John Stephen Vaughan was an English Roman Catholic bishop, brother of Bernard, Roger, and Herbert Vaughan.
Background
He was son of Lieutenant-Colonel John Francis Vaughan, of an old recusant (Roman Catholic) family, the Vaughans of Courtfield, Herefordshire. His mother, Eliza Rolls from The Hendre, Monmouthshire, was a Catholic convert and intensely religious.
Education
He was born at Courtfield, near Ross-on-Wye in Herefordshire, studied at Saint Gregory"s College, and at Bruges and Rome, and was ordained a priest on the 4 June 1876.
Career
All five of the Vaughan daughters became nuns, while six of the eight sons took Holy Orders and became priests. Three were later called as bishops: Roger became the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Sydney, Australia. Herbert, the eldest, became Archbishop of Westminster.
John, in his turn was made the titular bishop of Sebastopolis and auxiliary bishop in Salford in 1909.
He returned to England in July 1879 and rejoined the staff of Street Bede"s in his former role as Professor of Mathematics, where he remained until July 1886. In 1896, he was appointed domestic prelate to the Papal Court with the title Monsignor and in 1898 became Canon of Westminster.
Between 1890 and 1903, he organized free Catholic lectures in various public halls in London. He resided in Rome 1904-1907, and then undertook a preaching tour in the United States and Canada.
In 1909, Monsignor Vaughan returned to England and was sent back to the Diocese of Salford to assist Bishop Louis Charles Casartelli as his Auxiliary Bishop, he took the title of Titular Bishop of Sebastopolis and was consecrated in Westminster Cathedral on the 5 August 1909.
Coming to Manchester he initially resided at Xaverian College until 1912 when he returned to Saint Bede"s College as Rector. In 1915 he became Rector at Street Joseph"s College, Upholland near Wigan. In 1920 became Parish Priest at Street Hubert"s Church in Great Harwood where he died five years later on 4 December 1925 at the age of seventy-two.
Thoughts for all times (1899)
Concerning the Holy Bible (1904)
Dangers of the Day (1909)
The Purpose of the Papacy (1910).