Monthly Archives: January 2026

Bishop Cretin

Jim Hudak decided he wanted to know more about the namesake for our high school. Jim did the research and wrote a brief article summarizing what he learned, and thought many in our class would enjoy reading it. Hence, Jim’s article follows. Thanks Jim!

J.S.

Bishop Joseph Crétin: The Man and the School

Who Was Bishop Joseph Crétin?

Joseph Crétin was born far from Minnesota, in a small French town that could never have guessed what he would do with his life.

Born on December 19, 1799, in Montluel, France, Crétin grew up in a settled place with old stone buildings and regular church routines. Nothing there hinted at the rivers, wooden chapels, or growing cities he would later know in America.

We don’t know much about Crétin’s parents. Most church records don’t mention them. Instead, what stands out is how Crétin’s life moved away from his hometown and toward a bigger purpose.

In 1838, he volunteered to be a missionary in America and crossed the Atlantic Ocean with Bishop Mathias Loras. After landing in New York, he moved inland and spent over ten years in frontier areas like Dubuque, Prairie du Chien, and mission territories connected by rivers instead of roads. These weren’t easy years. Crétin faced cold weather, limited supplies, and many hardships.

When Rome created the Diocese of Saint Paul in 1850, Crétin probably wasn’t chosen because he was brilliant or charismatic. He was most likely chosen because he already knew how to endure tough conditions.

He arrived in St. Paul on July 2, 1851, traveling upriver by steamboat and landing at the Lower Levee. That same day, he officially took charge of the diocese. That evening, he appeared at the small log chapel that served as the city’s cathedral and blessed the people. There was no break between his arrival and his leadership. The frontier didn’t allow for that.

Crétin lived where he worked. A large brick building at 6th and Wabasha that was completed in 1851 served as cathedral, home, offices, and school all at once. His living space was on the upper floor. Prayer, leadership, teaching, and sleep all happened under the same roof—and with the same exhaustion.

The pace wore him down. Reports from that time describe years of non-stop work followed by long illness, blamed simply on overwork. Joseph Crétin died in St. Paul on February 22, 1857. He was fifty-seven years old and had been bishop for less than six years.

Crétin’s Legacy

Crétin didn’t leave behind fancy symbols. He left structures and systems.

Within months of arriving, St. Paul had a working cathedral complex with classrooms built right into it. In 1852, with the Sisters of St. Joseph, Crétin opened the Cathedral Grade School. Locally, people called it “Cretin’s School.” This wasn’t just a name; it showed that the school was his project.

Education was the backbone of his work. He brought in teaching orders because they made institutions last. Hospitals followed. Cemetery land. Orphan care. Groups promoting sobriety and charity. These weren’t just nice extras. They were answers to frontier problems that couldn’t wait.

During Crétin’s short time as bishop, the diocese grew quickly—more churches, more missions, more clergy, and a rapidly growing Catholic population spread across a huge territory. What later became Cretin High School, and eventually Cretin-Derham Hall, grew directly from this early framework.

The man died young. The systems did not.

That’s the difference between Crétin the man and Crétin the institution: one body failed under the load; the other carried it forward for generations.

From “Cretin’s School” to Cretin High School

By the early 20th century, the original Cathedral school had already split and recombined several times, but one thing stayed constant: boys’ education staffed by religious orders, built for discipline and structure, not experimentation.

Key changes:

  • Late 1800s: The boys’ school tradition started under Crétin becomes more formal.
  • 1871: The Christian Brothers arrive in St. Paul. This is a turning point. From then on, the boys’ school has a more organized educational approach.
  • 1928: Cretin High School opens at the Hamline & Randolph campus—the location that defined the school for generations.

That campus mattered. It was large, visible, permanent. This is when “Cretin” stops being just a historical echo and becomes a place.

Sources

(in French) Persee:
https://www.persee.fr/doc/arcpa_0000-0000_1880_num_11_1_5855_t1_0716_0000_17?utm
An official list of collections in French relating to the reorganization of France after the French Revolution.
“Text of the decrees concerning the division of the kingdom in the annex of the session of February 26, 1790,” referring to the National Assembly’s crucial decisions to reorganize France into new administrative units (départements) during the French Revolution, establishing a more uniform national structure instead of old provinces. 

Ramsey County Historical Society
https://rchs.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/RCHS_Fall1969_Forgotten_Pioneers.pdf
Article on Bishop Cretin

Notre Dame Archives
https://archives.nd.edu/calendar/c185703.htm?utm
Various references to Bishop Cretin

Wikipedia: Second Cathedral of Saint Paul, MN.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Second_Cathedral_of_Saint_Paul_(Minnesota)

New Advent Catholic Encyclopedia
https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04487b.htm
Summary description of Bishop Cretin’s life

8Jan2026 Class Luncheon

Hi Guys,

Nice turnout for lunch with 14 in attendence.

Jim Dimond, Dave Britz, Dave Tyree, Larry Moser, Tom Troskey, Dick Butler, Mike Gaida, Tom Schleck, Joe M McGrath, Joe Schufman, Ed Kurhajetz, Dave Moore, Brian Dobie, John Runyon.

We talked a bit about how the hockey and basketball teams at CDH are doing—-both quite well.

Also, about CDH’s new web site, take a look and click all over the place because it is filled with interesting items from what is going on in the school today to how the school came to be and the history of the Christian Brothers and Sisters of St Joseph.

www.cretin-derhamhall.org   

Our classmate Steve Nachtsheim has offered some men’s basketball tickets for the University of St Thomas men’s home games to his Cretin classmates, Steve a graduate of St Thomas and life long supporter of the University who lives in California has 4 season tickets to their games but as you can imagine can not attend all the games. These are legacy club tickets—-VERY NICE—-

So,if you are interested in seeing the Division 1 men’s basketball team in the brand new arena contact Steve at       stephen@nachtsheim.com          THANK YOU STEVE.

Many of you are aware that the St Thomas Academy class of 63 also meets on the second Thursday of each month at the Pool & Yacht Club and we converse with them regularly. One of their members (Mike Byrne) brought a photo Christmas card he got from one of his life long friends who lives in North Carolina——that friend is also a member of our Cretin class of 63—-It was Tony Tuk and his beautiful family.

Thank you to Mike and it was great to see the photo of Tony and his family.

There are two photos with this email showing John Runyon holding a copy of a March of 1963 Comment . John was a page editor on the Comment staff. The other photo is of a cartoon drawn by our classmate Len Mitsch. Len, and a couple of other talented classmates always had drawing in the Comment. The other artists as I recall were Greg Ridge, Jim Szalapski and I think Bill Jack.

All editions of the Comment are Joe M McGrath’s and I just have them in my possession to share with you guys in these class updates. —-THANK YOU JOE

Thanks guys, that’s all for now, next meeting is Thursday February12th.

Tom Troskey

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