Background
James Ryan was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, to John Marshall and Brigid (née Rogers) Ryan. His father worked as superintendent of motor power of the Lake Erie and Western Railroad.
James Ryan was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, to John Marshall and Brigid (née Rogers) Ryan. His father worked as superintendent of motor power of the Lake Erie and Western Railroad.
He attended Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, and Mount Saint Mary"s Seminary of the West in Cincinnati, Ohio. He then went to further his studies in Rome, where he earned a Bachelor of Sacred Theology (1906) and Doctor of Sacred Theology (1909) from the Urban College of Propaganda and a Doctor of Philosophy from the Roman Academy (1908).
He served as Rector of the Catholic University of America (1928-1935) and Archbishop of Omaha (1935-1947). He was ordained to the priesthood in Rome on June 5, 1909. He then began his career at the Catholic University of America in Washington, District of Columbia, where he served as instructor in philosophy (1922-1926) and associate professor of philosophy (1926-1928).
In July 1928 he was named the fifth rector of the university.
During his administration, he reorganized and rebuilt the university, also instituting nursing courses and a School of Social Work and expanding the graduate school to admit 800 students. He became a well-known and powerful figure in Washington.
He was once received by President Franklin Doctorate. Roosevelt, and his send-off party was attended by the likes of Ambassador Hans Luther, Assistant Attorney General Joseph B. Keenan, Justice Pierce Butler, Postmaster General James Farley, Secretary Henry A. Wallace, and Canon Anson Phelps Stokes. He served as the first Executive Secretary of the National Catholic Welfare Council (1920-1928), and was raised to the rank of Domestic Prelate in 1927 and of protonotary apostolic in 1929.
He received his episcopal consecration on the following October 25 from Bishop Joseph Chartrand, with Bishops Thomas Edmund Molloy and Joseph Ritter serving as co-consecrators, at the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception.
Following the promotion of Bishop Joseph Rummel to Archbishop of New Orleans in March 1935, Ryan was named the fifth Bishop of Omaha, Nebraska, on August 3, 1935. Following his return, he declared, "The foundation has been laid for a "Catholic front" to protect democracy in this hemisphere."
When the Diocese of Omaha was elevated to the rank of an archdiocese, Ryan became its first Archbishop on August 4, 1945. He died two years later from a heart attack at age 60.
Fellow Mediæval Academy America, American Academy Arts and Scienees, American Geographical Society. Member American Philosophical Association, American Historical Association, American Catholic Historical Association, American Catholic Philosophical Association, British Institute Philosophical Studies, Societe Thomiste, Phi Beta Kappa. Club: University.