter's Catholic Church (Jefferson, South Dakota) St. Scholastica Catholic Church and Rectory
Template:Roman Catholic Diocese of Sioux Falls; Roncalli High School (South Dakota) S. St. Mary High School (Dell Rapids, South Dakota)
Diocese of Lead: St. Patrick Church •1902.08.04: Established as the Diocese of Lead with territory from the Diocese of Sioux Falls •1930.08.01: See transferred and title changed to Diocese of Rapid City •1995: Title of Bishop of Lead Restored as Titular Episcopal See [16] Diocese of Leavenworth: Church of the Immaculate Conception
Kettler was ordained to the priesthood at St. Joseph's Church in Sioux Falls by Bishop Lambert Hoch for the Diocese of Sioux Falls on May 29, 1970. [1] After his ordination, the diocese assigned Kettler as an associate pastor in parishes in Aberdeen, South Dakota, and Sioux Falls. In 1979, he left the parishes to begin coordinating work for the ...
Diocese of Sioux Falls (1889 to 1902) Diocese of Lead (1902 to 1930) [3] [4] The first Catholic church in the present day diocese was Our Lady of the Holy Rosary Church near Vermillion. In Sioux Falls, St. Michael was dedicated in 1881, making it the earliest Catholic church in that city. [5]
Pope Leo XIII erected the Diocese of Winona in 1889, taking southern Minnesota from the Archdiocese of Saint Paul. [13] While he was an empire builder, Ireland was not without controversy; the author of The Church and Modern Society (1897), Ireland opposed the use of foreign languages in American Catholic churches and parochial schools ...