Tag Archives: Cardinal George

OEMC warns of traffic delays during Cardinal George funeral procession

(CHICAGO) Thursday’s funeral services for the late Cardinal Francis George are expected to delay traffic as the procession heads from the Near North Side to northwest suburban Des Plaines.

Street closures could be in effect between 8 a.m. and 4 p.m. near Holy Name Cathedral, 735 N. State St., during and after the service, a statement from the Office of Emergency Management and Communications.

Wabash will be closed from Chicago to Pearson, and Pearson will be closed from State to Wabash, OEMC said.

Following the funeral, there will be a procession from the city to All Saints Cemetery in northwest suburban Des Plaines. Closures will be in effect on streets and expressways along the route between 2 p.m. and 4 p.m., OEMC said.

The procession will head southbound on State to Ontario, then to westbound I-90/94.

The procession will get off the expressway at Irving Park and take the following route to the cemetery:

  • Westbound Irving Park to Narragansett;
  • Northbound Narragansett to Nagle;
  • Northbound Nagle to Milwaukee;
  • Northwest-bound Milwaukee to Dempster;
  • Westbound Dempster to Rand
  • Northwest-bound Rand to River
  • Northbound River to All Saints Cemetery.

Schedule of Services and Public Visitation for Francis Cardinal George, OMI – Archbishop Emeritus of Chicago

The following schedule of services and public visitation for Francis Cardinal George, OMI, Archbishop Emeritus of Chicago, has been posted on the Archdiocesan website, www.archchicago.org.

Francis Cardinal George, OMI
Archbishop Emeritus of Chicago
1937 – 2015

 

Schedule of Services and Public Visitation

The following is a schedule of services and public visitation for Francis Cardinal George, OMI, Archbishop Emeritus of Chicago, 1937 – 2015.

All services, including public visitation and the Funeral Mass will take place at Holy Name Cathedral, State and Superior Streets in Chicago.

The Committal Service will take place at All Saints Cemetery, 700 North River Road in Des Plaines.

Tuesday, April 21
1 p.m. Holy Name Cathedral Doors Open
2 p.m. Rite of Reception (Open to the Public)
2:30 to 6:30 p.m. Visitation (Open to the Public)
7:30 p.m. Prayer Vigil for Priests and Seminarians (Attendance by Ticket Only)
9 to 11 p.m. Visitation (Open to the Public)
11 p.m. Holy Name Cathedral Doors Close

Wednesday, April 22
7 to 9:30 a.m. Visitation (Open to the Public)
10:30 a.m. Interfaith Service (Open to the Public)
11:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Visitation (Open to the Public)
7:30 p.m. Prayer Vigil for Women and Men Religious, Deacons and their Wives (Attendance by Ticket Only)
9 p.m. Wednesday, April 22 until 7:30 a.m. Thursday, April 23
Visitation and All Night Vigil Conducted by Lay Ecclesial Movements
(Open to the Public)

Thursday, April 23
7:30 a.m. Prayer Service (Open to the Public)
8 a.m. Holy Name Cathedral Closed for Funeral Mass Preparation
11 a.m. Holy Name Cathedral Doors Open for Funeral Mass (Attendance by Ticket Only)
12 p.m. Funeral Mass (Attendance by Ticket Only)

Immediately following the Funeral Mass, the Committal Service will take place at All Saints Cemetery in Des Plaines. Per the Cardinal’s wishes, he will be buried in the George family plot. (Open to the Public)

In lieu of flowers, donations to the Cardinal’s favorite charities will be appreciated — Priests Retirement and Mutual Aid Association (PRMAA) or To Teach Who Christ Is, a campaign to support scholarships for students in Catholic Schools.

Francis Cardinal George has died at 78

(Chicago)  Longtime Chicago Archbishop Francis Cardinal George has died at 78.  Francis George headed the Catholic Church in Chicago from 1997 to 2014.  George retired while battling cancer and was replaced by current Archbishop Blase Cupich.

George was known as a staunch conservative who took over after the reign of liberal Joseph Cardinal Bernardin.

George was an intellectual who held doctorates in philosophy and sacred theology.

He talked recently about making an impact on the lives of others, “As people in public life you say something occasionally, you reach out in some gesture of kindness.  You do something that you are not even aware of, because (it’s) just part of who you are… and you transform someone’s life.  And that is what is eternal.  That’s what lasts.”

He was a Chicago native who grew up in St. Pascal’s parish on the northwest side of Chicago.

During his tenure he also served for three years as the president of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops.

John Dempsey, 89 WLS News