Background
James Davis was born in Houghton, Michigan, the only child of John Frank and Elizabeth R. (née Didier) Davis.
archbishop bishop Catholic priest
James Davis was born in Houghton, Michigan, the only child of John Frank and Elizabeth R. (née Didier) Davis.
He studied at Saint Patrick"s Seminary in Menlo Park, California, and was ordained to the priesthood on May 19, 1929.
He served as Archbishop of San Juan (1943-1964) and Archbishop of Santa Fe (1964-1974). He and his family moved to Topeka, Kansas, and afterwards to Flagstaff, Arizona. He served as chancellor of the Diocese of Tucson from 1930 to 1932.
On July 3, 1943, Davis was appointed Bishop of San Juan in Puerto Rico by Pope Pius XII. He received his episcopal consecration on the following October 6 from Bishop Daniel James Gercke, with Bishops Thomas Arthur Connolly and Joseph Thomas McGucken serving as co-consecrators.
In 1958, he estimated that 90 percent of Puerto Ricans were nominally Catholics, while only 30 percent practiced their faith. However, he later said there would be no punishment for Catholics who violated this order.
He was promoted to the first Archbishop of San Juan, Puerto Rico April 30, 1960. In 1963, Davis" predecessor in the archbishopric of San Juan, Edwin Byrne died while serving as Archbishop of Santa Fe.
In 1964, Pope Paul VI, transferred Davis into Byrne"s former position, again, when he was appointed to be the ninth Archbishop of Santa Fe, New Mexico.
Five year before reaching the mandatory age of retirement for a bishop according to canon law, he retired as Archbishop of Santa Fe in 1974. He died in Phoenix, Arizona, in 1988.