Apollinaris William Baumgartner
Apollinaris William Baumgartner, OFMCap, D.D., was a prelate of the Catholic Church, serving as Bishop of Agaña, Guam, from 1945 to 1970.
Biography
Early life and education
William Baumgartner was born in College Point, Queens, New York City, New York, United States, to William Lawrence Baumgartner and Elizabeth Baumgartner. He attended St. Fidelis School, the parochial elementary school of St. Fidelis Parish in College Point, and already had decided to become a Capuchin friar by the time he was to start high school. He boarded at St. Lawrence College in Mount Calvary, Wisconsin, a seminary high school run by Capuchins. He later received a Doctor of Divinity.Priesthood and episcopacy
Baumgartner was ordained a priest on 30 May 1926, taking the name Apollinaris, the name of many famous Catholic saints and bishops. On 25 August 1945, Pope Pius XII appointed him Vicar Apostolic of Guam and Titular Bishop of Ioppe. He was consecrated on 18 September 1945, with Archbishop Amleto Giovanni Cicognani, Titular Archbishop of Laodicea in Phrygia, serving as consecrator, and Bishop Eugene Joseph McGuinness, titular bishop of Ilium, and Bishop Bartholomew Joseph Eustace, Bishop of Camden, serving as co-consecrators.He arrived in Guam on 23 October 1945, shortly after the end of the World War II, flying in on the personal plane of Admiral Chester W. Nimitz, who was leading the post-war military administration on the island. The vicariate apostolic was in ruins at that time, with most of Guam's churches damaged beyond repair, all the American missionary priests still held captive in Japan, and only one Chamorro, or native Guamanian, priest remaining, with no sisters of Chamorro left. From 1947 to 1949, he also served as Apostolic Administrator of Okinawa and the Southern Islands, Japan, in addition to his work in Guam.
Work in education
Almost immediately after arriving on Guam, Baumgartner set to work reestablishing Catholic schools on the island, all of which had been destroyed in the war. He quickly arranged for religious sisters to set up houses on the island to staff his schools, while also hiring Chamorro lay teachers. This was a new trend in Catholic education on Guam, where for all of its history, most Catholic school teachers had been foreign-born priests and religious sisters. The schools were attended mostly by native Guamanian children, but also children of American military personnel. Besides founding schools, he was also active in acquiring scholarships for Chamorro children to Catholic seminaries, colleges, and universities on the mainland United States.Some of the schools he founded are noted in detail as follows: