Robert Emmet Lucey
Robert Emmet Lucey was an American prelate of the Catholic Church. He served as the second bishop of the Diocese of Amarillo in Texas from 1934 to 1941 and as the second archbishop of Archdiocese of San Antonio in Texas from 1941 to 1969.
Biography
Early life
Lucey was born in Los Angeles, California, to John Joseph and Marie Lucey on March 16, 1891. He began his college education at St. Vincent's College and completed the rest at Saint Patrick's Seminary in Menlo Park, California, in 1912. Lucey then went to Rome to reside at the Pontifical North American College. In 1916, he received a Doctor of Sacred Theology degree at the University of the Propaganda there.Priesthood
On May 14, 1916, Lucey was ordained a priest for the Diocese of Monterey-Los Angeles in the Church of St. Apollinaris in Rome by Archbishop Giuseppe Ceppetelli.During the next five years in Los Angeles, Lucey was assistant pastor of several parishes which included St. Vibiana's Cathedral, Immaculate Conception Parish, Immaculate Heart of Mary Parish, and was pastor at St. Anthony's in Long Beach from 1929 to 1934. Among the positions that he held were chaplain of the Newman Club at the University of Los Angeles and diocesan director of Catholic Charities of the California Conference of Social Work, director of Catholic Hospitals for the diocese, and board member of the California State Department of Social Welfare.
Bishop of Amarillo
Lucey was appointed bishop of Amarillo by Pope Pius XI on February 10, 1934. On March 1, 1934, Archbishop Amleto Giovanni Cicognani consecrated Lucey at St. Vibiana's Cathedral in Los Angeles. There he established a newspaper called the Texas Panhandle Register.Archbishop of San Antonio
On January 23, 1941, Pope Pius XII appointed Lucey as archbishop of San Antonio. He was installed by Cicognani at the Cathedral of San Fernando in San Antonio on March 27, 1941. Lucey helped establish the Yorktown Memorial Hospital in Yorktown, Texas, the Czech Catholic Home for the Aged in El Campo, Texas, and the Huth Memorial Hospital in Yoakum, Texas. Lucey also created 29 clinics throughout Southwest Texas.In the early 1950s, Lucey ordered the racial integration of all schools in the archdiocese. He also stipulated that the archdiocese only use unionized labor for its construction projects and supported union organizing efforts by farm workers in Texas. In 1965, he gave his full support to the national war on poverty program of the Johnson Administration. Furey cofounded the juvenile rehabilitation program the Patrician Movement and created the equal play advocacy organization Project Equality in 1965.
In September 1968, while dedicating a new church rectory in Stonewall, Texas, with US President Lyndon B. Johnson in attendance, Lucey praised the American involvement in the Vietnam War. Lucey contented that our military intervention reflected the peace efforts of Pope Paul VI. However, the pope had previously called on Johnson to stop the bombing of North Vietnam. Lucey later took a trip to Saigon in what was then South Vietnam to serve as an observer to the 1967 presidential election.