The Diocese of Gallup (, ) is a diocese of the Catholic Church in northwestern New Mexico and northeastern Arizona in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Santa Fe. The mother church is the Sacred Heart Cathedral in Gallup. The bishop is James Sean Wall.
Territory
The Diocese of Gallup comprise the following counties:
- Navajo and Apache counties in Arizona
- San Juan, McKinley, Cibola and Catron counties in New Mexico
- Parts of Rio Arriba, Sandoval, Bernalillo, and Valencia counties in New Mexico
History
Name changes
The current Diocese of Gallup has undergone several name changes since its territory became part of the United States.
The New Mexico counties came from:
- Vicariate Apostolic of New Mexico (1850 to 1853)
- Diocese of Santa Fe (1853 to 1875)
- Archdiocese of Santa Fe (1875 to 1939)
- Diocese of Gallup (1939 to present)
The Arizona counties came from:
- Diocese of Santa Fe (1868 to 1891)
- Vicariate Apostolic of Arizona (1891 to 1897)
- Diocese of Tucson (1897 to 1939)
- Diocese of Gallup (1939 to present)
1500 to 1898
From the 16th century to the early 19th century, all of present-day New Mexico and Arizona were part of New Spain, a Spanish colony. The first Catholic presence in the present-day Gallup region was that of Marcos de Niza, a Franciscan friar who arrived in the land of the Zuni people in 1539, looking for cities of gold. He was followed in 1540 by the expedition of the Spaniard Francisco Vasquez Coronado in Cibola, also looking for gold. During the 1580s, small parties of Franciscan friars started visiting the native settlements in the region, evangelizing the natives.
1898 to 1939
The first Catholic missionaries to the Navaho Nation were Franciscan priests who arrived there in 1898. The first Catholic church in Gallup, New Mexico, was Sacred Heart Church, constructed by the priest George Julliard in 1899. St. Michael Indian School was opened in 1902 in St. Michael's, Arizona by Franciscans from St. Michael's Mission in Window Rock, Arizona. They received financial assistance from Mother Katharine Drexel.
1939 to 2000
Pope Pius XII erected the Diocese of Gallup on December 16, 1939, taking its territory from the Archdiocese of Santa Fe and the Diocese of Tucson. The pope named Bernard T. Espelage as the first bishop of Gallup.During Espelage's 29-year tenure, the Catholic population of the diocese increased from 30,000 to 79,260. The number of priests went from 32 to 108 and the number of parishes from 17 to 53. Pope John Paul II named Donald Pelotte as coadjutor archbishop in 1986 to assist Hastrich. When Hastrich retired in 1990, Pelotte automatically succeeded him as bishop of Gallup. Pelotte was the first Native American Catholic bishop in the United States, an Abenaki from Maine.
2000 to present
thumb|311x311px|Bishop Wall (2018)
In 2007, Pelotte suffered a traumatic brain injury at his home and was hospitalized. In January 2008, Pope Benedict XVI named an apostolic administrator to run the diocese. In April 2008, Pelotte retired due to his health problems.
In 2013, Wall renovated a chapel used by local seminarians with sacred art in santero, a New Mexico folk art based on Spanish colonial art. In May 2023, Wall announced that the diocese was taking over operation of St. Michael's Mission from the Franciscans. Also in 2013, the diocese filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in order to settle sexual abuse lawsuits against diocesan clergy.The case was closed in 2017.
Wall in 2025 ordered a group of young men in Concho to vacate housing owned by the local parish and stop teaching in Catholic schools. Calling themselves the League of the Blessed Sacrament, the men had been expelled from the Canons Regular of Immaculate Conception in Santa Paula, California, four years earlier. Wall said that the group had no official status with the Catholic church.
Sex abuse
In 2004, James Burns, a diocesan priest, was sentenced to 18 months in prison for sexually abusing a minor in Blanco, New Mexico. The diocese in 2005 identified the priest Clement A. Hageman as an abuser from the 1940s to the 1970s. Hageman was transferred to the Archdiocese of Santa Fe from the Diocese of Corpus Christi when allegations of sexual abuse arose there. The archdiocese later moved the priest to the Diocese of Gallup for the same reason.
The diocese released a list of 42 clergy and one lay teacher with credible accusations of sexual abuse of minors in 2014.
Bishops
Bishops of Gallup
- Bernard T. Espelage (1940–1969)
- Jerome J. Hastrich (1969–1990)
- Donald Edmond Pelotte (1990–2008)
- James Sean Wall (2009–present)
Coadjutor bishop
- Donald Edmond Pelotte (1986–1990)
Schools with former high school divisions
- Gallup Catholic School – Gallup, New Mexico (high school closed in 2013)
- St. Bonaventure School – Thoreau, New Mexico (high school closed in 2001)
Arms
References
External links
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Gallup official site
- Arizona Catholic Conference
