The Archdiocese of Omaha (Latin: Archidioecesis Metropolitae Omahensis) is a diocese of the Catholic Church in northeastern Nebraska in the United States. Its mother church is St. Cecilia Cathedral in Omaha; as of 2025, the archbishop is Michael George McGovern.
== Territory ==
The Archdiocese of Omaha includes 23 counties in northeast Nebraska: Boyd, Holt, Merrick, Nance, Boone, Antelope, Knox, Pierce, Madison, Platte, Colfax, Stanton, Wayne, Cedar, Dixon, Dakota, Thurston, Cuming, Dodge, Burt, Washington, Douglas, and Sarpy.
== History ==
=== 1838 to 1888 ===
The first Catholic missionary to visit present-day Nebraska was Peter De Smet, a Jesuit priest who crossed the Missouri River into the territory to baptize two infants of the Otoe people near present-day Bellevue in 1838. At that time, the area was under the jurisdiction of the Diocese of St. Louis. DeSmet later traveled along the Platte River to a council of the tribes.
In the mid-19th century, the Omaha area was part of the Nebraska Territory, a vast jurisdiction that covered five states in the Northern Plains and the Rocky Mountains. For the Catholic church, the Nebraska Territory fell under the Apostolic Vicariate of Indian Territory (East of the Rocky Mountains). The first church of any denomination in Nebraska was St. Mary's, established in Omaha in 1856.
In 1857, Pope Pius IX established a smaller jurisdiction, the Apostolic Vicariate of Nebraska. He named James O'Gorman as the apostolic vicar in 1859. When O'Gorman arrived in Omaha, he had three priests to assist him; he ordained another priest later that year.
The construction of the Union Pacific Railroad in 1867 brought more Catholic immigrants into Nebraska. Due to the poverty of his vicariate, O'Gorman relied heavily on financial support from the Society for the Propagation of the Faith in Lyon, France, along with the Leopoldine Society of Austria-Hungary and the Ludwig Missionsverein of the Kingdom of Bavaria.
Many Irish immigrants working on the railroad in Nebraska were suffering injuries and illnesses. This prompted O'Gorman to plan a Catholic hospital in Omaha. Having a location for the hospital, he tasked the Sisters of Mercy to raise funds for it. The new hospital opened in 1870. O'Gorman also worked with the Sisters of Mercy to open Mount Saint Mary's Academy, the first Catholic girls school in Omaha. By the time O'Gorman died in 1874, the vicariate had 19 priests serving 12,000 Catholics in 20 parishes and 56 missions.
The second apostolic vicar of Nebraska was James O'Connor, appointed by Pius IX. In 1883, Pope Leo XIII erected the Apostolic Vicariate of Montana, taking sections of Montana from the Vicariate of Nebraska.
=== 1888 to 1900 ===
Leo XIII suppressed the Apostolic Vicariate of Nebraska in 1888 and replaced it with the Diocese of Omaha, covering all of Nebraska and Wyoming. O'Connor became the first bishop of Omaha. During his tenure as bishop, O'Connor introduced the Franciscan Fathers, the Poor Clares, the Religious of the Sacred Heart, the Benedictines, and the Sisters of Providence to the diocese. In 1879, he founded Creighton School, later to become Creighton College, in Omaha.
In 1887, Leo XIII erected the Dioceses of Cheyenne and Lincoln, taking their territory from the Diocese of Omaha. At this point, the diocese only included eastern Nebraska. With the assistance of Sister Katharine Drexel, O'Connor founded the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, a religious order for Native Americans and African Americans, in 1889. O'Connor died in 1890.
The next bishop of Omaha was Bishop Richard Scannell from the Diocese of Concordia in Kansas, named by Leo XIII in 1891. Under his governance, the cornerstone of St. Cecilia Cathedral was laid in 1907. He also oversaw the diocese's expansion to 95 parishes, serving more than 80,000 Catholics. The number of parochial schools and diocesan priests more than doubled and there were increases in the number of religious men and women.
Scannell erected the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital in Omaha in 1892. In 1895, the Good Shepherd Sisters founded the Good Shepherd Home, a residence for troubled girls. He also introduced the following religious orders to the diocese:
Third Order Regular of St. Francis
Sisters of St. Joseph
Presentation Sisters
Sisters of the Resurrection
Sisters of St. Benedict
Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament
Good Shepherd Sisters
Dominicans
Felicians
Ursulines
Franciscan.
=== 1900 to 1945 ===
In 1912, Pope Pius X erected the Diocese of Kearney, taking its territory from the Diocese of Omaha. Four years later, Pope Benedict XV added several more counties from Omaha to Kearney. Scannell died in 1916.
Archbishop Jeremiah Harty from the Archdiocese of Manila in the Philippines was named bishop of Omaha by Benedict XV in 1916.[1] Though appointed a bishop, Harty retained the personal title of archbishop. In 1917, Harty expressed skepticism of Edward J. Flanagan's establishment of Boys Town, a home for troubled boys in Nebraska. However, Harty later endorsed its goals. The Sisters of Mercy opened the College of Saint Mary for women in Omaha in 1923. Harty died in 1927.
Joseph Rummel replaced Harty in 1928. Rummel became archbishop of the Archdiocese of New Orleans in 1935. James Ryan, rector of Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., and titular bishop of Modra, was the next bishop of Omaha.
=== 1945 to 1993 ===
Pope Pius XII elevated the Diocese of Omaha to the Archdiocese of Omaha on August 4, 1945. The pope named Ryan as the first archbishop of Omaha. Ryan died in 1947.
The second archbishop of Omaha was Bishop Gerald Bergan of the Diocese of Des Moines, appointed in 1948. During his administration, more than $80 million was spent for new Catholic schools, churches, and hospitals in the archdiocese. This caused him to become known as the "building bishop". After Bergan retired in 1969, Auxiliary Bishop Daniel E. Sheehan of Omaha succeeded him.
Sheehan's campaign for educational excellence raised more than $26 million to improve Catholic education in the Omaha Metropolitan Area. In response to the reforms of the Second Vatican Council, Sheehan established the Archdiocesan Pastoral Council (APC) in the early 1970s. He gathered representatives from the clergy, the religious communities and the laity to share in the archdiocesan decision-making process. The APC placed emphasis on improving family life, youth and young adult ministry, evangelization, social and rural life issues and Hispanic ministry. Sheehan led capital campaigns to raise funds for archdiocesan improvements, including a $4.5 million refurbishment of the St. James Center. His final campaign had a goal of $25 million to build Skutt Catholic High School in Omaha and take care of other capital needs in the archdiocese. Sheehan retired in 1993.
=== 1993 to present ===
Pope John Paul II in 1993 appointed Bishop Elden Curtiss of the Diocese of Helena as the next archbishop of Omaha. Curtiss retired in 2009. That same year, Pope Benedict XVI named Bishop George Joseph Lucas of the Diocese of Springfield in Illinois as the fifth archbishop of Omaha.
Lucas denied the Intercessors' application and sent the community a list of mandatory reforms. After they refused, Lucas revoked official approval for the group. The community dissolved soon after.
On March 31, 2025, Pope Francis accepted Lucas resignation and named Bishop Michael George McGovern from the Diocese of Belleville as his successor.
=== Sexual abuse scandal ===
During the 1980s and 1990s, John Fiala amassed accusations of inappropriate behavior toward minors in the Archdiocese of Omaha. However, when Fiala tried to transfer to the Archdiocese of San Antonio in 1995, officials in Omaha gave him a clean bill of health. Fiala was convicted in Texas of attempted murder in 2010 and sentenced to 40 years in prison. In 2014, he was convicted of sexually abusing an minor and was sentenced to 30 years in prison.
Daniel Herek, a priest serving in Omaha, was convicted in 1998 of sexually assaulting and videotaping a 14-year-old and was sentenced to 20 months to five years in prison. He was laicized. In 2002, a jury awarded $800,000 from the archdiocese to a minor who had been abused by Herek.
In 2002, Archbishop Curtiss removed Thomas Sellentin, an archdiocesan priest, from public ministry after Sellentin admitted sexually abusing minors over a 30-year period. In 2003, three brothers sued the archdiocese, stating they had all been abused by Sellentin. Sellentin was laicized in 2019.
In November 2018, the archdiocese released the names of 38 priests and other clergy members who have been credibly accused of sexual misconduct, an action requested by the state's top prosecutor. The archdiocese acknowledged that it did not record reports of sexual abuse until 1978.
== Bishops ==
=== Apostolic Vicars of Nebraska ===
James Myles O'Gorman (1859–1874)
James O'Connor (1876–1890)
=== Bishops of Omaha ===
James O'Connor (1876–1890)
Richard Scannell (1891–1916)
Jeremiah James Harty (1916–1927), Archbishop (personal title)
Joseph Francis Rummel (1928–1935), appointed Archbishop of New Orleans
James Hugh Ryan (1935–1947) became Archbishop of Omaha in 1945
=== Metropolitan Archbishops of Omaha ===
James Hugh Ryan (1935–1947)
Gerald Thomas Bergan (1947–1969)
Daniel E. Sheehan (1969–1993)
Elden Francis Curtiss (1993–2009)
George Joseph Lucas (2009–2025)
Michael George McGovern (2025–present)
=== Auxiliary bishops ===
Daniel E. Sheehan (1964–1969), appointed Archbishop here
Anthony Michael Milone (1981–1987), appointed Bishop of Great Falls-Billings
=== Other diocesan priests who became bishops ===
Blase Joseph Cupich, appointed Bishop of Rapid City in 1998; future cardinal
William Joseph Dendinger, appointed Bishop of Grand Island in 2004
Joseph Gerard Hanefeldt, appointed Bishop of Grand Island in 2015
Edward Joseph Hunkeler, appointed Bishop of Grand Island in 1945
Patrick Aloysius Alphonsus McGovern, appointed Bishop of Cheyenne in 1912
John Linus Paschang, appointed Bishop of Grand Island in 1951
== Parishes ==
== Omaha Catholic schools ==
The Omaha Catholic Schools is a school district in the Archdiocese of Omaha. Over 19,000 students attend Omaha Catholic Schools each year. As of 2025, the school district was composed of:
51 elementary schools
Five private, single-sex high schools
Three coed high schools in Metro Omaha
Seven coed rural and middle high schools
=== High schools ===
== Suffragan sees ==
Diocese of Grand Island
Diocese of Lincoln
== References ==
== External links ==
Official website