The primary publicly known Black priest in the US, Augustus Tolton, might not be a family title. But I consider his tale – from being born enslaved to turning into a faculty valedictorian – merits to be a staple of Black Historical past Month. “Good Father Gus” is now a candidate for sainthood.
My coming near near e book, “The Wounded Church,” examines ways in which the Catholic Church has excluded other people throughout other chapters of its historical past, from ladies to African American other people. One bankruptcy of historical past that many American citizens would possibly not find out about was once how the U.S. church barred Black males from turning into monks – a bankruptcy that ended with Tolton’s ordination within the overdue Nineteenth century.
Slavery to seminary
Tolton was once born on April 1, 1854 in Missouri, the place he and his circle of relatives have been enslaved. He was once baptized as Catholic as an toddler. He escaped slavery in 1863 along with his mom and siblings, ultimately settling in combination in Quincy, Illinois.
Lifestyles in Quincy was once a long way from a dream come true. He tried to wait an built-in public college and a Catholic parish college, however was once bullied and confronted discrimination, inflicting him to go away. Tolton labored at a tobacco manufacturing facility – the primary of a number of handbook jobs he held as a tender guy, whilst additionally organising a Sunday college for Black Catholics.
Ultimately, he encountered the Rev. Peter McGirr, an Irish immigrant priest who allowed the boy to wait St. Peter’s, an area parish college for white Catholics, when the tobacco manufacturing facility the place Tolton was once hired was once closed within the iciness. McGirr’s choice was once arguable, however Tolton driven on and excelled. He started non-public tutoring by way of monks at Saint Francis Solanus Faculty, now Quincy College. In 1880, he graduated because the valedictorian.
Augustus Tolton was the primary Black guy to be ordained as a Catholic priest within the U.S.
Quincy College by means of Wikimedia Commons
By way of then, it was once transparent that Tolton was once abnormal – even if running at a soda bottling plant, as an example, he had realized German, Latin and Greek. He sought after to turn out to be a clergyman, but was once rejected by way of U.S. seminaries.
The Vatican allowed Black males to be ordained, however church hierarchy within the U.S. would now not admit Black males to seminaries. Their exclusion was once pushed by way of white monks “internally beholden to the racist doctrines of the day,” as Nate Tinner-Williams, co-founder and editor of the Black Catholic Messenger, wrote in a 2021 article. Tolton carried out to the Mill Hill Missionaries in London, a bunch that was once dedicated to serving Black Catholics, and was once rejected by way of them as neatly.
On the time, the one Black males who have been Catholic monks within the U.S. have been biracial American citizens who handed as white and didn’t brazenly establish themselves as Black. Probably the most well-known of those was once Patrick Healy, who served as president of Georgetown College from 1873-82. Healy and his brothers have been ordained in Europe.
With out a path to ordination in his house nation, Tolton traveled to Rome to finish his seminary schooling. He was once ordained on Easter Saturday in 1886 and celebrated his first Mass in Saint Peter’s Basilica. He deliberate on going someplace in Africa as a missionary, however was once as an alternative despatched to the US. As Tolton later recalled, “It was said that I would be the only priest of my race in America and would not likely succeed.”
‘Good Father Gus’
After ordination, Tolton returned to his house nation and celebrated Lots in New York and New Jersey ahead of settling in in his place of origin of Quincy. The Lots have been like a triumphant go back for Tolton: crammed to capability, and drawing in other people from surrounding spaces to rejoice the rustic’s first Mass presided over by way of a Black priest.
“Good Father Gus” was once widespread, and recognized for being a “fluent and graceful talker” with “a singing voice of exceptional sweetness.” But his ministry encountered backlash – regardless that now not from parishioners. He encountered jealousy from different ministers. Tolton informed James Gibbons, archbishop of Baltimore, that Black Protestant ministers have been worried that their participants would go away and turn out to be Catholic. White Catholic monks “rejoiced at my arrival,” Tolton wrote, however “now they wish I were away because too many white people come down to my church from other parishes.”

A picture of Augustus Tolton in William Simmons and Henry McNeal Turner’s 1887 e book ‘Men of Mark: Eminent, Progressive and Rising.’
New York Public Library by means of Wikimedia Commons
Tolton’s maximum influential bankruptcy started when he moved to Chicago in 1889. He was once despatched as a “missionary” to the Black neighborhood in Chicago, with the hope of organising a Black Catholic church. He served the parish of St. Monica’s, described on the time as “probably the only Catholic church in the West that has been built by colored members of that faith for their own use.”
This luck took a toll. Tolton had sessions of illness and took a short lived go away of absence from St. Monica’s in 1895. It’s unclear whether or not he suffered from psychological sickness or bodily sickness. All through a warmth wave, he collapsed in the street. He died day after today, on July 8, 1897, at age 43.
Highway to sainthood
Tolton’s legacy continues past his lifestyles and early demise. As the primary Black priest within the U.S., “whom all knew and recognized as Black,” consistent with Cyprian Davis, a Black Catholic monk and historian of the church, Tolton opened the doorways to different Black males being ordained.

Augustus Tolton’s gravestone in St. Peter’s Cemetery of Quincy, Sick.
Ched/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA
Ten years after Tolton carried out to enroll in the Mill Hill Missionaries, the order authorized a Black guy for seminary and priesthood: Charles Randolph Uncles. John Henry Dorsey gained the Holy Orders in 1902, turning into the second one Black guy ordained within the U.S. and the rustic’s 5th Black priest.
“Good Father Gus” is now at the trail towards sainthood. In 2019, Pope Francis complicated Tolton’s purpose for sainthood, making his title formally “The Venerable Father Augustus Tolton.” The following steps, beatification and canonization, require proof of miracles, which the Archdiocese of Chicago and the Vatican are comparing.
These days, some colleges and methods elevate Tolton’s title, introducing him to a brand new technology. However whilst church legislation and follow now not limit the ordination of Black males to the priesthood, complete fairness in church ministry stays elusive.
Black ladies have been lengthy excluded from becoming a member of spiritual orders, and so they began their very own congregations within the mid-Nineteenth century. A Black guy didn’t turn out to be a U.S. cardinal till 2020, when Wilton Gregory was once named cardinal of Washington, D.C.
All through Black Historical past Month, I consider Tolton’s lifestyles and legacy be offering an important instance of ways one guy overcame stumbling blocks to pursue priesthood, encountering luck and loneliness alongside the best way.