Wilhelm Heinrich Waagen

 Robert Wace

 Eberhard Wächter

 Luke Wadding

 Michael Wadding

 Ven. Waire

 Diocese of Waitzen

 Wakash Indians

 Walafrid

 St. Walburga

 Principality of Waldeck

 Waldenses

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 Martin Waldseemüller

 Adrian and Peter von Walenburch

 Wales

 Walkenried

 Ven. John Wall

 Walla-Walla Indians

 Albrecht von Wallenstein

 Henri-Alexandre Wallon

 Charles Walmesley

 Ven. Henry Walpole

 Edward Walsh

 Peter Walsh

 Robert Walsh

 Thomas Walsh

 William Walsh

 Thomas Walsingham

 Walsingham Priory

 Ferdinand Walter

 Walter of Châtillon

 Walter of Merton

 Walter of Mortagne

 Walter of St-Victor

 Walter of Winterburn

 Waltham Abbey

 Walther von der Vogelweide

 Brian Walton

 Wandelbert

 Heinrich Wangnereck

 War

 Hugh Ward

 James Harman Ward

 Bl. Margaret Ward

 Mary Ward

 Thomas Ward

 Ven. William Ward

 William George Ward

 Mary Francis Xavier Warde

 William Warham

 Archdiocese of Warsaw

 Franz Wilhelm, Count von Wartenberg

 Washing of Feet and Hands

 Washington, D.C.

 State of Washington

 Liturgical Use of Water

 Diocese of Waterford and Lismore

 Ven. Edward Waterson

 Charles Waterton

 James Waterworth

 Jean Antoine Watteau

 Abbey of Waverley

 Ven. William Way

 Way of the Cross

 Use of Wealth

 Wearmouth Abbey

 William Weathers

 Samuel Webbe

 Beda Weber

 Friedrich Wilhelm Weber

 Heinrich Weber

 Karl Maria Friedrich Ernst von Weber

 Henry Weedall

 Liturgical Week

 Francis Richard Wegg-Prosser

 Weingarten

 Nicolaus von Weis

 Johann Nikolaus Weislinger

 Johann Baptist Weiss

 Monastery of Weissenau

 Ignatius von Weitenauer

 Ven. Thomas Welbourne

 Weld

 Frederick Aloysius Weld

 Prefecture Apostolic of Welle

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 Ven. Swithin Wells

 Wells in Scripture

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 John Wessel Goesport

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 William Weston

 Westphalia

 West Virginia

 Abbacy Nullius of Wettingen-Mehrerau

 Heinrich Joseph Wetzer

 Ven. Christopher Wharton

 Diocese of Wheeling

 Amiel Weeks Whipple

 Ven. Thomas Whitaker

 Ven. Thomas Whitbread

 Abbey of Whitby

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 Andrew White

 Charles Ignatius White

 Ven. Eustace White

 Ven. Richard White

 Robert White

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 Stephen Mallory White

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 Ellen Whitty

 Robert Whitty

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 Stephan Wiest

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 St. Wigbert

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 George J. Wigley

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 Ven. Robert Wilcox

 Johann Wild

 St. Wilfrid

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 Adrian Willaert

 Will and Testament of Clerics

 St. Willehad

 Pierre Willems

 St. William (1)

 St. William (2)

 Bl. William

 William, Abbot of Marmoutiers

 William, Abbot of Saint-Bénigne

 Ven. William Carter

 Bl. William Exmew

 Bl. William Filby

 Bl. William Hart

 Bl. William Lacy

 William of Auvergne

 William of Auxerre

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 William of Conches

 William of Digullevile

 St. William of Ebelholt

 St. William of Gellone

 William of Jumièges

 St. William of Maleval

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 St. William of Norwich

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 St. William of Paris

 St. William of Perth

 William of Poitiers

 William of Ramsey

 William of St-Amour

 William of St-Thierry

 William of Sens

 William of Shoreham

 William of Turbeville

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 William of Wykeham

 William Perault

 William the Clerk

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 William the Walloon

 Williamites

 Sts. Willibald and Winnebald

 St. Willibrord

 St. Willigis

 Williram

 Wilhelm Wilmers

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 Richard Wilton

 Wilton Abbey

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 Boniface Wimmer

 Jakob Wimpfeling

 Konrad Wimpina

 Ancient See of Winchester

 Johann Joachim Winckelmann

 Windesheim

 Feast of the Holy Winding Sheet of Christ

 Friedrich Heinrich Hugo Windischmann

 Karl Joseph Hieronymus Windischmann

 Rose Window

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 Windsor

 Ludwig Windthorst

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 Thomas Wingham

 Winnebago Indians

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 St. Winwallus

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 Nigel Wireker

 Wigand Wirt

 Wisconsin

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 Nicholas Patrick Wiseman

 Witchcraft

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 Francis Xavier Witt

 Wittenberg

 George Michael Wittmann

 Patrizius Wittmann

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 Diocese of Wladislaw

 George Dering Wolff

 St. Wolfgang

 Wolfram von Eschenbach

 Michael Wolgemut

 Louis-François-Michel-Reymond Wolowski

 Thomas Wolsey

 St. Wolstan

 Woman

 Thomas Wood

 Wood-Carving

 Ven. John Woodcock

 Abraham Woodhead

 Julian Edmund Tenison Woods

 Ancient Diocese of Worcester

 Words (in Canon Law)

 Antiquity of the World

 Worms

 Philip von Wörndle

 Christian Worship

 Edward Worsley

 Thomas Worthington

 The Five Sacred Wounds

 G. Henry Wouters

 Ven. Peter Wright

 William Wright

 Franz Xaver Freiherr von Wulfen

 St. Wulfram

 Kingdom of Würtemberg

 Diocese of Würzburg

 Würzburg Abbeys

 Théophile-Louis-Henri Wyart

 John Wyclif

 Andrew of Wyntoun

 Wyoming

Diocese of Wheeling


(WHELINGENSIS).

Comprises the State of West Virginia except the following counties, which are in the Diocese of Richmond: Pendleton, Grant, Mineral, Hardy, Hampshire, Morgan, Berkeley, and Jefferson; also the Counties of Lee, Scott, Wise, Dickinson, Buchanan, Washington, Russel, Grayson, Smyth, Tazewell, Carroll, Wythe, Bland, Floyd, Pulaski, Montgomery, Giles, and a portion of Craig Co., in Virginia; square miles in West Virginia, 21,355; in Virginia, 7,817; total 29,172. The Diocese of Wheeling was formed from the Diocese of Richmond by Apostolic letters dated 23 July, 1850. The Rt. Rev. Richard Whelan, D.D., at that time Bishop of Richmond, was transferred to Wheeling as the first bishop of the newly-created see. He had been consecrated the second Bishop of Richmond, 21 March, 1841. The earliest record preserved in the Wheeling chancery sets forth that Rev. Francis Rolf was appointed pastor of Wheeling in 1829. He records a baptism performed by him on 3 November, 1828. There is evidence of priests having visited Wheeling at an earlier date. Wheeling was established as a town in 1795, and one vague tradition has it that it took its name from a certain Father Whelan, a Catholic priest, who came occasionally to minister to the spiritual wants of the members of his flock. The western part of Virginia, which in 1863 became the State of West Virginia, had never many Catholic settlers, nor does it appear to have had many professing any religion. In 1912 the Catholic population was estimated at about 50,000, and the total population at 1,000,000. A letter preserved in the archives of the Diocese of Wheeling dated Baltimore, 13 April, 1832, and signed James Whitfield, Archbishop of Baltimore, states the inability of securing a priest to be stationed at Wheeling, but the letter goes on: "I desired the priest who attends a congregation, on the way to Wheeling, about 40 miles on this side (Brownsville if I remember), to go and give Church once or twice a month. He seems to say that he would comply, as far as he could, with my wish."

From February, 1833, to 1 January, 1844, Rev. James Hoerner was in charge of the Catholics in the Wheeling district. He was succeeded by Rev. Eugene Comerford, who was in Wheeling till the arrival of Rt. Rev. Richard Whelan, Bishop of Richmond, in November, 1846. The bishop took charge of the missionary work in the Wheeling portion of the Richmond See till he was transferred as the first Bishop of the new Diocese of Wheeling. The zeal of Bishop Whelan in labouring under the most difficult and trying circumstances for period of twenty-four years is still remembered by many of the faithful, and often referred to as a striking example of genuine saintly piety. He did much manual labour in addition to the other duties of his episcopal office. The present Wheeling cathedral was planned by him, and built under his supervision. He was architect and supervisor, and did much of the actual work in building the edifice. He also established a seminary of which he took personal charge, and some of the priests who were educated by him are still labouring in the diocese. St. Vincent's College for laymen was also instituted under his auspices. Bishop Whelan had among his self-sacrificing clergy one especially conspicuous for his saintly life, the late Rev. H.F. Parke, V.G. This servant of God met a tragic death by being crushed under the ruins of a falling building, 9 April, 1895. Bishop Whelan (d. 7 July 1874) was succeeded by the Rt. Rev. John Joseph Kain, D.D., who was consecrated the second Bishop of Wheeling, 23 May, 1875. In 1893 Bishop Kain was appointed coadjutor to the Archbishop of St. Louis, Missouri, and became archbishop of that see, 21 May, 1895. He died on 13 October, 1903. During the eighteen years of Bishop Kain's administration, the work, so well begun by his able predecessor, was continued and made rapid progress. He was consecrated at the age of thirty-four and devoted his talents and energy to the increase of clergy, the establishing of new missions, and the building of churches and parochial schools, so that, at the time of his transfer, the diocese was well established, although it was still greatly in need of priests, about thirty-five of whom covered an area of 29,172 sq. miles. The Catholics were much scattered and there were but few points at which the necessary support of a pastor could be obtained.

Rt. Rev. P.J. Donahue, D.D., was consecrated the third Bishop of Wheeling, 8 April, 1894. At the time of his appointment he was rector of the cathedral at Baltimore. During the eighteen years of Bishop Donahue's administration the number of clergy has been doubled, many new missions established, and the following institutions founded in the diocese: Home of the Good Shepherd, situated near Wheeling, where 200 wayward and homeless girls are provided for -- the sisters in charge conduct a large laundry and sewing school; the Manual Training School, near Elm Grove, W. Va. (West Virginia), six miles east of Wheeling, conducted by the Xaverian Brothers, and St. Edward's Preparatory College, Huntington, W. Va., in charge of the secular clergy of the diocese, of which the Rev. John W. Werninger is the first president. Besides these institutions two large additions have been built to the Wheeling Hospital, and a new orphanage for boys at Elm Grove, W. Va., a large addition to St. Vincent's Home, Elm Grove, W. Va., St. Joseph's Hospital at Parkersburg, W. Va., and St. Mary's Hospital at Clarksburg, W. Va., have been erected. Prior to 1895 there was one religious order of priests, the Capuchin Fathers, and three religious orders of women, the Sisters of St. Joseph, Visitation Sisters, and the Sisters of Divine Providence. Since then, the Marist and the Benedictine Fathers have been introduced, as also the Good Shepherd Sisters, Sisters of St. Francis, and the Felician Sisters. There are academies for girls at Mt. De Chantal (near Wheeling), Parkersburg, Wytheville, Wheeling, and Clarksburg. There are a Catholic high school at Wheeling, and 16 parochial schools in the diocese.

Edward E. Weber.