Jean-Nicolas Lemmens
Jean-Nicolas Lemmens (also Joannes Nicolaas Lemmens or Joannes Nicolaus Lemmens) (3 June 1850, in
Family
Jean-Nicolas Lemmens was born the son of Godfried Lemmens and Gertrude Bemelmans, within a large Dutch
area in the southern Netherlands.His family produced a number of Catholic priests, including his brother, Hendrik Lemmens, also a priest in Victoria, Canada, and Guillaume Lemmens (1884-1960), Bishop of Roermond in the Netherlands.
Career
Lemmens studied at the American College in Leuven, Belgium, which was founded in 1857. He then moved, with his brother, to Vancouver Island, Canada.[2]
After the murder of
During the early 1890s, Lemmens actively encouraged local Catholics to join labour organisations (including the forerunner to the British Columbia Federation of Labour which had been established in 1890) and to unite with other citizens to press, "for better working conditions". He is considered as one of the earliest supporters of organised labour in British Columbia.[6][7]
Lemmens travelled to
References
- ^ Catholic Hierarchy: Bishop Jean-Nicolas Lemmens
- ^ The American College's contributions Archived 2013-09-21 at the Wayback Machine by John A. Dick (National Catholic Reporter, 1 December 2010)
- ^ The Apostle of Alaska: life of the Most Reverend Charles John Seghers by Maurice de Baets (St. Anthony Guild Press, 1943)
- ^ GCatholic.org: Jean-Nicolas Lemmens
- ^ Well and Truly Laid: Ceremony of Laying the Foundation Stone of the New St. Andrew's Church (Victoria Daily Colonist, 8 March 1889 - archive)
- ^ Victoria: DeMers to de Roo by Patrick Jamieson (Ekstasis Editions, 1997)
- ^ Bishop Lemmens Cited for Supporting Labour Unions (The Torch, December 1952)
- ^ The Deceased Prelate[permanent dead link] (Victoria Daily Colonist, 23 September 1897)