Brann, Henry Athanasius
BRANN, HENRY ATHANASIUS: Roman Catholic;
b. at Parkstown (27 m. s.w. of Drogheda),
County Meath, Ireland, Aug. 15, 1837. He came
to the United States at the age of ten, and was
educated at St. Mary's College, Wilmington, Del.,
St. Francis Xavier's College, New York City (B.A.,
1857), St. Sulpice, Paris (1857–60), and the American
College, Rome (D.D., 1862). He was ordained
to the priesthood at Rome in 1862, being the first
priest of the American College, and from 1862 to
1864 was vice-president of Seton Hall College,
South Orange, N. J., where he also taught theology.
Four years later he became director of an ecclesiastical
seminary at Wheeling, W. Va., where he
remained until 1870, when he was appointed rector
of St. Elizabeth's Church, Fort Washington,
N. Y. Twenty years later he became rector of
St. Agness Church, New York City, where he still
remains. He is archdiocesan censor of books and has
written Curious Questions (Newark, N. J., 1867);
Truth and Error (New York, 1871); Essay on the
Popes (1875); The Age of Unreason (1881); The Immortality
of the Soul (1882); and Life of Archbishop
Hughes (1892).