Background
McNeil was born in Hillsborough, Inverness County, Nova Scotia.
McNeil was born in Hillsborough, Inverness County, Nova Scotia.
He attended Propaganda College in Rome.
In 1879, McNeil was ordained as a priest. In 1880 he was appointed vice-rector of College of Saint Francis Xavier in Antigonish, Nova Scotia, and had risen to rector by the end of his service in 1891. He was pastor in Arichat and Doctorate"Escousse, Nova Scotia before becoming Vicar Apostolic of Western Newfoundland (Street George"s) and Titular Bishop of Nilopolis in 1895.
In 1904, McNeil was appointed Bishop of Saint George"s, Newfoundland.
From 1910 to 1912, McNeil was Archbishop of Vancouver, British Columbia. After only two years, he became Archbishop of Toronto, Ontario, where he served from 1912 to 1934.
Under McNeil, thirty more parishes were established, including those with non-English speaking immigrants in Toronto. He lobbied for fair taxation for Catholic schools.
McNeil founded the Federation of Catholic Charities when, in 1927, Toronto"s umbrella Federation for Community Service refused to continue to fund Roman Catholic charitable institutions.
McNeil died in 1934, while serving as Archbishop of Toronto. He is buried at Saint Augustine Seminary. Under his leadership, the China Mission Seminary, later renamed the Scarboro Foreign Missionary Society, and the Newman Club were established.
Neil McNeil Catholic High School in Toronto was named in his honour.