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The Australian Catholic Church

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    The Growth of the Australian Catholic Church

  • First Catholics Arrived in Australia

    First Catholics Arrived in Australia
    10% of the first convicts were catholic and 50% were from Ireland
  • First Catholic Preists Arrived

    First Catholic Preists Arrived
    They arrived as convicts. James Dixon had conditional freedom to perform Mass but lost privilege after Castle Hill rebellion.
  • Government Appointed Chaplains arrived in Australia

    Government Appointed Chaplains arrived in Australia
    Father John Joseph Therry & Phillip Connolly, this arrival is regarded as the formal establishment of the Catholic Church in Australia.
  • 10 Catholic Schools

    10 Catholic Schools
    Nuns and Brothers ran the first catholic schools. Their clientele were wealthy and or catholic.
  • Catholic Schools Recieve Governement Funding

    Catholic Schools Recieve Governement Funding
    This ran from around 1833 to the late 1860's
  • John Bede Polding Arrives in Australia

    John Bede Polding Arrives in Australia
    John Bede Polding was the first bishop. His priests were mainly Irish - there was a conflict between Polding's vision and their ideas.Irish clergy dominated Australian Catholic Life.
  • All States Passed Education Acts Removing State Aid.

    All States Passed Education Acts Removing State Aid.
    This ran until 1893 and with no money to pay the staff, the bishops appealed to religious orders in Ireland and other European countries/Nuns/Sisters and brothers.
  • First Catholic Church

    First Catholic Church
    First catholic church in 1907 at Coffs harbour
  • Australian Born Priests Outnumber John Bede's Irish Priests

    Australian Born Priests Outnumber John Bede's Irish Priests
  • Christianity during the 1950's

    Christianity during the 1950's
    During the 1950's Catholics increased (baby boomers 50's-no contraception-against gods will). Numbers of brothers, nuns and priests also increased. Catholics improvised their socio-economic status.
  • Influx of Foreign Catholics

    Influx of Foreign Catholics
    From the 1960's - 70's there was an influx of non-English speaking immigrants including one million plus catholics from Italy. Malta, the Netherlands, Germany, Croatia, Hungary and numerous other places. Ideas and practises came into conflict.