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To say he is retired is a joke. Let us simply say
that he qualifies, vintage-wise, as a retired priest of the Archdiocese of
Atlanta. His work never ceases as he tirelessly hunts down workers for the
Lord's vineyard in North Georgia.
He has 25 years of special golden labor behind
him. Much of his personal priestly duties took him out of his native state of
Georgia. But Georgia was always on his mind during those years. He marked the
life of the home church with missionaries he first influenced and then sent
south. Bishops fidgeted nervously when the Georgia Monsignor hit town. Billy
the Kid fashion, he would pry open their vocation banks for the needs of an
infant Church in Dixie.
When the crop tended to dry up stateside, he saw
no problem in coolly invading the shores of his forefathers in Ireland. The
pickings were great for this master of persuasion. A new field opened to his
talents and Irish vocations flowed.
We believe he is our Man of the Year, not for past
historical conquests. 1977 saw him again attempting his missionary journey,
never too easy, in the cutting winds and biting rains of an Irish autumn.
Again, he brought news of glad success. Six more young men have been placed in
Irish seminaries, training under the name of Atlanta, Georgia. Apart from his
history of blessed success, this year's feat stands as a monument.
Patrick Joseph O'Connor was born in Savannah on
January 23, 1902. After attending Catholic schools in his native city, he
studied for the priesthood in St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore. He was ordained
in the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, Savannah, on May 25, 1933. After
serving as a parish priest, he was assigned to the faculty of the Catholic
University in Washington, DC. He served in many faculty offices and became well
known for his work in the Preachers Institute.
In 1950, the bishops of the United States
appointed him director of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception,
which was still in the process of being built.
He returned to his native state in 1956 to become
pastor of Immaculate Conception Church in downtown Atlanta. In 1958, he was
appointed chief of Catholic education for Atlanta with the title, Secretary for
Education. In 1967, Monsignor O'Connor retired.
Through all these years and assignments, his
mission to pass along the vocation he received, never was neglected. Over 35
priests in the Atlanta and Savannah Dioceses can be counted as "his men." And
the work goes on. No idealistic mother's son is safe when the Monsignor's eye
is cast his way.
1977 was just another year for Monsignor O'Connor,
but because of his work and the technique blessed by God in him, the Church is
Georgia is richer.
With prayerful good wishes, we send to him our
title, Man of the Year.
Monsignor Patrick Joseph O'Connor, priest,
Georgian, vocation director.
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