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Friday, July 30, 2010


September 23, 1950
ARCHBISHOP NEVER RECONCILED HIMSELF TO CONFEDERATION



Edward Patrick Roche was born in Placentia on February 14, 1874 son of Edward Roche and Mary Riely (O’Reiley) He was educated at St. Patrick's Hall School and St. Bonaventure's College, both in St. John's, and studied for the Roman Catholic priesthood at All Hallows College, Dublin, Ireland, being ordained there June 24, 1897.


In 1907 he was transferred to St. John's where he became Chancellor and Vicar-General of the Archdiocese under Archbishop Michael F. Howley.

On February 26, 1915 Pope Pius X appointed him Archbishop of St. John's. He was consecrated as Archbishop at the Cathedral of St. John the Baptist, St. John's, on June 29, 1915.

It was as a supporter of the return of Newfoundland to responsible government and as a determined opponent of Confederation with Canada that Roche gained much notoriety in the late 1940s. The campaign for confederation found in him one of its fiercest opponents.

He was convinced that no good could come to Newfoundland from Confederation. The archbishop argued through the pages of The Monitor, the diocese's Roman Catholic monthly newspaper that before confederation could be thought of, responsible government— as promised by Britain — was the way to go. He was actively involved in the 1948 referenda campaigns, encouraging all Newfoundlanders, but particularly Roman Catholics, to vote for the return of responsible government.

Roche died on September 23, 1950, a little less than a year and a half after Confederation, after having served as Archbishop for over 35 years.

He was buried in the crypt under the main altar of the Basilica Cathedral.

Even in death, some Roman Catholics argue, Archbishop Roche was not reconciled to Confederation. When Archbishop Roche’s great foe the Confederate Premier Joseph R. Smallwood died in December 1991 the provincial government approached the Roman Catholic Basilica Cathedral to host a state funeral for him. The Basilica has the larger seating capacity of any church in the city. The irony of having Joey Smallwood in the Roman Catholic Basilica was not lost on some parishioners. It is said, that one of the Basilica Parishioners was urged to go into the crypt during the funeral service because the suspicion was that “Roche was spinning in his grave because Smallwood was in his church.”

For more information on this and other related subjects contact the Archives of the R.C. Archdiocese. www.stjohnsarchdiocese.nf.ca

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Larry Dohey
Archives of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St. John’s
P.O. Box 1363
St. John’s, NL
A1C 5M3
709-726-3660
E-mail: archives@nf.aibn.com

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