Bernard F. Meyer, M.M. was an American Catholic missionary.
Education
Born in Brooklyn, Iowa, Bernard Meyer"s family moved to Stuart, Iowa where he was educated in the local public schools. After working on the family farm he attended Saint Ambrose College in Davenport, Iowa and Saint Mary's Seminary in Baltimore.
Career
He served as the Prefect Apostolic of Wuzhou from 1934-1939. He professed religious vows in 1914 and was ordained a priest on February 12, 1916 by Bishop Austin Dowling of Des Moines. After ordination Meyer was appointed to the minor seminary faculty at Venard.
He was named the superior of the mission on October 30, 1931.
On December 10, 1934 Pope Pius XI appointed Meyer as the Prefect Apostolic of Wuzhou. He suffered health problems and he resigned his position on July 20, 1939.
As World World War II broke out, Meyer was living in Hong Kong and he was interred by the Japanese. He was offered repatriation, but instead chose to take care of the medical and spiritual needs of his fellow prisoners.
He returned to the United States as a delegate to the Third General Chapter in 1946.
Meyer returned to Guangdong (Canton), but was exiled from China by the Communists in 1950. Bishop Vincent Waters of the Diocese of Raleigh invited Meyer to promote Catholic Action in his diocese. Being located in the Southern United States also provided relief from the acute rheumatism he suffered from.
Meyer"s health declined during the last ten years of his life.
He moved into the Saint Teresa Residence when it opened in 1968. He died on May 8, 1975 at Phelps Memorial Hospital in North Tarrytown, New York at the age of 83.
Bishop John West. Comber celebrated his funeral on May 12 in the Maryknoll Chapel. Together with Theodore F Wempe, he compiled the Student"s Cantonese English Dictionary published in 1934.
Although some refer to a "Meyer-Wempe System", there was nothing new in it as their entire schema followed the system devised in the last decade of the 19th century known as Standard Romanization (Social Research), which, in turn, was almost identical to John Chalmers" system of 1870.