When Jesuits Were Giants: Louis-Marie Ruellan, S.J. (1846-1885) and Contemporaries

by Cornelius Michael Buckley

Hardcover, 1999

Barcode

2267

Call number

922.2 BUC

Status

Available

Call number

922.2 BUC

Pages

399

Description

"No one in France or the United States during the second half of the nineteenth century doubted that the Jesuits, loved and honored by friends, hated and feared by enemies, were a force to be reckoned with. Scholars, missionaries, educators, adventurers, social innovators - they were Renaissance men, giants. This is a biography that chronicles the life and times of just such a man, Louis-Marie Ruellan, who began his life as a romantic, pampered, bourgeois Breton who ended up a selfless servant of God. Ruellan had entered the Jesuits in 1870, just in time to serve with them in the Franco-Prussian War. After the war, he was exiled with them to England in 1880, and finally came to the United States in 1883 to work among the Salish Indians of the Pacific Northwest. Among other things, Ruellan ended up as a founder of Gonzaga University." "Through Ruellan's extensive correspondence, much of which is contained in the book, the author introduces the reader to miners lured to the Northwest by gold, as well as to the Indians, homesteaders, railroad laborers, farmers, and the men and women who gave the American frontier such a magical aura."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved… (more)

Publication

Ignatius Pr (1999), 399 pages

ISBN

089870703X / 9780898707038

Collection

Rating

(1 rating; 4)

User reviews

LibraryThing member eschator83
I strongly recommend this devotional insight into the life and times of a young missionary Jesuit priest born in France who sought to come to the US Northwest around the time of our Civil War and revolution in France. The author's structure of describing history of locations and contemporaries may
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put you off at first, but once you accept it the history and spirituality he describes will leave you thinking of ways you can improve the contribution of your life.
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