Joseph G. Pinten
Joseph Gabriel Pinten was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as the third bishop of the Diocese of Superior in Wisconsin, and as the fourth bishop of the Diocese of Grand Rapids in Michigan.
Biography
Early years
Joseph Pinten was born on October 3, 1867, in Rockland, Michigan, the son of Joseph and Anna Pinten. He grew up in Calumet, Michigan. In 1881, deciding to become a priest, Pinten entered Saint Francis de Sales Seminary in St. Francis, Wisconsin. Pinten traveled to Rome in 1885 to attend the Propaganda Fide University in Rome.Priesthood
Pinten was ordained to the priesthood by Cardinal Lucido Parocchi on November 1, 1890, at Trinità dei Monti Church in Rome for the Diocese of Sault Sainte Marie-Marquette. After returning to Michigan, the diocese assigned Pinten as an assistant pastor at St. Paul's Parish in Negaunee, Michigan, in 1892 and then assistant pastor of St. Fidelis Parish in Detour, Michigan. Pinten spent 1893 on medical leave, then had the following parish assignments in Michigan:- Administrator at St Fidelis in Gladstone
- Pastor at Holy Rosary in Iron Mountain
- Pastor at St. Barbara's in Vulcan
- Pastor at St. Joseph's in L'Anse
- Rector at St. Peter's Cathedral in Marquette
Bishop of Superior
On November 30, 1921, Pope Benedict XV appointed Pinten as the third bishop of Superior. He was ordained bishop on May 3, 1922, at St. Peter Cathedral with Archbishop Sebastian Messmer presiding. The next day, an enthronement ceremony was held at Sacred Heart Pro-Cathedral in Superior, Wisconsin.After his arrival in Superior, Pinten purchased a home for himself. When he learned that a local community of sisters was living in an overcrowded residence, he remodeled the house and quietly turned it over to them. He oversaw numerous building and expansion projects throughout the diocese.
Ground breaking for the new cathedral began on June 23, 1926. In his last act as bishop of Superior, Pinten blessed and laid the cornerstone for the Cathedral of Christ the King in Superior on October 24, 1926. The next day he left for his new appointment at Grand Rapids.